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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  November 25, 2020 4:00pm-5:00pm EST

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all a safe and healthy and happy thanksgiving. thank you so much for joining us. i know it's been a hard time but you guys are stronger than what we are facing. have a good one. you're looking at a nasdaq all-time record flow. that will do it for the claman countdown. i'll see you soon. [bell ringing] ♪ >> without losing some steam but we do have a record for you in the market ahead of the thanksgiving holiday. the nasdaq, your record setter today closing out the session at a brand-new five. nasdaq up by 57 points which is about half of 1% but the market 12,000 94 is a record. the dow is below 30,000. the return of lockdown seems to threaten the economic recovery in some people's minds so we are working that. s&p close to just under six points retreating from what was a record high. great to be with here on a
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wednesday. feels like a friday on after the bell. let's look at the news that's happening at this hour. team coverage with more on the markets. hillary vaughn, covering the president elect. let's start with you, the day before thanksgiving. what are we seeing? >> we are seeing a retreat partially for the s&p. the dow transports, all retreating from record highs but the dow closing at 29872 on track for november since 1928. you've got to go back really far. the nasdaq, first, record close september. 12,000 94. the first force was this rotation we've seen for the week out of tech to cyclicals that reversed today. energy was your worst performer and tech was your second best performer.
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the second we noticed is the economic data that poured in this morning. that was a reality for many investors. jobless claims rose for two weeks in a row. the first time since july, 778,000 americans filing for first-time unemployment benefits. claims rose the most in states where infections also rose the most. minnesota, ohio and illinois but it's not just infections, it's hospitalizations that are concerning. seen them risen most since the pandemic started over 80000 americans now in the hospital with covid. the good news, 20 million americans will likely be vaccinated this year. officials worry the real driver of the pandemic is not the asymptomatic people not gathering in public places gathering in people's homes. connell: right. especially for thanksgiving. thank you. happy thanksgiving to you.
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let's bring in steve to talk about this. the numbers are terrible, there's no way around it in terms of the virus on the health side. also the economic numbers reminded us of where we are with yesterday's 30,000 on the dow, kind of giving they hope of where we might be going so what would you say about the present state of the economy? >> i think it is really strong even though the unemployment numbers, i looked through the report and it true there was an increased of initial claims but more people lie about 300 -- 400,000 more people dropped off unemployment then signed up for new unemployment so the numbers are dropping and it looks like a beautiful downward slope for the last six months of people who are reliant on unemployment benefits. i don't like the increase of new members but the fact is the net numbers of people collecting the benefits is falling.
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it comes into question whether we need another stimulus. my answer is, i say no. there's no need for additional government spending. then we got good news on housing and construction. we continue to get good news on goods orders so i think the economy given what we've been through has been pretty hot right now. connell: okay, that's good. that's certainly a positive way of looking at it. steve, your answer on stimulus, i get but guess will come on and surprise with one of the answers once in a while. your old friend was on this time yesterday. the dow was hitting 30,000 so art pretended to play a kazoo with his hand which was the first surprise. that being said, and he surprised me the second time, you got to go back and watch that if you can. when he was very complementary of the incoming biden administration, janet the treasury and i wonder what your view is now that the election is over because art said from his view, i wanted president trump
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to win. he didn't but we could have done a lot worse. what is your personal view of things and how it sets up the economy? >> i learned my economics, i very rarely disagree with him but i'm not quite as optimistic as he is about the incoming biden administration. i agree that i like some of the new appointments, i think janet, although i have some disagreements with her, she's attentive to the market and knows how they work. some of the other people he's brought in i think are very sensible but you look at the agenda, that joe biden ran on and it's pretty radical. massive increases in taxes and in the regulatory state. big reductions in the oil and gas industry. the thing that i would say they need the most about what happened in the last couple of weeks since the election, biden seems to focus, obsessed with
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ointment change. out of the 25 biggest problems in the u.s., climate change is not one of them. we got to get people back into the jobs, we've got this health epidemic and problems with failing businesses. we got our schools closed down and it shows a lack of proper priorities to think we should be thinking about climate change when we've got more immediate problems. by the way, climate change agenda is very -- it's basically capping the gas industry, putting coal out of business, american manufacturing and construction industries shift towards this industry. connell: all right, i wonder if that's more concerning than some of the other issues that the president elect and when he becomes president joe biden, he
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has to have a democratic senate to get something passed. we'll talk about that later in the show why it's so important the race is in georgia but on regulations, that is what your talking about i think with climate, you don't necessarily need the senate on your side. you can do that with the stroke of a pen, right? >> you got that right. we and the trump administration, when we couldn't get things through congress, we used executive actions and the agencies to do it. obama did that as well. that is not a great way to govern. we have a legislative branch, we have a congress and they are supposed to make that but we've moved away from that. i think you will see a further acceleration of executive orders and action by past and congress under a biden administration especially if they don't win one of those georgia seats because they will have a lot of the worst things. this is a lot of reasons why the market is so bullish since the
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election because it looks like we will have checks and balance in the senate to mitigate some of his worst instincts. i think people are very happy that we are not looking at, right now at least, the aoc bernie sanders agenda coming out of biden. connell: rights. all being relative which was part of the points that are made yesterday. always great to see you. have a happy thanksgiving. all right, ensuring a smooth transition, the department of health and human services today holding its first briefing with the incoming biden team cleared lake burman will have a look at that. >> nothing new but what is new this go round, there is this immensely important operation warp speed program that needs to be handed over from the trump administration to the incoming biden administration january 20. i'm told via health and human services is what oversees operation warp speed, the first
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briefing took place today between hhs officials and the biden team. three topics of conversation including vaccines, how to go about disturbing them and therapeutics. here's what an official told us about the briefing. committed to smooth, professional transition planning and held a meeting. career transition director with members of the biden agency review team. project leads from operation warp speed and hhs chief of staff, brian harrison. the person familiar with the briefing told me at the beginning of the briefing, harrison made it known that it's the goal of hhs to make sure operation warp speed is seamlessly handed over, the sources telling me that it was a positive interrupt introductory meeting. i've also told the representatives from the cdc on the call as well, it's the
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expectation that more of these briefings will be taking place in the upcoming days to weeks. connell: all right. now to this idea of giving thanks, president-elect joe biden living at thanksgiving address this afternoon in which he called for national unity. hillary vaughn is live with more on that. >> president-elect joe biden delivered a thanksgiving day eve address today doc talked about how his day one plan to ramp up testing will help find people who have covid single them out d separate them from the general public to prevent them from being part of the spread. >> more testing will find people with cases and get them away from one another. slowing the number of infections. more protective gear for businesses and our schools do
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the same, reducing the number of cases. >> this week, biden rolled out his 18 for national security but next week, he's going to announce his dream team for the economy on a call with reporters today, it is transition team said next week he'll announced he economic appointees, spots that need to be filled right now are treasury secretary, congress secretary and labor secretary. sources say janet will be biden's pick for treasury but other spots, the top contenders for biden's secretary of commerce include former governor of virginia and former chair of the democratic national committee, hopson, former chairwoman of dreamworks animation and meg whitman, ceo of ebay and packard and she would be seen as an olive branch to conservatives, possibly serving as a balance to whoever
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biden picks for secretary of labor. on the short list right now, contenders for that include tom perez for labor, chair of the democratic national committee, former secretary of labor but also senator bernie sanders who has really been gunning for this position, trying to pressure the biden administration to consider him for this spot but also to candidates tied to the cio, union organization key to delivering support for biden and also bill spriggs on that list. those announcements after thanksgiving into next week. connell: now as we circle back to the white house, a newsmaking tweet from the president while hillary was reporting. >> as we were talking, president trump tweeted a moment ago he has pardoned his first national security advisor, michael flynn. let me take you to the tweet. as of three minutes ago.
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it's my great honor, he says, do not general flynn has been granted a full pardon. congratulations to his wonderful family. i know you will have a truly fantastic thanksgiving. this is something we were expecting that we have been told would be coming and now the president made it official. just to give you the brief back story, michael flynn was the president first national security advisor, not on the job very long here at the white house as he was initially let go for lying to the vice president, mike pence about his conversations with the russian ambassador. there was an fbi investigation into the conversations flynn was having with the russian ambassador. during the transition. the president, flint and his legal team were not really pleased with how the fbi conducted that in the fallout from that and what they eventually learned the president
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backed michael flynn over the years and now we seen this coming from president trump of his former national security advisor, michael flynn. we should know as presidents leave office, they often go about executing pardons. it's nothing new for president to do, it's something we most likely will see president trump continue to do in his remaining days of office and as we head into thanksgiving this afternoon. now we learn perhaps one of the more profile one two days. michael flynn receiving a presidential part. connell: a very powerful tool for any president, it can often be controversial. we were anticipating this, it will be just that, controversial. thank you, blake. racing were delays, consumers putting faith in the delivery
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business. big-time faith. they have to because online shopping is hitting record highs in the pandemic this year. for more, live to a ups store later in the hour in chicago. plus, a similar lining of staying at home. we will talk to a business owner about a spike in online sports memorabilia. being sold from americans to other americans across the u.s. something of a foxbusiness holiday getaway addition for you now, jeff flock hitting the road. what you have coming up for us? >> we got traffic. this would be typical, the busiest time of travel on the roads but if you look, why is this? stay tuned. you have some explanations for you. ♪ (food grunting menacingly) when the food you love doesn't love you back, stay smooth and fight heartburn fast with tums smoothies. ♪ tum tum-tum tum tums lexus has been celebrating driveway moments.
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foxbusiness alert, blake burman was thinking about getting home to the family early for thanksgiving this wednesday, the news that's have interrupted and you have yet breaking news. tik tok related. >> i was taking my mike off, i was just about done with the michael flynn news. he was what was put in my inbox from the treasury department. the committee on foreign investment in the u.s., which as we know a one-week extension
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from november's 27th, friday to the december 4. this is about time to review a revised admission the committee recently received. bottom line, u.s. government via the treasury department is giving tik tok another week, the deadline gets extended another week to figure everything out. one of the big questions going forward, are we going to get a final answer with tik tok and potentially having to break up the company next week? or will this just be a revolving door of extending deadlines at the end of the trump administration? something we will continue to follow but the treasury department is telling us heading into thanksgiving, another one-week extension. connell: that is interesting. i wonder if it will make its way to january 20. either way, run for the hills. we will see you next year week. the lockdowns that are part of
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it the u.s. reporting one of its deadliest days of the pandemic but still, millions of americans traveling for the holidays. we have fox team coverage back and forth, charles in atlanta. the countries busiest airport. we will get to jeff in a moment but charles, let's start with you. what is the latest? >> is been ready busy here at the airport, steady stream of people in-and-out through most of the day. with that being said, major concerns among health officials with million amount americans traveling in those who will gather this holiday weekend. airports have seen some of the largest crowds since the beginning of the pandemic, fewer than 4 million people screened at checkpoints friday. overall, airlines expected to see about 50% less travel this year compared to the last. fewer people but still alarming
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for public health officials pleading with americans to stay home as coronavirus infections continue to skyrocket out of control. connell: >> what we are doing now is going to be reflected two, three weeks from now. reporter: you see doctor saudi sounding the alarm about what could see in the next few weeks. >> it's interesting, we've done so many stories you've been talking about it with all these, whether it's the cdc or whoever the agency might be but people are out there traveling. what are you hearing? why are they traveling? reporter: what we hear the most is that people feeling the pandemic fatigue, for ten months, people have been inside their homes for school, work or maybe because they don't have a job so this would be the perfect opportunity for them to get away
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from home, get out of the pandemic fatigue sunk some family members. >> i have not seen my stepmom in ten years since my dad passed away. i thought i would get away for seven days. >> there's definitely a scary thing at first but now it's been around what, ten months later? people are starting to care less about. reporter: a lot of these folks say they are following precautions, wearing masks, keeping distance. they hope this thanksgiving travel holiday will turn out perfectly. connell: of course. you can see how people are thinking about it. thank you, reporting from atlantic. jeff flock, you've been talking about this as well. reporter: if you got family, and have that not seen them in such
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a long time, i have not seen my daughter in the year. anyway. on the road so i will say this, a lot of people are using the roads as opposed to the air because the airports, you've got to interact with a lot of people you don't know. if you're in your car, you can control the environment a little bit, maybe not be as exposed as you might elsewhere. look at the numbers on air travel versus travel by car, the numbers are not so far down when you look at the forecast. who knows how it will actually come out but that is the forecast. air travel is down by larger percentage. travel on cruises and all of that, that is way down. nobody wants to be in a completely crazed environment so maybe the safest way to go is in the car, the way i am right now.
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and he's got the camera, we spent a lot of time together anyway. we are a family pod, what can i tell you? connell: you and mike. half joking earlier, but it is true. you been doing for whatever it is, 13 years. just about every wednesday before thanksgiving, you are driving or sometimes at the airport but what is this year like compared to other years? doesn't look like much traffic right now but how does it compare to other is? reporter: i would say it's really not bad as previous years. this would be the busiest time and right now, as you see, this is to 94 south to indiana, mainly trucks. not people and cars going places. maybe people are heeding the warnings and staying home, just hanging out. maybe they are doing resume thanksgiving. connell: a lot of us are, a little zoom if grandparents can
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figure it out which is another story, by the way. [laughter] just and mike. all right. we have a thanksgiving matchups postponed today, out of abundance of caution. nfl said they will reschedule thursday prime time game. they will play sunday afternoon instead. some players have tested positive for the virus. ♪
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so fedex and ups are bracing for very high demand. record-breaking online holiday shopping expected to take place this year. should consumers prepare for massive delays? live at a ups store out of chicago with the latest from there. reporter: i can give you 3 billion reasons why you should get your holiday shopping and shipping done early.
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that's how many packages are going to be delivered between thanksgiving and christmas this year according to ship matrix. because of the pandemic, online ordering was essentially already at holiday levels for the entire year. now they are bracing for another search. we expect record shattering year. let's look at the numbers. $189 billion, that's how much americans are expected to spend on online shopping this year. that's up about 33% compared to last year, which by the way, which was another record. that's why the u.s. ups and fedex of the world are gearing up for a busy season. they are on a hiring spree and so is the united states postal service. ups looking to add 100,000 seasonal workers to get through this time. fedex looking to add 70000 dhl, adding about 100002 it's
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workforce. he mentioned delays. if you are the type to procrastinate, you need to pay attention to this. about 7 million packages a day according to ship matrix will be delayed because the demand is about 86 million packages a day and the industry really only has the capacity to deliver about 79 million a day. that's where you get the 7 million number from. the delay right now is only about one -- two days and expected to stay there which is about not really a problem unless you are one of those people who like to wait until the very last minute if you area procrastinator. i'm happy to report, i have all of my holiday shopping done already this year which we've been talking about records, that is a record for me. all done before black friday. connell: that's crazy. twenty-fifth of november. a kind of american are you? [laughter] for the rest of us, we not may be as quick as you so is probably a little early to even
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think about this, for most companies perspective, or anybody thinking about returns through this? reporter: big time. we are seeing a record online ordering which also means record returns. $280 billion of online orders will be returned this holiday season according to salesforce ask because people can't try on products or touch or feel them when they order them online so a lot of them are getting sent right back. i can't believe you're already thinking about returning the gift i got for you. [laughter] connell: that's exactly right. very good. in a moment, we will talk about the crucial georgia runoff in the senate we mentioned earlier. just weeks away and results could make a 2 trillion-dollar difference in the next round of covid relief so we will explain that in a live report from atlanta on where things stand in those races. california officials are warning of what they say might be the biggest fraud of taxpayer dollars and the history of the estate. we'll have that and remember a
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legend today. one of the best soccer players to ever play the sport, died today, had a heart attack. argentina world cup in 1986. the infamous hand of god cool, as they called it against england. diego, one of the great soccer players, a great personality of the sport as well. died at the age of 60. we'll be right back. to support a strong immune system, your body needs routine. centrum helps your immune defenses every day, with vitamin c, d and zinc. season, after season. ace your immune support, with centrum.
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georgia on their minds, officials are going through about 5 million votes in the state presidential recount. the focus clearly has shifted to the key runoff races on the senate side of january. let's go to harrigan reporting live from atlanta with the latest. steve. reporter: ordinarily, this would be a challenge to get out the vote. that does not seem to be the case this time around. more than 700,000 people have requested absentee ballots, that's about three times as many as requested in 2018. spending seems headed for record levels, to $70 million spent on television as already. many attack ads, this could be a battle for control in the senate. the two runoff races january 5 could determine which party controls the senate and as president trump will not be on the ballot, there's some concern democrats might have a challenge
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getting out there base. >> the democratic voters in georgia, you're pretty happy about what's happened, what happened in the election and might not be as motivated to vote in january. reporter: democrats say they will go door to door while social distancing during the pandemic. back to you. connell: thanks. bill is with us from the wall street journal. i read this research report from dan this morning, very smart and put it all in perspective for me as to why, especially from the perspective of the audience care about the georgia races. he says it's the $2 trillion senate election in georgia saying if the democrats win, you can have stimulus that's like $3 trillion but of the remote-controlled it, they will likely spend less, maybe $1 trillion. what you make of what is happening there. reporter: everything is on the
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line because right now, with democrats having control of the house and the white house, there's nothing to stop them from the more radical plans like stuffing the court or inviting new states in which means new democratic senators. the only against that is georgia. a lot of the focus is on the recount of votes in the presidential race. it seems some of president trump's supporters are saying that the republicans in line will boycott the races in georgia. i think that is the exact opposite message in terms of what donald trump's just are. donald trump has extraordinary achievements turning around the economy with tax cuts, deregulation, judicial ethics, three slots on the supreme cou court. all this is in jeopardy if democrats take control of the senate.
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>> the fact that he hasn't conceded, do you think it will hurt republicans? is that at the very least, a distraction? guess you could make the opposite argument in some ways, it could fire up people, i don't know. what do you think? >> it could, i think it depends on what the president says but if the assumption is that we will get back at republicans for insufficiently supporting donald trump and his recount, i think the real harm will be donald trump's legacy. let's not forget he had a lot of achievements and the democrats want to turn it around. the best guarantee against that of the president's legacy is if current republicans, and when the senate races and keep some of these achievements in place. connell: it's kind of an issue by issue. a predicament there, he's been
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support of the president's policies, he's concerned about climate change the president elect is talking about but that's kind of the type of issue you can make changes with a stroke of a pen by executive order. but taxes, it could be very important because if you are an investor at the end of the year, you think maybe i should sell these stocks that have grown up a lot because if the democrats take the senate, they take these seeds and have higher taxes next year. that does come down to georgia. >> yeah and deregulation. it comes down to this. there's a lot of stuff joe biden could do through executive power and executive orders but there is still an awful lot of big things you need congress to do. anything congress has to do would probably sell through the house but we need mitch mcconnell and the republicans to stop it and make sure we don't
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get and aoc of bernie sanders agenda going through the senate. connell: what is your sense of that? maybe it's too strong of a word but thinking as republicans, we need to only when one out of two, we will get it in georgia but state wide races have been closed in recent memory. biden ended up winning on the presidential side. and with the other way on that. what is your sense on this? >> i am not an expert on georgia. my sense what has been that the republicans have the advantage in these runoffs. in one case, he gets down to a two man race rather than a three-man race but the other big lesson in 2020, we can't take anything for granted. no assumption is safe. when you see all this money going in because people realize the stakes, he will have to
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fight for every game you have and a lot depends on whether people see this as supporting the republican party and the republican agenda that donald trump went through or whether people, a lot of the people who voted for donald trump see this as a way to get back as other republicans. i hope it is the former. connell: that could turn out a lot. a lot of money being spent. thank you as always. running back emma customers canceling orders for treadmills, taking to social media complaining about months of shipping delays. it's primarily because of shipping logjams. it's axis to the customers still waiting. ♪
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businesses today are looking to tomorrow. adapting. innovating. setting the course. but new ways of working demand a new type of network. one that's more than just fast. you need flexibility- to work from anywhere. and manage from everywhere. advanced technology. with serious security. and reliable coverage, nationwide. forward-thinking enterprises, deserve forward-thinking solutions. and that's what we deliver. so bounce forward, with comcast business.
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you might think you were born with a slow metabolism.d to lose weight, that's exactly what these people thought. (woman) i lost 75 pounds with golo. (announcer) nambu lost 48 pounds. hannah lost 60 pounds. and graham lost 131 pounds. how? they went to golo.com. now it's your turn to lose weight quickly and easily with golo. head to golo.com now. that's g-o-l-o.com. not to scanning and pandemic. investigators in california discovering what they say is massive unemployment fraud that took advantage of the covered crisis. william has this story from los angeles. >> it's basic theft and less risky than holding up a convenience store.
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his asked the state for money and they send it. thousands essentially stealing up to $1000 a week, california race to help those out of work because of the pandemic. 20000 claims paid inmates alone including 133 on death row scott peterson, lawyer says he did not file and got no money. however, many cases, friends and family did file under an inmate name and others, somebody stole their identity got the unemployment debit card sent to an outside address. in one case, the state had benefits to 16 inmates at one address and another, the state paid one person almost 50 grand. >> the laughingstock of the united states. sending potentially $1 billion to criminals with names like john doe. >> investigators learned by listening to inmate phone calls were payments were discussed. another week, a state sent out 38 million pieces of mail with
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people's full social security numbers. remarkably, when notified about the fraud, the unemployment apartment refused to stop the payments saying nothing could be done until prosecutors filed charges against the suspects. >> it's open and notorious within the correctional facilities being discussed about how everybody is getting paid. >> the money was stolen from the california state government. >> like 35 other states, california does not cross mention names with those receiving benefits, something the state says it's working on. this is state and federal money that was scammed. 140 million. $1 billion total. connell: thank you. preventing a potential problem on the road, a recall on tesla. tessa recalling more than 9000, issues with bolts. a trip that could detach over time. companies saying in a statement,
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all we are not aware of accidents or results in injuries, if it separates while in drive, it could create a rose road hazard. not good. we'll be right back. ♪
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♪ connell: this is kind of the upside of staying at home, the pandemic sending so many americans looking through their attics and garages, and they're finding some pretty cool stuff. and then the they sell what they find online, and as a result, the sports memorabilia web site now has more than 60,000 items for the savvy holiday gift givers out there. brandon steiner joins us, one of the big wigs in the sports memorabilia world. is that really what it is, brandon, nothing elsed to do on a saturday, finds his dad left him a mickey mantle rookie and it was in a box you didn't know?
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>> something like that. also your wife asking you what are you going to do with all that stuff -- [laughter] you need to get all that together and get it out of the house, and that's where collectible exchange comes in handy. we're seeing a tremendous amount of people really trying to downsize, lick liquidate, they'e moving, and then we see a lot of people looking to buy stuff. i haven't seen the collectible business this -- i mean, it's jumping, it's popping. people are loving everything does well, sells well online, and, obviously, if you're looking for a quick gift, but there's been some stuff that's been hot. and i think it's important to buy this stuff as a gift, not necessarily as an investment. i think the thing does bring you joy, not always going to necessarily bring you profits, is similar to the stock market where you expect that to go up in value. collect bls sometimes go up in
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value, but not all the time, and you shouldn't buy it with the thought process that it's going to be huge a stock, although you can make some money. obviously, if you bought this alabama -- from many years ago, this would have been a good investment. there's a lot of stuff -- there's a bunch of famous giants, a jeter rookie card on our site. this actually went up in value, by the way, derek has done very well if you collected him. that's fun. if you're a syracuse -- connell: well, he always makes a lot of money, right? oh, go ahead, syracuse? what's that? >> when we took down the dome, took the roof down, we actually took a photo of the dome and printed it on the dome. so so if you're a syracuse fan, there's a hundred different one,
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and then the roof on the dome is all these different pieces made in the entwine, which is pretty cool. i've always been notorious for coming with items, so there's a lot of really cool gifts on our site -- connell: i gotta point out a couple of different things. one of them is, first of all, someone who wednesday to ford -- went to fordham, syracuse was kind of our rival. that's one strike against you. the second thing, you're wearing a yankee pullover, i'm a mets fan, and then you're giving all us a these examples and it's tiki barber, lie manning -- ely e manning, it's all giants stuff. you don't have a joe namath or a ken o'brien jersey? [laughter] >> i can't give away a ken o'brien jersey -- [laughter] joe namath on the site. it's a little tough to find those fordham grads to sell, but
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rose hall is minted. i hope i can take that, the oldest indoor stadium in the country. connell: it is. >> it is a great campus and a great school. that's a little sucking up for you to get off my back -- connell: all right. okay. >> to i'm hoping that they'll be with the mets, they've got the new owner who's going to do a great job, and you've got to jump on a guy like that. by the way, are you a ufc fan? everything mcgregor, u finishing c collectibles -- ufc collectibles. connell: yeah, i paid for one fight once, and it was a 14-second fight, and i was like, god, $100, and the thing ended in 14 seconds. brandon, have a happy thanksgiving, you're always great. we'll talk to you again. brandon steiner there, collectible, change.com. not just the giants, he's got some jets stuff too.
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that's not one of the things on the thanksgiving list we're thankful for, the 0-10 gents. as we report the news "after the bell," i'm connell mcshane in new york. thanks for watching us today and every day, and have a happy thanksgiving with your family. ♪ ♪ lou: good evening, everybody. we begin tonight with breaking news. president trump has pardoned general michael flynn. the president today tweeting this, quote: it is my great honor to announce that general michael t. flynn has been granted a full pardon. congratulations to general flynn and his wonderful family, i know you will now have a true ally fan taic -- truly fantastic thanksgiving. the president's pardon comes 316 days since general flynn withdrew his guilty plea, 202 days since the justice department told judge emmet sullivan to dismiss

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