tv Varney Company FOX Business September 15, 2022 9:00am-10:00am EDT
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they're calling it a crisis and begging for help and a it's a lot of hypocrisy and voters can see through this. maria: mark, final word. >> you cannot lie a problem away or turn a behind eye to the problem. stop the lying, it's time for a solution. maria: stop creating misinformation boards and stop the misinformation. mark tepper and sarah westwood, thank you for joining us. have a great day. stu, take it away. good morning, everyone. varney: two bus loads of migrants arrived around 6:30 eastern this morning and sent by texas governor greg abbott. florida's governor sent two plane loads of migrants without warning yesterday afternoon. states like massachusetts have better facilities to take care of the individuals they have invited into our country.
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extraordinary scenes in el paso, texas. 1,000 migrants a day are arriving with nowhere to go and sleeping on the streets and one local official says it looks like a third world country and a white house official says the border is secure but it's obviously not. the border is a bigger issue in november. there's a tentative deal to end the rail strike -- it didn't start, there's no strike. labor secretary negotiated through the night and came up with a deal that needs approved by the rank in file still. get to money, steady as she goes at the open. the most interesting thing for me is the rising yield on treasuries. ten year currently yields 343. the two year is getting real close to 4% again. you're at 383 as we speak. there is therefore a lot of talk about recession and inflation. stocks edging mostly lower this morning. the dow up maybe 20, s&p down 6,
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nasdaq down 40. bitcoin, we're looking at $20,000 per coin, $20,130. later today, the president holds what he is calling a united we stand summit to combat hate-based violence and sounds like an attack on maga republicans is coming and it is now after all campaign season. russia and china ganging up. russia needs military equipment and technology, china needs natural resources and both resent american power. thousands of people lining up for a glimpse of queen elizabeth's coffin as she lies in state. william and kate walked outside of the palace looking at the mountain of flowers growing for a week. a poll found one-third of the british public had actually seen in person queen elizabeth. half of those over 65 had seen
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her in person, clearly the queen was a very visible to her subjects. it's thursday, september 15th, 2022, "varney & co." is about to begin. ♪ ♪ stu: i do like it when we play that to get things going on a thursday morning. start me up. okay, let's get going. more migrants are bussed out of texas and heading to some exclusive areas as we told you a few seconds ago, martha -- sorry, lauren. lauren: they're coming to my home. no, martha's vineyard. stu: home of the liberals. lauren: first, someone to texas sending to right outside kamala
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harris' residents. she told people the border is secure and 50 or more went to martha's vineyards and governor ron desantis' office owning the flights saying things like states like massachusetts, new york, and california will better facilitate the care of these individuals who they have invited into our country by incentivizing illegal immigration through their designation as sanctuary states. florida voted to spend $12 million to transport the illegals out. they don't want to deal with they will. and sanctuary cities like chicago, where mayor lori lightfoot calls the government moves a manufactured crisis ambush. she wants more federal resources to deal with the influx but basically they're giving her a taste of her own medicine. stu: yeah. lauren: we're dealing with it, why can't you when you haven't changed the policy. stu: it's escalating. the fli flights and bus trips wl continue and sanctuary cities
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will continue to resent it and reject them, and there's a big deal going on here. lauren: each taxpayer is on the hook for $10,000 to feed and clothe and educate them. stu: each year and there's 2 million coming in in this fiscal year. let's bring in jason chaffetz on this stuff. it's a denial of reality. it's got to stop. the border is open. surely this is now a big issue for november. jason: it totally is. governor desantis, governor abbott, they're absolutely right. there's been an invitation from the biden/harris administration to bring these people in and these cities are dealing with them by the dozens. look at arizona, new mexico, and california and certainly texas, they're dealing with them by the hundreds of thousands. for them to send them to a nice place like martha's vineyards, massachusetts for goodness sakes, they should share in the burden in taking care of these people. stu: we have a new fox poll, jason, showing that the majority
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think the administration is incompetent and ineffective. you know, that fits right into the border issue, doesn't it? jjason: yeah, the incompetence issue will permeate and this is why joe biden really does parallel jimmy carter and the rapid inflation, incompetence and started with afghanistan and you look at the policies that the democrats instituted and the reason that crime is getting worse, immigration's getting worse, inflation's worse. the energy sector, these are all self-inflicted wounds, and it permeates as just incompetence and when joe biden tries to go out and tell us all those things aren't true, we can see them with our own eyes. stu: he gets angry. ask him a question, he gets angry. last ward to you, please. i'm exhausted with this. i really am. jason: he does get angry but never sits down for an interview.
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he never actually does an actual interview and anxiouses questions. again, he doesn't look the part, he's not a good communicator, and the policies are just destroying america. stu: thank you, jason chaffetz indeed, sir. news breaking early this morning, there's a tentative deal reached to avoid a railroad strike. what's in the deal? lauren: it's being report that had more time off is what broke the log jam and got us to this tentative deal. 24% pay raises, cash bonuses, unpaid time off so workers could go to the doctor. president biden says this is a win for the union. their key voting block -- midterms before the elections. labor secretary marty walsh said it was 20 consecutive hours of negotiations and the rail companies and union negotiators came to a tentative agreement that b balances the needs of workers, unions, and employers.
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60,000 union workers were planning to not show up messing up deliveries of oil, grain, car parts for automakers and no doubt adding to price pressures. stu: sure, but the unions have leverage at this moment. enormous leverage especially when the president is on their side. lauren: they have to officially vote and word is when he was calling into the negotiations, he expressed concern for the workers and their families, not really for the rail companies. stu: i do understand that. thanks, lauren. look at futures please, left hand side of the screen. we're looking at a modest gain, a tiny gain for the dow. modest losses for the s&p and nasdaq. our favorite dividend guy, david barnson, he's usually in california but he's with us today in new york city. i want dividend plays unless you want to sort it out with politics. david: i think that railroad strike deal, it's a good thing they got it fixed. last thing our supply chain needs is anymore pressures but ultimately i'm not sure it's going to be a great victory for
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the white house. it would a been a loss if it hasn't happened, but i don't think it'll be a positive this thing got done the way it did. a lot of union people are upset about the way it happen. stu: really, give me a stock that pays me a handsome dividend that will grow. david: talking about railroad oil and gas and we transport way too much oil and gas with rail. one of my dividend picks is umi, which is a midstream energy etf. it's about 18 different pipeline companies, it's actively managed and some canadians, some mlps, some u.s. pipeline companies. it's a big play on the energy story of america. we need less oil and gas being transported by rail and more by pipelines. it's safer, it's more economical, and so it's a great dividend story there. stu: good luck with that. woe have anti an anti-pipeline president. >> but we have an energy secretary that admitted pipeline was the safest way to transport
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oil and gas and need more terminals to export l and g to europe. stu: umi capitals. what's it yield? david: 5% and grows about 8% we are year. stu: don't worry, i'll take 5%. david : i know you will. stu: now, you're going to be with us for the whole hour so we'll get more dave denned plays later. dividend plays later. thank you, david. take a look at tesla. lauren, did i hear they're having trouble getting people back to the office? lauren: yeah, because people were promised they could work from home and now have to relocate to work from the house and tesla doesn't have room. people have showing up but taking calls outside for quiet because of the noise. employee moral is down big time. yes, that has to do with the twitter nonsense too, but basically in june, elon musk said you're coming in and at least 40 hours a week or you're leaving. stu: they don't like it? lauren: a lot don't don't like it and it's been hard for tesla
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to hire because of that, which i doubt because i think tesla is a cool company to work for stu: david, what do you have to say about tesla back to the office? david: biggest nonsense back to the office ever. anyone complaining about going back to work, fire them. if they complain about it, fire them. if they go use their cell phone outside as if they don't have a desk to make a call, fire them. i'm tired of it. get people back to work. elon musk has been a leader in this area and plenty of people now in new york city started getting their people back to work, way too late if you ask me, the law firms took about two years to get back to work, but tesla's done the right thing and these people complaining about it should probably say thank you and go on their way for their very good job and very good stock options. stu: i'm glad we got out of you this morning. david: i'm holding back. stu: we open the markets in 19 minutes and we'll be down a fraction. coming up, people of sussex, in
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england, fed up with prince harry and meghan markle and calling for the duke and duchess to be stripped of their titles. democrats won't say when the inflation reduction act will actually cut inflation. watch this. >> when does the inflation reduction act going to reduce inflation? >> well, i think if you look at -- thanks for being here. appreciate it. >> republican congressman kevin brady will be with us and he'll take that on. seven next. ♪ -- kevin is next. ♪
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stu: take a look at gap, please. it's not the gap, it's gap. kanye west is terminating his agreement with them over contract violations and the stockisdown 3.5%. white house celebrating their inflation reduction act. but new polls show people are not celebrating; right. # # >> retail sales came in and exclude them and take out autos and it decreased 0.3% and that could be an indication that the buying patterns are starting to change outside of buyy autos but talking about the polls, more than half of registered voters that the president's job performance on the government has been incompetent and the job numbers on inflation has been
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abysmal and only 29% of people approve, 65% disapprove his job performance on the economy, not much better. still more than half of registered voters disapprove of his energy policy and job on climate change. with images like we saw on the day that cpi inflation came out at 40 year highs, core inflation without food and energy prices rose for the first time in five months. inflation is not under control at all. more than three in four registered voters say the votes will be affected in november. >> i don't believe they have the right solutions to solve this problem so the idea of voting for one of -- a member of their party to continue the same trend of decisions just doesn't sit well with me. >> innocence to the current state of our economy in relation to inflation here in georgia, i
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definitely see purchasing power diminishing and consumer confidence dropping and i believe we'll see a lot of that reflected in the polls in november. >> this afternoon, the president will be focused on what he calls the threat to the democracy and later on tonight he'll hold a galla for the congressional hispanic caucus reaching out to the voters. stu. stu: edward, we got in in time before they fired up the big engine in the background to drown out fox. >> the truck is back and it did kick up the moment i started talking, yeah. stu: i know it. i know it. they're out to get us, edward. we'll be back. thanks very much. congressman kevin brady is with us and he's the ranking member of house weighs and means committee. will the inflation reduction act cut inflation or make it worse? >> yeah, it will not cut it. it will make it worse, especially in the short term and there's no real deficit reduction or change in global temperatures either.
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look, for most persons, there's nothing to be celebrating about here. this is a very cruel economy under president biden. we see them skipping meals, having trouble making their rents or their mortgage payments. one out of four americans are delaying their retirement because they can't figure out how to make ends meet with the crushing inflation under president biden, and we are in -- i don't even think those higher home housing prices have really entered the cpi yet. i worry about home heating fuel going umm especially as we enter the winter months and we are in a wage price spiral. the white house is in denial about this as well, but that's going to drive inflation as we saw with the wholesale prices yesterday, inflation is here to stay and it's soul crushing. stu: if the gop takes control of the house in november, i believe you will become chair of the house weighs and means committee and that means you hold the pursestrings. can you reverse any biden
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policies if you control the money? >> so, a couple thoughts, stu, i've announced my retirement after 26 years in congress. stu: sorry. >> i love my job and would love to be able to play that role, but it is time. one thought. secondly, republicans are -- one of our core principles in our new commitment to america will be an economy that is strong and a major part of that is getting this inflation under control. first part of the solution is stop fueling it. democrats are making worse with the $700 billion spending and we need more energy and more workers and less taxes and less regulation. all those costs are ending up in inflation so there's some pretty common sense approaches here. will the president go along with that? no. he is determined to wreck this economy and frankly, i've never seen an economy -- a recovery wrecked so thoroughly and
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quickly as this president. stu: indeed. i like to talk about the commitment to america. that's the republican plan going into the november elections. as i understand it, that plan, that comp will be released on september 23rd, is that accurate? >> yes, sir. yes, sir. stu: and contained all that you're going to do if you take control of the house. >> yeah, our belief is americans after watching the president's dismal performance and this congress run by one party, they want some real solutions here. an economy that's strong, you know, communities that are safe. a government that's accountable and a future that's more free than the one we have today, and you'll see specific policies, house republicans are going to govern on. it's one of the best i've seen in a long, long time, and i think it's exactly what the country needs right now. stu: well, sir, we wish you well in your retirement. >> thank you, stu. stu: i feel bad about that. >> tell you what, i'm running through the tape here so we'll still be on the job till early
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january in the new session. stu: excellent, so you'll be back on this program i do hope. >> yes, sir, i hope so. stu: see you soon. thanks a lot. check futures please, market opens in seven, eight minutes time. looking at red ink now, not much but red on the left hand side of your screen. we'll be back. back ♪
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to see here later in the month, that is going to be a telling tale and our inflationary fight is going okay from a monetary perspective. stuart, there's a risk component we have to deal with now, investors and you and i with our retirement money and we have to be weary that's going to be happening and we're not getting that nice neat bottom we hit in march and april 2020 of covid and take off again. that's not the scenario we're going to get till the end of the year. stu: i understand of my idea of buying a two-year treasury and holding till maturity and yielding 3.7, 3.8%, that idea is
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growing on you, dr? >> you're right, stuart. i know you read my notes there and what i suggested perhaps is that folks out there now with the one year treasury having an even higher return and yield and 3.95 seconds ago that they could get that with a shorter duration. and regular investors can buy that on treasury direct, straight from the government without a middle person in between. so that's a pretty good deal. one year duration, almost 4% yield. not too bad. stu: but there's a tax break involved here, i think? >> yes, the state and local level, you get that exact tax break and with the volatility, might help some people sleep at
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night instead of jumping into the great dividend stocks thanksgiving david is going to -- stocks that david is going to talk about and the ibm stocks that we've covered in the past weeks and months. stu: i'm transferring my allegiance on the one year treasury on the grounds that restricts me less and i'll get 3.95%. david is sitting next to me, not sure he's keen on that idea. we'll get into it later. here we go, the market is about to open. it's off and running, here we go. the dow is going to be down just a little in the opening few seconds of business. looks like we're down 52 points and winners on the big board and not all open yesterday and no real clear price trend yet. how about the s&p 500, that's opened slightly lower and down half a percent and nasdaq down a bit and i presume that big tech is not doing well, that's accurate. apple down 154, amazon 127 and
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microsoft slipping below $250 a share. staying on big tech, david's with me. is this the group, big tech, the group that l leads us out? david: i don't believe it is and a lot of people are waiting for it to do so. that would be a very contrary thing. historically the sector leader in one decade was never the lied leader in the next decade. never once. it usually goes to the bottom of the pack, and that's where it is so far. right now the leading drop is in technology. now, big tech has done much better than smaller tech in some of the frothier more expensive-type names and they're down 70, 80% but even in big tech, netflix down 70, facebook down 60, and apple, google, microsoft are only down 25ish and so forth. apple's done better and i think they were very expensive and you'll get a repricing and on a go forward basis with yields
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higher, value is going to outperform growth this decade, not just this year, this decade. stu: this decade. value out performs growth this decade. susan is with us. any comments? susan: the dogs and the dow a year after the big hit, these stocks tend to outperform so it depends on your outline, but i think also technology, innovation will outperform in the next decade or so. stu: i want to see netflix, can you put that up on the screen, please, because i think it's up this morning. netflix got a boost from a financial from evercore. susan: mark that comes on your program is raising netflix to outperform and in his view, it's worth 30% more and you could get $300 because of that new ad tier that's coming pretty soon. netflix themselves outlined they could get 40 million viewers by 2023 onto that ad tier and that's why evercore says it's worth a buy and also if you think about it, netflix is comes to the realization that their
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pure subscription model doesn't work in this type of age. also, if i was a linear, if i was a comcast, broadcast network provider, i would have concerned a lot of ad revenue migrating onto the streaming sites and disney coming out with an ad tier in early december. stu: netflix at 232 as we speak on the upside this morning. >> if it hits 300, only down 50% from the all-time high. stu: let's not forget that. got that dig in there. susan: talk about growth then when it comes to technology and some of these plays. are you going to get 30, 40% growth in margins like with apple and value plays like railways, airlines, banks, et cetera, david? >> no, you're not. the attention between growth and value investors is the price you pay. if you're getting 30% growth and paying 100 times earnings, you're over paying for 30% growth. susan: what about apple? if you're paying 30 times growth
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and it was growing. david: it was trading 16, 17 times and not 30 times earnings. by its own standard, apple is at a bigger premium in valuation. susan: it's about how you price growth and price earnings. david: it's always about how you price growth and investors always overprice it. stu: all this technical stuff. aisle move on. susan: it's how you value a portfolio. stu: whatever you say. rail stocks, i presume they're up a little this morning, no rail strike. susan: yeah, surprised to see it's not down more. maybe david can add into this as well. you're not losing $2 billion a day in these disruptions and rail is a good indicator on the health of the economy, how much are goods be -b shipped across the country and how much are people willing to move across the country. stu: why is csx down? special news?
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susan: i will look into that but they were up in the premarket after that deal. stu: tell me about gap, not the gap but gap. kanye west terminating his deal with gap. susan: he's terminating because he said gap didn't live up to their contractual obligation including contributing products, opening stores and dedicating the yezi clothing line and this deal was set to tonight through 2026, included royalties, equity to kanye and to distribute about 8.5 million shares to yezi after the target was met and i think it'll be very lucrative and in this era and economy, a lot of vc multibillionaires will tell you, why does kanye need a gap. doesn't gap need kanye and yezi more? it's like the kim kardashian billionaire scenario. stu: kanye west is considered an
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influencer? sue sisusan: absolutely. in this era, celebrities are the brands. they don't need the gaps anymore. stu: gap is down 1% as we speak. fill me in on this. adobe buying $20 billion and maybe they're overpaying for the figma deal. susan: exactly, that's the thousand on wall street and it's been $20 billion and one of the largest private company acquisitions so what figma does is personal designed work for websites now, is it worth $20 billion? that's the argument. have you heard of kanva? one of the most valuable startups in the world and that's a graphic and you can make your own graphics. stu: i just feel so -- almost out of touch. i never heard of figma.
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susan: or canva. stu: yeah, till today. david: who pays $20 billion for design company? a company that doesn't respect its shareholders enough to pay dividends every quarter. companies that have the disciplined dividends don't do nma deals like this. susan: they released earnings in this acquisition. stu: we're having a livelier discussion than usual at the opening of the market. david: when the market is down 12%, they're saying you're not just overpaying, you're overpaying substantially and there's been dealing people thought were overpaid, microsoft with skype and google with youtube. susan: aol. david: this was the worst one of all times. it's the irresponsibility of corporate board rooms and they get board with too much cash on hand and overpay for a design company for $20 billion. dear lord. stu: for a dividend, he's got strong opinions. david: just getting warmed up. stu: we like it.
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we've got another 20 minutes on the show. house democrat caucus share jeffreys thinks his party has republicans on the run. >> they're running scared. they're not measuring the drapes anymore because the positions of extreme maga republicans, the american people do not like what they see. stu: okay, the newly minted anchor of fox news sunt, that will be shannon bream, she'll comment on that later on in the show. chik-fil-a called a hero and the staffer rushing to help a mother with a baby getting carjacked. could cost you $10 million bucks getting into a taxi in new york city. the new proposal that could have fares surging. ♪
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stu: those mar markets are showg just a little bit of red ink, not much here. down 28 on the dow and 21 on the nasdaq. show me bitcoin, please. holding onto $20,000, barely. $20,078 per coin. still on cryptos. all right, susan, i need you here. i want to talk -- i want you to talk to me about't either. i understand there's a huge upgrade in progress on ether. susan: it's live today. ask me question ifs you don't understand. this is proof of work, meaning minors, bit computers, it's
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proof of stake. the people that own ethereum can validate this is the next chain on the block chain and that's how you create ethereum and ether. does that make sense? stu: yes, it does. susan: without the miners, 99% greener, faster they say. some would say this is going to help institutional clients that it's client friendly and that's positive and also for the price itself, there's less available stock right now supply because this merge just happened so that's also bullish for the price. but i would say for me, the calculation on how successful this merge, this new platform, this new alteration is is how fast can i use it to buy nfts, which is the main dominant currency you use to buy the non-fundable tokens, and how much am i paying for gas prices to use the ethereum block chain to buy any nft. stu: that was a sufficiently
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long explanation so i have no time to follow up at all. all though david here is rolling his eyes aggressively, we cannot go to him. david: you can go gamble in vegas or atlantic city and -- susan: you're just a nonbeliever in nfts and crypto. >> david: yes. lauren: there was a viewing party at 3:00 a.m. for the merge. about 40,000 people watched it live on youtube. i was up while it was happening but i didn't watch. not my cup of tea. susan: 24 hours into international. stu: 20 seconds to tell me about coin base rating politicians. cryptocentral. susan: talk to me about privacy issues as well because if i was a politician, i don't know if i want to be rated on the actual app itself in the right hand corner in terms of how friendly i am to the cryptouniverse.
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serious is that what they're doing? susan: yeah, some say it's bullish once you get parameters and rules and regulations around cryptocurrency. stu: okay. stu: got it. this is important. tennis star roger fedderrer announced he's retiring from tennis. he said "the labor cup next week in london will be my final atp event. i will play more tennis in the future but not in grand slams or on tour. to the game of tennis, i love you and will never leave you". he is 41 years old and a gentleman too. coming up, a school in ohio told teachers they don't have to notify panters if their child, as young as 11, requests to be called bay different name or pronoun. panters are outraged. roll it. >> what are we teaching our children? it is not your responsibility to worry about moral values, that
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is a parental right. you are treading on parental rights all over the place, and you're also violating the constitution. stu: caitlyn jenner will offer her opinion on this later on in the show. the world health organization said the covid pandemic may be nearing a close. what does that mean? dr. mark segal is here, next. ♪
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stu: the white house is urging people to get the new omicron booster. is there a rush to get it or should we be rushing to get it? lauren: well, one doctor says get it by halloween. why does he set up by october 31st? there's enough weeks to take full effect for the winter holidays when you gather with family and friends indoors. and the pfizer and moderna vaccines, boosters, target the original omicron and the latest -- the original covid and the latest omicron variants but they say that protection only lasts for three to four months so i don't see many people
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raising their hand and saying, sure, every quarter i'll get a booster shot. stu: i don't see that. lauren: especially for me i was out two days sick from the shots. stu: yep, i remember it well. we need a doctor, we happen to have one. his name is dr. mark segal and frequently comes on this show by the way. should everyone get the omicron-specific booster, doctor? >> well, the way you set that up, what am i going to say? they should give it out on halloween when you're getting candy, get a snickers bar and the vaccine? lauren: sorry, doctor. >> i want to say in all seriousness though, i see a role of this in people of high-risk groups and people over the age of 50 and 60 and underlying health conditions and haven't had a shot in a long time. we're looking at immunity the wrong way, and i think the government has promoted it the wrong way. what is immunity and where do you get it? if you had covid, that's natural immunity and it helps you against the variant and the shot is targeted to the variant, and
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we've been in omicron territory for a long time now, which is good news because more immunity is spreading and it's milder. the world health organization is about to signal the end of the pandemic and you know they're always behind the game. but they're saying 28% less cases in the world right now, 22% less deaths last week in the world. we're heading in the right direction, but i'm not against the tools. i'm not against the snickers bar and not against the vaccine for the right groups. stu: wait a minute, there's a lot of things i'm not following today. what's this snickers bar thing? >> that was a joke about halloween, stuart. i was saying that when you're trick or treating, you know, he's saying -- the doctor saying by halloween get your covid shot and i'm saying i'm more focused about the candy they're handing out at the door. stu: is it only thursday? okay, okay. okay. hold on a second. it's a technical question, you've to answer this one, doctor, can you get the booster
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if you've not been vaccinated? >> yes. that's a really good question and the answer is then it doesn't function as a booster. then it functions as a preliminary shot. this is finally the technology catching up with where we are with it. we're in omicronville and venn, this is targeting it. i want to point out something else, really important here. they're very far behind and you're a big fan of bio-technology. we should have a nasal vaccine by now the way that china has. we have much more advanced technology that we're very slow to finance here to give us a pan coronavirus shot and we're sticking with the mrna vaccines, and i like them especially for high-risk groups, but we can do a lot better with this. lauren: can i ask you a question, dr. segal, it is true a lot of people get severely sick after getting their shot or dose, what do you make of that? that makes me less hesitant to continue to get boost when had i'm out two days sick after it.
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stu: makes you hesitant to get boosted because you get sick. >> completely a very important point. i do think that this vaccine has a fair amount of side effects. you might want to make that decision with your doctor next time, lauren, because you're young and you're healthy. you know, you get to be older like me and what's his name over there, you might say, let's get the shots. you might get the shot. so here's the point, covid itself needs to be compared with the risk of the shot. covid can give you long covid. you know, you might have brain fog, might have fatigue, persistent symptoms. i'm worried about covid, and i am not afraid to have that discussion with any patient. what's your risk of the shot? is it going to give you fatigue? are you going to be knocked out for two days versus what's the risk of covid? in your case, lauren, the risk of covid is pretty low so that needs to be taken into account. that's the way this should be talked about. not main dates or demands or punishing people. stu: dr. fauci -- i mean siegel
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for your input today indeed. lauren we'll give you a snickers. >> i apologize to those with peanut allergies out there lauren: we're all the realm today. stu: we're out of time. david, thank you very much for being with us. your input was valuable. gibbing check of the markets and looking at green, dow up 80 points and nasdaq up 15. we'll take that. brett bare, shannon brean, caitlyn jenner. what a 10:00 hour, that's next. ♪ and op
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