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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  October 31, 2022 9:00am-10:00am EDT

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planned? >> no. are you dressing dusty up, that's all i want to know? >> i haven't, but i'm thinking about getting her some new sweaters since the temperatures are changing. i was just thinking about that yesterday. >> i'm going as joe biden and will just start walking into walls all day. too much? maria: oh, boy, we're going to watch what the president does in the final week before the midterm elections and we have a market under pressure and we have the fed meeting tomorrow and wednesday, we'll likely get a 75 basis point hike and markets are down and don't forget to tune into fox business for the chicago pmi out in about 45 minutes and stuart will have that. dagen and rob, great to be with you. have a great day, everybody. "varney & co." is up next. stu, take it away. stu: i doubt i'm all over the number coming out at 9:45 but i may be reported. good morning, maria, and good
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morning, everyone. everybody monday i say, have we got a big show for you. well, today elon musk barges into twitter, biden furious at oil companies, obama rallies democrats as biden takes time off, a minor pull back of stocks after friday's big rally but i'm going to start with this, work earns streaming out of big fox con iphone plant in china. thousands of new cases reported at that plant, fox con denies the number and boosting pay and healthcare to get workers to stay on the job. the shanghai disney resort just closed indefinitely. china's zero covid affecting us. concerns of the future iphone production and the stock is down $2 at the moment. twitter saga, musk is considering big layoffs and considering monthly fees for bone fioed users and -- bona
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fide users and general motor halting ads on twitter and plenty of ho hollywood celebrits are leaving. the federal reserve widely expected to raise rates by 75 basis points on wednesday and dow off 170, s&p 20, nasdaq down about 80 points. bitcoin holding at $20,000 a coin. the 10-year treasury yield bouncing off 4% level and breeched before that last week, 4.04 right now and 2-year trading -- put d it on the scren because i don't know t price of gas is falling and national average for gallon of regular now $3.76 and the president is furious about this. he's not happy going into the midterms with gas prices at these levels and angrily demands the oil company uses profits to lower the price at the pump. former president obama out campaigning for democrats suggesting abortion is the
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important issue. biden took the weekend off. bad news in the polls, abc says the economy and inflation are the most important issues way out front of abortion, gun violence, and climate change. yes, it is monday, october 31st, halloween. i hope all your children are happy with their costumes. i know how difficult that can be. "varney & co." is about to begin. ♪ stu: this is ghost busters. i know it.
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i took my kids to see it years ago. let's start with twitter, is that coveted blue check mark, which means i'm a decent kind of guy, is that the cost? susan: you've got a lot of followers and i heard what elon musk will do is charge you for that blue check mark from $3 to $20 a month, pay to play subscription service, which is kind of how he plans to unlock value from the 300 million daily active twitter users and tweeting that the whole verification process is being revamped right now and has to find how to get the $44 billion back and musk is giving engineers a november 7 deadline to get the program up and running, and it makes sense given that 70% of journalists use twitter. a lot of them get special privileges by having that blue check mark so not a bad way to extract money, monetize, and get value from paying $44 billion and also payments, crypto, all
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initiatives that musk has proposed and just coming back from silicon valley and i have intel from the vc community, venture capital community and twitter never worth more than $44 billion and if someone is able to create value from buying twitter it's elon musk and bringing on vc friends into thee management team. stu: we have jeff seger, the man who called twitter a garbage company. do you think elon can turn the garbage company around? >> i have to believe is somewhere in his heart he has a lot of buyer's remorse about owning this pile of garbage, and i'm calling it the empire of dirt and he's the king of the empire of dirt. stu: go overboard why don't you. >> well, trying to get, as susan said, he has to get the value up
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to $44, $45 billion and you have banks that have about $20 billion of the debt. they put it out and have to keep it on their balance sheet because nobody in their right mind is going to touch this debt. it is going to make high yield look attractive. this is what's called junk and he has to fire people. i thought that was a real baller move last week to fire those three he's firing them with cause and he's trying to get out of paying their tens of millions they'd get for severance. stu: let's get to the markets, let's dangerous territory i suspect right there.
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goldman sachs says jay powell will likely raise rates 75 basis points on wednesday. that's the fourth aggressive move in a row. my opinion, jeff, it has to be a big move or jay powell loses credibility. what's your response? >> to me jay powell has lot credibility from the minute he said inflation is transitory. now what i find with jay powell is that he is doing -- the fed's new strategy is to take the path of least embarrassment and they've blown their credibility and they've made mistakes and they're probably not going to make the same mistakes again. they're just going to make different mistakes and the mistake they're going to make this time is raising interest rates too high, too fast. they're going to move towards putting us in more of a recession to do something about the inflation so they're at a point right now where them regaining credibility is extrems
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unlikely as you putting on a halloween costume and going trick or treating tonight. stu: very good, jeff. there's people that tune in every monday morning to see you bash somebody. really cool stuff. thank you very much, jeff. get politics, eight days to the midterms and former president obama hitting the campaign trail for vulnerable democrats. listen to what he's saying, roll it. >> they want to gut social security and medicare and then give big tax cuts to the wealthy and some of the most successful corporations in the world. they are not interested in actually solving problems. they're interested in making you angry and then finding somebody to blame. they're hoping you may not notice, you may be distracted from the fact that they don't really have any answers. stu: okay, charlie hurt is with us this morning. i want to go back to the beginning of the series of sound
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bites. what's this about gutting social security and medicare? where did that come from? >> i think it's a desperate ploy by democrats and&you know they're desperate when they go to wear fair class business and there's no basis in fact for him to make these claims and he's doing it same play because -- he's doing what he's accusing republicans of doing and he's trying to frighten people and trying to get them angry at somebody other than them, other than democrats for doing this. the whole reason barack obama is on the campaign tail is because the top democrat in the country, the leader of the party is like kryptonite to campaigns. nobody wants joe biden out there so they go to barack obama and even barack obama can't actually talk about issues. he has to fear monger and play
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class ware fare, which never works. stu: on that subject. karine jean-pierre was pressed about why obama was on the campaign trail and biden is not. >> the president has been talking about the economy every day and the things we saw the former president, president obama passionately speak about are the things at stake but also the work that the president, president biden and vice president harris have done to get our economy back on its feet for the last 20 months. stu: charlie, i have to say that kjp has a very tough job. what do you say? >> she does. it's the toughest job anybody has ever had and this election is a referendum on the job that president biden and kamala harris has done with the economy and it's going to be a very, very rough mesodamage for
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democrats, but it's -- but kjp is right about one thing, the election will be about the economy and joe biden's handling of it, and it's going to be devastating for them. stu: there's a prediction, devastating. charlie herd, thank you very much. the dow is up about 130, nasdaq up about -- sorry, down 130 on the dow, down 70 odd on the nasdaq. coming up, here's what we have for you, 79% of voters feel our country is out of control. is that good news for republicans? senator rick scott said -- well, he's got high hopes for the elections. roll it. >> this is our year, the democrats can't run on anything they've done. people don't like what they've done. stu: eight days to the vote and the trend is going the republican's way. democrats are on defense in deep blue new york state. kathy hochul calling herself the underdog against repose zeldin.
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could new york turn red? what a story. we have the latest on that race coming up next. ♪
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(soft music) stu: if you like the music emaciation semper the qr code on the. >> to the future's market. where are we going?
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on the downside but not by much, dow down 130 and na nasdaq by . the governor's race in new york is getting closer by the day. are both sides bringing in the heavyweights on >> reporter: yeah, they are, stu, good morning. we're in the village of thorn wood and you can see the lee zeldin bus is parked and getting ready for the rally, the republican candidate for governor and virginia governor glen youngkin joining lee zeldin in a few hours. it's similar to the blue trending areas outside of washington dc and virginia, the middle class and upscale, upper class residents. they're concerned about taxes, quality of life, and education.
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he wants to replicate some of youngkin's policies in the state and zeldin says in public education, he wants to give parents more say. >> the focus of gloverrer youngkin is very much in tune with the education policy feedback that i get from parents in west chester and in those surrounding areas and i believe that parents should have a fundamental right and they have a fundamental right to control the upbringing of their child. >> reporter: for her part, governor hochul campaigned with first lady jill biden and they were in mount kissko and down to long island and hochul addressing the issue of crime that's hurt her in the poll
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numbers so far in the campaign. she claims that gun crime is down and the perception that crime is high in new york state is simply wrong. >> crime is very important. people are concerned about it. there's a lot of fear out there but for that to be extrapolated that i told him i don't know why i have to keep telling him why it's so important because i already know. >> reporter: hochul will be holding a news conference with members of moms demand action, a gun safety group and as for zeldin who will be campaigning tomorrow in new york city and suffolk state county and exchanging the state legislature for the governor's mansion, we shall see. stu: we shall indeed. eric, see you again soon. the head of the country's largest teacher's union, randi wiengarten on the campaign trail and going with gretchen whitmer
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and stacey abrams. karol, she was one of the key people involved in shutting the schools down. what is she doing on the campaign trail? i don't get it. >> she was the key person for shutting down schools and they listened to her when she said schools must stay closed and she tried to keep schools close for school year 2021 and i say that because i don't think people realize it wasn't just 2020. she with thed schools closed for last year and the fact that randi wiengarten is on stage and they though she's toxic and campaigned with terry mccullough for the virginia win for republicans and they know how terrible she is and she's still on stage with them and that represents her power and what democrats think she can do for them. stu: next one, karol, lee zeldin crimed out crime in new york.
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>> lee zeldin gets into office, new york will become a law and order state and he will be a law and order governor. the crime problem has been totally self-inflicted. you cut police budgets, you do things like eliminate cash bail, and you have rogue prosecutors who won't even enforce laws they disagree with, of course you'll have streets that are less safe. stu: karole, let me tell our audience that don't know, you fled new york to florida because of crime and everything else. is the crime bad enough to get lee zeldin elected? >> absolutely. i have a column in the new york post where i specify that the crime is so unusual in laces like new york and argue with the katie hochuls of the world whether or not crime is bad. i love seeing my governor spreading the message of low crime is possible and lee zeldin might be the way to go on it. i get messages from friends in
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new york now that i've moved to florida saying if lee zeldin loses by a point or two, it'll be your fault because you left. new york can save itself and you're all out there and can vote and do it. i'm rooting for new york and hope they do it. stu: so am i, i live and work here. karol, thanks for being with us and i know you'll be back again real soon. the supreme court will be hearing arguments about affirmative action in higher education and i believe this involves harvard university. susan: that's right, harvard and north carolina and this is a landmark case against the college admissions process, and they argue that asian and white students are being unfairly discriminated against and approaches in higher education violates constitutional protections and federal law that means you should not consider an applicants race at all and harvard discriminates against asian american students in the lawsuit especially with the personal rankings that we talked about, and that seems to reflect
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cultural stereotypes about asian students and personalities and makes it harder for asian american students to get acceptance in harvard, despite the fact they have higher scores usually whether in sats or grades and despite the fact you're looking at most diverse supreme court in history. ketanji brown recused herself and we'll see. some say we'll get a ruling in the next month or so. but this could be huge in the admissions process really that could change the entire landscape. stu: affirmative action and higher education could be over. susan: yeah, not just in higher education but it could be translated to other. stu: all over the place. yes, it is unconstitutional and that's what the supreme court says, that's the end of it, good-bye. susan: yeah, but just in the asian american communities especially with parents that of course we know culturally push for higher education, they would like to see more of the grades being considered than these
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stereotypes around personality. stu: try hard and play by the rules and you're in in my personal opinions. stu: we'll take you to the opening bell, next. arkansas ♪
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stu: keith fitz is with us. which big tech is best to buy right now? >> go to the head of the class of the companies building our future. that's apple and microsoft bar none. stu: that's it, bar none? >> well, it's always a game of things and i'm going into the chip makers and crowd straiks and the cloud flair and they're at the head of the class and everything else follows them. stu: i'm looking at meta, $98 a share. does it go up or down from here? i think you say it goes down.
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down >> i think $50 a share before it's done. stu: we've got that on tape and probably rerun it many, many times in the future. >> i hope so because we were right off of 300. stu: that's true, you were right off of 300. how about big energy, that's done extremely well recently and you put money into it and you're going to buy some more? >> we did, stuart. we put some more and look at this, north carolina, china and russia fundamentally changed the global supply chain and this has a long way to run and people will latch on to the idea when they're literally freezing because there's not enough liquid, natural gas and fuel oil to go around. stu: it's the changing of the guard and for 12 years, 10 years we've had big tech dominating things and that's the group going places and they're building the future. now it's a switch to big energy. that's like a 180, isn't it? >> it is and isn't the irony extreme because all the sudden there's a digital distribution
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network on top of what is otherwise a linear business model. people don't see it coming, which is a huge opportunity for savvy investors. >> any opportunity in the midterms if for example the republican sweep congress. >> you know, i'm not smart enough to figure that out and wowed like to believe there is as all the sha shenanigans stop and i've never seen an election like this in my lifetime. stu: apping, microsoft, good and big energy, good. other tech stocks bad. i can sum it up like that. keith, you get to the point which strands me with 30 seconds of air time put in there and keith, you're all right. see you again soon. the dow opening on the downside in just a couple seconds and probably looking at about a half percentage point or two-thirds of one percent down. we're now open. we are open for business on a monday morning.
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let's have a look at dow 30 on your screens. s&p 500 down a half percentage point, a bit more than that. and nasdaq composite on the downside of two-thirds of 1%. have a look at big tech again. amazon is up, the rest of them are down. susan is back for wilds of silicon valley. what's an big tech today? susan: looking at last day of october today, this is the best h since 1976 and we're coming off one of the worst weeks for big tech. worst week ever for meta, worst week since 2016 for amazon and a bit of recovery here and i'll tell you why. morgan stanley this morning says s&p 500, that includes the big tech stocks that could help lead the rally, we could go up to 4150 and get 6% upside and
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that's because morgan stanley chief strategy has a lot of confidence in the bear market and he says that it looks like we're closer to the end of fed tightening and that's to the last one will come, last tightening in december and first one in the first quarter of 202. stu: i want to re-fur -- 2023. stu: i led the whole show with this in the tom of the hour, thousands of workers seen fleeing china.
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susan: the video of the group caught fleeing the largest iphone compilation center in china. they're denying a mass escape and said production is stable in their view. that's why wall street is trying to figure out who is right here and who to believe. i spoke to apple ceo tim cook and asked about china and he said there's no china covid impacts on production or even silicon access, which are the parts they need to bill those iphone -- build the iphones in the quarterly reports or earnings. stu: we had a report this morning i read on roisters that the shanghai -- the shanghai disney shut down with people inside. susan: they shut down operations in order to comply with those sudden china covid restrictions and apparently they directed visitors to stay put inside till they returned a negative test. shanghai government said they
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were barring people from entering or exiting the disney land park till their results were confirmed as negative. good news, rides stayed open so you could get on rides inside but this isn't the first time that visitors to shanghai disney land were stuck inside. last year 30,000 in november were suddenly locked in. disney stock is down a little bit in reaction to this news but it's just tough. stu: it's a good job there's no elections in china and if there's elections in china, the covid policy might take a hit . can you imagine with a country of 1.3 billion. why is there still a covid policy in china. susan: in my travel and discussions with senior level individuals in asia, china with 1.3 billion, their hospital system can't handle a massive outbreak of covid. that's why they want to clamp down very tightly on covid outbreaks and cases. stu: even if it doesn't work and
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messes up the economy. 1.3 billion, can't have a run on the hospitals. all right. big deal here, black stone struck a deal with msn electric and which part of emison are they buying? susan: the climate technologies business. the reason why the stocks are down is because this news, this deal news was reported a few weeks ago. buy on the rumor and sell on the news. that's what's happening right now. this is a $14 billion acquisition and includes debt. i think i'm encouraged actually that these are -- there's these type of transactions taking place in this environment where rates are no longer zero for the first time in more than ten years. stu: where does black stone get the $14 billion from? susan: as you know, they do very well and have a big cash pile and a large distributable income, which is how you measure private equity firms. stu: a look at caterpillar. they've been on a tear. i think that stock is up 33% this month, down fractionally
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today and somebody doesn't like them. who is it? susan: ubs downgraded the stock from neutral to buy and they want to reflect a more ball languagessed risk war profile and -- balanced risk war pro file and they're still up over the long term and you have to be given we have trillions of dollars being spent on infrastructure around the world. not just here. everywhere else china is building and emerging markets as well. stu: it's like this changing of the guard and go from big tech towards industrial company value. susan: yeah, but end of bear market being called in q1, 2023 of mike wilson in morgan. stu: susan, thank you very much indeed. check the big board in business for six minutes and down 130 points. show me the dow winners, please. i know there's system. some. chevron, oil company doing well and united health up there again and s&p 500.
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wynn resorts. mosaic company. susan: i think it's a software company actually. stu: all right. technology, align technology, none of the big names except for amazon on the list of nasdaq winners. where's the 10-year treasury yield he asks? over 4%, 4.05 to be precise. the price of gold, $1638. bitcoin $20,000 a coin. where's oil? it's down a fraction, $86.94 and nat gas up sharply. it's getting cold. $6.30 thermal units and average price of gallon of gas is $3.76 and gallon of diesel, no change at $5.30. coming up, elon musk completed his takeover of twitter but he set up a liberal meltdown. listen to what amy klobuchar
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said about him. >> now that elon musk runs twitter, do you trust him? >> no, db of i i do not. i don't think people should be making money on passing on this stuff that are a bunch of lies. stu: one says the pr democrats d president joe biden are not to blame for inflation. it's capitalism. we'll be back. ♪
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stu: hillary vaughn is at the white house. which tweet is getting flagged. >> the president tweeted, let me give you the facts, in 2020, 55 corporations made $55 billion and paid zero in federal taxes and inflation reduction act puts an end to this but twitter is now calling out -- fact checking calling it out saying the inflation reduction act put a minimum tax on small corporations and the tweet references only 14 had earnings greater than $1 billion and would be eligible under biden's tax law. this comes as the white house continues to defend their handling of the economy so far as voters are putting them on defense according to a new abc poll and about half of americans say the economy or inflation is the most important issue to their vote for congress. the so-called inflation reduction act has not lived up to its name for voters just yet. this friday brought bad news for
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the fed and for people looking for relief from high prices, pca inflation climbed again in september to 6.2% rising faster than the fed is hoping for as they weigh more interest rate hikes but president biden's economic team insists that inflation is a global problem. >> there's no question, prices, inflation are too high around the world and we've not escaped it here. those are all things he's doing and all of them are things that the republicans are talking about undoing that would only raise prices for typical families. >> president biden has insisted it's the fed's job to get control of inflation but now some democrats in congress are worried about even more interest rate hikes. the top democrat on the senate banking committee sharon brown issuing a statement warning about -- warning the fed about raising interest rates too high too quickly saying he thinks that job losses could be a side effect of that. stuart. stu: got t hillary, thank you
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very much indeed. then we have progressive congressman jamal boman saying inflation is not democrat's fault. >> the issue of inflation is not related to democrats or biden's fault. it's a problem of the core of the economic system that's been there for a very long time. price gouging is out of control, corporations are making record profits and we have to hold them accountable. stu: okay, i need steve forbes and here he is, thank goodness. steve, is this the socialist wing of the united states congress? >> yes, it is. they're about to get their wings clipped in a week from tomorrow thankfully. for 3,000 years, governments have always blamed others for inflation and inflation comes from the government, central banks mucking things up, like the dollar and supply chains like oil and gas production. roman times they blamed
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christians for inflation and good for the lions but didn't curve inflation and medieval times they blamed it on the witches and 1920s they blamed on jewish bankers and merchants and 1970s, richard nixon on greedy arabs and always blame it on others and government is at fault for the federal reserve and federal government itself and central banks around the world making the same mistake for ten years printing a lot of money, zero interest rates and wonder why prices are going up. look in the mirror, fellas. stu: that was a very good historical round up there, steve. glad you came up with that. we have another one, new abc poll shows the economy and inflation is top of voter concerns and surely good news for republicans; right, steve. >> it is indeed. when the biden administration tries to tell people things are hunky dory and people shop and see it again today. when biden took office, 8% today
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or by the fed's contorted inflation index, still over 6%, four or five fold increase and voters want action and the federal reserve unfortunately has the belief that the only way you bring inflation down is by putting people out of work. i think the republicans are going to take a look at that when they win next week and also removing barriers to oil and gas production in this country. stu: if the republicans sweep congress next week, what could they do? realistically to clamp down on inflation? >> they're going to allow for permission and doing legislation now that they would remove the barriers to producing and moving oil and gas on federal lands instead of blockages the administration put today and whole infrastructure ministry and sweeping those things away and if biden wants to veto those, it'll be a great issue that would hurt the country and hurt the democratic party.
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they'll start by getting spoil gas production up in the country and there's a serious production of oil and gas around the world and they better pray for a mild winter or we'll have real problems going into the spring. stu: you got it. steve forbes, great stuff. see you again later. thank you. >> thank you. stu: the chairman of the democratic congressional campaign committee says republicans don't have a plan to fix inflation. all right. what else did he say, susan? susan: inflation and the economy are the top two issues and heading into the midterms with the latest abc poll and interesting to hear from representative patrick maloney, listen. gee with have a plan for cheaper gas, cheaper groceries, cheaper housing and cheaper healthcare. they have no plan to move our country forward, protecting voting ri rights and reproductie freedoms and don't punish the people fixing your problems and don't reward the people trying to exploit the problems for their own political power. that's the difference right now.
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we're engaged in the hard work of bringing our country forward. the other side is working on their own power. susan: now, it can be argued that inflation including rising prices for gas, food and goods have soared under the biden administration and half being blamed on the $2 trillion america rescue plan last year. half of the 40-year inflation surge comes from that and gop has been seen as better stewards that the economy has in recent polls i've seen. stu: that gentlemen saying we're going to cut healthcare costs and that's how we're going to help people. that's not for two years, that's the whole punt. cut inflation now. susan: has to have more concrete ideas from everybody that's running this year. stu: okay, maybe agree to differ. coming up, do you remember when "fox & friends" sent lawrence jones and [inaudible] into a haunted house? roll it. >> we're good. we're good. you got this. [ screaming ].
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>> no, no, no, no. stu: got him going there. it turns out haunted houses may actually help reduce stress and lower anxiety. i'm a little skeptical on that but we'll bring you the story. country star luke bryant brought florida governer desantis on stage and that sparked a backlash. why can't the governor of florida go to a concert to raise money for the victims of hurricane ian in his state? we'll discuss. ♪
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stu: tom brady and giselle are dividing up their $650 million fortune. gerri willis is here. who's worth more? >> well, i have to tell you, it was bunchin early on, absolutely. tom brady married up. according to celebrity net worth, she earned $500 million in salary and endorsements between 2000 and 2020. lawyers for tom and giselle working with lawyers to hammer out the settlement and some
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$26 million worth of property and lots, lots more to split. the terms of the split will remain confidential and sealed so we're not likely to get total all the details; right? according to experts, the pair almost certainly sign add prenumb created to protect bunchin more than brady at the beginning of their relationship and she was the highest paid model in the world from 2002 to 2017. in recent years brady making up ground and he's the ninth highest paid athlete in the world and flush with endorsement deals like under armour, subway and crypto platform and production company called 199 because that's the number he was chosen first to play. he was the 199th draft pick if you'll remember. listen. >> my suspicion is each kept their own property and about agreeing on sharing time with the kids and dividing up
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properties that they have together. >> now, the couple will have to figure out how to split up the shared property including the mega mansion they designed together and the production on the home has been halted and super fancy, big security operation and a total gym, we'd expect that from tom. lots going on there. stu: it's much easier for wealthy people to get divorced because they don't encounter financial insecurity. they've both got enough to work out. >> emotionally it's probably easier; right? absolutely. they have the two kids so that's a big deal. stu: it is indeed. i don't mean to make light. check the markets, 25 minutes into the session and we're down across the board, down 230 on the dow and 140 on the nasdaq. cofounder of home depot will be here, will cain, florida congressman steube. the 10:00 hour of "varney & co."
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is next. ♪ . . cut through the noise with best-in-class education resources that match your preferred style of learning. learn your way. not theirs. td ameritrade. where smart investors get smarter℠. my husband and i have never been more active. shingles doesn't care. i go to spin classes with my coworkers. good for you, shingles doesn't care.
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because no matter how healthy you feel, your risk of shingles sharply increases after age 50. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. ♪
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