Skip to main content

tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  November 25, 2022 1:00pm-2:00pm EST

1:00 pm
dave: welcome to the second
1:01 pm
hour of "cavuto coast to coast". if i'm david asman. you are not looking at a reply, the markets are closing, the dow finishing as stocks close a winning week on a shortened trading day. not so good for the s&p and nasdaq. let's get the read from gary gary kaltbaum and dan gill trued --geltrude. good to see you guys for thanksgiving. the phrase gird your loins, you are a big local scholar. that is a phrase i am hearing from particularly small businesses, we are expecting a recession. >> from very big companies, and
1:02 pm
that starts to happen, through the small businesses, if anybody knows anything it is the small companies, the engine of the country, engine of the economy. has to be watched big time closely through the pipes over the last year, higher prices for everything, most people are buying and it crushes these small businesses, cost the food chain from top to bottom comes delivery of whether it is food or any type of product. it has to be watched, if you listen to anybody that is the place. dave: i listen to you when you talk about taxes, you deal with a lot of clients, individuals and companies in terms of giving advice, one good news i think we can deliver from the election is with a republican
1:03 pm
house you are not going to see a raise in taxes over the next couple years. >> we shouldn't because they are going to need some of the republicans to vote for tax increases, i don't think we will see that but the good news related to taxes is the trump tax cuts which are going to expire in 2025, right now, there is the political element, you have a chance if you want to have the glass half-full that you could have an extension of those trump tax cuts in 2025 depending on how the elections go. dave: unless you have republicans in congress that are dumb enough to go along with a tax increase we are operating under the trump tax code for the rest of this term. >> i think that's the case and it is good news. dave: how does all of this affect the markets here?
1:04 pm
>> i'm worried. the markets rally in, the dow is rally and, nasdaq has been dead and that is the risk on area so i am worried and a lot of stocks rallying and earnings are down and keep going down so people talk about how better earnings are, that's the other way around. right now we are okay. i worry in 2,023. there are a lot of things in the system that will affect things and oil prices have come down, interest rates have come down but are elevating from where they are and the economy is used to. you add in, i've been saying this forever, $31 trillion in debt, rules, regulations, two words called executive orders, which for whatever reason the last few years in dc are much easier to get through, more
1:05 pm
emboldened -- dave: a student loan bailout. i don't think the supreme court will uphold that. there has been so much biden and the democrats played in such a sneaky fashion sending the word sign in today, even at one point misdiagnosed saying it was passed by the house which wasn't true. so much misinformation by this administration will be tough to claw that back. >> in a position where they have to explain why didn't work and the president was circumventing congress. this was a bait and switch, we are going to do this, he knew, he knew, at least his advisers knew there was no way that was going to hold up because it was unconstitutional.
1:06 pm
the president can't just spend money, call it an emergency which it is not, there is greater emergencies than student debt and think that is going to carry through. of course it falls apart after the midterms. dave: you mentioned oil prices coming down, that's good news in one sense but also why it is coming down, china has a crazy 0 covid policy which we know is the wrong way to deal with covid but it is the opposite of what needs to be done but it will slow their economy, the world economy, we know that europeans in many cases are in worse shape than we are, is there any way to avoid recession at this time? >> i'm in the camp we haven't, don't know if it will be a bad one. we were in europe 11 days, people were worried, in the uk energy, and tourism is a big
1:07 pm
thing over there. hasn't helped the currencies get worked out. there are so many ingredients for trouble, you know what dc has? us. 200 million people wake up every morning to go to work and do better for their families, if they didn't have us they would be in big trouble, and they are like their opponents, not sitting on their side, but face-to-face, something new every day and with the student thing they sent a big email to anyone who signed up for that, how bad the republicans aren't taking money away from you, let's do something about it. dave: one reason we have been able to skirt around recession or not have it dig as deeply as it usually does is this overhang of jobs left over from the pandemic itself, how quickly can those jobs disappear, the last count was
1:08 pm
under 10 million, still a lot of extra jobs, more jobs, could that shrink quickly if we entered every session? >> i'm not sure those jobs are going to shrink, they have big tech, large companies, fedex laying people off, 10 million job openings, it depends what type of jobs. there are a lot of jobs for whatever reason that people don't want to take. why? they got all this free government money. they are sitting back saying they don't have it. >> always the last shoe to drop before recession is the job market. i watch it holding up leica rock but you see a bunch of tidbits on a daily basis starting to crack a little bit. dave: rocks can drop pretty quickly. great to see you in person, thanks for being here, have a wonderful holiday weekend.
1:09 pm
as americans begin ordering christmas gifts today, devastating rail strike still looms, so should congress step into prevent the strike? here is new york congresswoman nicole malliotakis, good to see you, thanks for being here. you are on the transportation committee. i haven't seen much sign of pete buttigieg, he doesn't have the expertise in transportation. is he anywhere to be found negotiating with unions right now? >> doesn't appear to be the case. the white house spokesperson said they are trying to keep their hands off of it, which i don't understand how they can allow that to happen particularly when we are a couple weeks from this potential strike. the white house should be negotiating with railroads and unions to work out an agreement. they put a temporary band-aid to get past the election in
1:10 pm
september but now we are faced with this whole thing falling apart again and it is important the white house engage congress and -- dave: they should engage themselves. the white house press secretary, saying the president is personally involved in all this, she said it 3 times, wanted it repeated for emphasis, the president said in nantucket he's not presently engaged. which is a? >> that's the thing. she said they were engaged and then said they weren't engaged at the president confirmed they weren't engaged. this could be devastating to our economy. it can cost the american economy up to $2 billion a day if this were to happen and you think about the heating supply issues in the northeast, we need the rail to be operating and with the holiday season coming along this be real damaging to our economy if we
1:11 pm
can't get people to stimulate this economy by purchasing gifts and other things throughout this season and everything from chemicals that treat the water supply to the diesel that heats our homes in the northeast. all that will be coming mostly by rail and it is the devastation that the white house is not more engaged. i think push comes to shove i don't think the railroads are unions once congress involved. i think they prefer to work something out if they can. the biggest hold out at this time is the working conditions that unions want addressed particularly like addictive scheduling and time off but i think there is a deal to be made but congress should be preparing when we returned to congress, to be prepared to pass something at that would be probably the tentative deal passed in september with whatever concessions have been made by the railroads and the unions together.
1:12 pm
i want to avoid any potential strike because it will be devastating to american families who are paying so much for energy costs, food costs and the holiday season upon us. dave: congresswoman nicole malliotakis, thank you for being here. kicking off the holiday season, sheets which is a major mid-atlantic restaurant and convenience chain announced it is dropping gas prices this thanksgiving week to one dollar 99 a gallon. adam sheets, vice president of store operations joins me now, thank you for being here. i take it from your last name that this is a family business and family businesses have a connection with the community. is this more of a chance to kind of incorporate your company into the community in which you operated for so long? >> absolutely and thank you for
1:13 pm
having me. family-owned business, all about showing love to our customers especially around the holiday season, gas prices at their highest seasonal levels ever for the thanksgiving holiday and this is a great chance to reward our customers and raise awareness of a great product, unleaded 88 fuel. dave: tell us about unleaded 88. >> the regular gasoline supply is comprised of 10% ethanol in most of the country. it raises the octane from 87 to 88, burns a little cleaner and is almost always cheaper than regular unleaded gasoline, it is a great product very few retailers offer. dave: you are taking a bath on the price, can't be making a profit at this amount? >> we can make decisions
1:14 pm
differently than publicly traded companies, we are leaving a few pennies on the table. this is an innovative way to price fuel, to lock in the price for one week which we are doing here is great for the consumer and we are pleased to do that. dave: i love your support of the community. i would assume because you sell other stuff besides gas that you are increasing sales on other items and that might help you in the end. >> no doubt. we've done this before. we did it over over the summer when fuel prices were elevated, great traffic to our stores, inside, we are very appreciative of customers taking notice. dave: they are appreciative of what you are doing for them and the community, thank you for coming in, best of luck to you. >> thank you for having me.
1:15 pm
dave: democrats trying to pass billions of dollars in new borrowing before republicans take control of the house. what does that mean for inflation in america next? ♪ ♪ take the money and run ♪ ♪ go on ♪ take the money and run ♪ ♪ go on ♪ take the money and run ♪
1:16 pm
the first-ever all-electric chevy blazer ev. 0 to 60 in under 4 seconds. and up to 320 miles of range on a full charge. evs for everyone, everywhere. chevrolet.
1:17 pm
to finally lose 80 pounds and keep it off with golo is amazing. i've been maintaining. the weight is gone and it's never coming back. with golo, i've not only kept off the weight but i'm happier, i'm healthier, and i have a new lease on life. golo is the only thing that will let you lose weight and keep it off. who loses 138 pounds in nine months? i did! golo's a lifestyle change and you make the change and it stays off. (soft music) when people come, they say they've tried lots of diets, nothing's worked or they've lost the same 10, 20, 50 pounds over and over again. they need a real solution. i've always fought with 5-10 pounds all the time. eating all these different things and nothing's ever working. i've done the diets, all the diets. before golo, i was barely eating but the weight wasn't going anywhere. the secret to losing weight and keeping it off is managing insulin and glucose. golo takes a systematic approach to eating
1:18 pm
that focuses on optimizing insulin levels. we tackle the cause of weight gain, not just the symptom. when you have good metabolic health, weight loss is easy. i always thought it would be so difficult to lose weight, but with golo, it wasn't. the weight just fell off. i have people come up to me all the time and ask me, "does it really work?" and all i have to say is, "here i am. it works." my advice for everyone is to go with golo. it will release your fat and it will release you.
1:19 pm
dave: in nonpartisan group warning washington's year end spending relaying congress could cause inflation to, surge even higher. hillary vaughan is on capitol hill. >> reporter: government funding runs out the summer 16th, the best thing congress could do is leave the budget as it is before the holidays, committee for responsible federal budget warning, quote, with inflation surging a debt approaching record levels policymakers should avoid worsening the deficit, through 2022. policymakers considering a end of the year fiscal package that would make things much worse. the group estimating the budget democrats are riding behind closed doors, $585 billion in
1:20 pm
the first year and increase inflation by 1.5%, democrats who are out of power in the house in the new year think passing a budget is the one thing they can do before republicans take charge. >> i hope with the debt ceiling, to contribute a complicated climate economic issue. >> reporter: some republicans are pressuring mitch mcconnell to block democrats new budget before christmas and tree -- freeze spending until january so new federal funding reflects gop priorities. >> republicans want to see more fiscal response ability, we want to make sure we are paying down our debt, see offset, spend money, take it from somewhere, comes down to senate republicans sticking with us, we only get an extension of the current funding levels to the new year when republicans take control of the house and we
1:21 pm
have a seat at the table. >> reporter: the heritage foundation says if democrats did pass a budget in a lame-duck congress with power change looming that would break precedent and be the first in modern history. dave: it feels like they are going to do it anyway. good to see you. appreciate it. let's bring in russ vote for more on this. what conditions our finances in? thomas, these numbers, your eyes glaze over when you hear them but how could this desperate situation our finances are in affect the economy? >> we have a terrible fiscal situation, 30 one trillion dollars in debt, people talk trillions as if it is drinking water, throwing around constantly, nothing is a real proposal unless it is in the trillions and ads on top of it and unsustainable situation and
1:22 pm
we are facing 40-year highs in inflation, that will only continue, republicans in the senate have an opportunity to change that, to let the cavalry arrived in january and use the filibuster to block this bill, they have a shot to do so and allow them to rewrite these policies and start cutting spending in the new year. dave: what really bothers me and a lot of people i talked to, still don't know where all money is going, we spent trillions of dollars over the past several years from the pandemic and part of it from president biden's new way of looking at the economy and we don't know where the money is going. as former head of the omb the omb is supposed to track all money to correct me if i'm wrong but it is their job, one of their response abilities. i don't think they are doing their job, are they? >> this administration has been rock of an transparent, don't
1:23 pm
know if he's just not releasing it but it needs to be done whether it is covid funding or funding for ukraine, $38 billion for ukraine, where did the money go in the first place and every single level of government funding, tracking and figuring how it can be pooled back to get a handle on the fiscal situation in the year. dave: something else i'm interested in, k-12 education they receive $200 billion of money, most of it during the pandemic years but the american rescue plan came with $122 billion, a lot of parents don't see how that money is being used to better their kids education. if anything it has gotten worse. >> taxpayers never see the
1:24 pm
benefit of millions of dollars being spent. we spent so much in the midst of covid, there needs to be an accounting and the rush with a lame-duck congress to spend more money and do it because there are retiring senators, that's not the reason for why you pass a bill. you've got to take time to figure out with a new congress what you can afford, where the money has gone and what are the new policies you put in place, the they have an opportunity to do the right thing. my hope is they take it. dave: one of the good things we mentioned with previous guests, at least we still have the outlines of the trump tax policies and we are using that, and how much is that, on this
1:25 pm
rough period, >> the last thing we want to do is repeal the tax increases are not expend them. we are putting forward a budget in a week or so and we fully extend all the trump tax cuts, keep the economy growing because you can't balance the budget without a growing economy. you can't balance the budget with only a growing economy but it is one of the 2 main principles, the other being dramatically reducing spending particularly on weapon iced government, that's what is necessary, republicans have an opportunity to do both, to make sure tax cuts get expended and go after spending with abandon. dave: woke and weapon iced government, quite a phrase and don't think it overstates the situation, good to see you, thanks for being here. homebuyers not holding back, the surprising rise in new sales despite soaring home prices. our next guest says buyers are in a power position, details coming up.
1:26 pm
♪ fascinating they're looking for you. who? who's looking? there is no time. they will kill you....but my daughter. mama.
1:27 pm
nicorette knows, quitting smoking is freaking hard. you get advice like: just stop. go for a run. go for 10 runs! run a marathon. instead, start small. with nicorette. which can lead to something big. start stopping with nicorette. ♪ [laughing and giggling] (woman) hey dad. miss us?
1:28 pm
(vo) reflect on the past, celebrate the future. this season with audi.
1:29 pm
what if “just an idea” could become a family tradition? this is financial security. and lincoln financial solutions will help you get there. as you plan, protect and retire. ♪
1:30 pm
dave: crypto in crisis. crypto currencies plunging, fox business's edward lawrence has the latest on the investigation into the infamous exchange. >> reporter: senator elizabeth warren sending a letter to the doj asking to prosecute these white-collar crimes. right now investigators piecing together the tangled web of money transactions that happen across one hundred 7 entities over the ftx umbrella. the top of that pile, sam bagman-fried. there are similarities to what happens with ftx today and the bernie madoff case, one person
1:31 pm
controlling everything, no internal controls and created stories about their successes. >> small audit firm. why was a company with billions in investment money using an audit firm, they don't use a lot of firm that was in the shopping center. those are huge red flags to investors and venture capitalists putting money into these ventures. >> forensic accountant bruce stravinsky is not working on the case but he went through court documents, he says it could be 6 to 8 months before accountants knew where the money went, but no paper trail exists, then the work starts after that to get one million creditors, their money back. >> you will see that. a lot of people won't get their money back, and that passed away. the younger base of investors, the time horizon is greater,
1:32 pm
>> sandbank the man will speak at a summit. dave: and thank you very much. an unexpected development in the housing market, new-home sales climbing despite high mortgage rates and concerns about recession. here with what that means for homebuyers, and mitch rochelle, great to see you. did this shock you? i was surprised by the numbers. >>, the bullish side of housing you though everyone else is taking the other side of the trade. look at on a macro basis, they have excess demand for homes versus supply, supply of homes whether new or existing four months, they are creating that in this country, people moving
1:33 pm
out of their parents homes. we have demand for housing and not enough supplies. seeing these blips is a positive sign or mortgage rates have happened. dave: based on what you said, i thought inventory was beginning to build. you have a deficit of inventory, when all supply chain problems is beginning to build, and the young homebuyers, those moving out of their parents house to buy a new home are having the toughest time coming up with a down payment and higher interest rates. >> i will take those in reverse order. the first-time homebuyer is the one who is hurt the most. they are heard on every possible level. similar down payment may have been invested in the stock market has disappeared but depreciated. hopefully they weren't investing in ftx and everything
1:34 pm
is costing more, with higher mortgage rates and inflation eating into earned income. they are suffering the most and most likely someone who will borrow money as opposed to someone older, a cash buyer. in terms of inventory there's a slight pickup in the new homes side of the equation, the back log of refrigerators, spikes of lumber settled down. existing homes, 90% of home sales, the supply by historical standards insanely low. to put it in perspective we have 4-month supplies, compared to where we were in the financial crisis days, there were 14 months supplies. the reality, this is a tight market in terms of finding your dream home. dave: if you don't deal with
1:35 pm
interest rates or banks, i would think the green carpet is laid out in front of you when you walk into a real estate office, no? >> one hundred%. one of the things you said in this segment, we saw the ultimate sellers market, there was so much demand, bidding wars, people offering over asking price, right now because of the shift and the washout of some of the demand, all the power shifted to buyers from sellers so if you are looking to buy a home now is a great time. you have more purchasing power even though it will cost more and more leverage. dave: if we go into a recession people don't usually buy houses if they are worried about keeping their job for a year or less that could hope -- hurt sales. >> that the leg of the stool you have to keep an eye on. if we have a washout in demand
1:36 pm
because of attack on the labor market from a recession all bets are off. dave: let's hope it stays good. thank you for being here, appreciate it. it is a big weekend and georgia's early voting begins in the runoff, we will talk to georgia congressman buddy caller -- carter who knows about georgia and the race's implications, the new shebang, buddy carter next. ♪ ♪ at prudential we think you should say it when things go right too. like, when you score your dream job. sell your business. or discover she's smart... really smart. now what? here's what: you connect with prudential's rock-solid team serving over 50 million people.
1:37 pm
with investment, insurance and retirement know-how. who's your rock? visit prudential.com or speak to an advisor today. what if there was a community of like minded people ready to support you when you need it most? christian health care ministries is an organization with over 40 years of trusted care who understands the importance of family. a group that sees you for who you are, regardless of your health history, offering values based affordable health care cost solutions. learn more today at yourchm.org about health care that puts you in control. (woman 1) i just switched to verizon business unlimited. it's just right for my little business. unlimited premium data. unlimited hotspot data. (woman 2) you know it's from the most reliable 5g network in america? (vo) when it comes to your business, not all bars are created equal. so switch to verizon business unlimited today.
1:38 pm
1:39 pm
1:40 pm
>> we need to elect herschel walker to keep democrats from a complete majority in the senate. there's no longer the
1:41 pm
power-sharing agreement, and when i've taken the house and able to stop a lot of this -- dave: on the huge applications, in the senate race, as early voting begins tomorrow. let's bring in georgia congressman buddy carter for more details. i assume you agree with doug collins. it was important for republicans to have an evenly divided senate so committees are evenly divided even though the vice president can break a tie. >> doug is spot on and the values of the citizens of georgia. herschel walker would be a reliable conservative vote and we need that. we are not in a good situation
1:42 pm
but ask your self which you would rather have in charge of the senate, chuck schumer or joe manchin. i would rather have joe manchin. if they get that 50 first vote he will not carry as much clout as he has in the past and at least he has helped us some. dave: if warnock wins, the senate will not have evenly divided committees and the onus will turn on you in the house, to do all those committee hearings. there were hearings and there are hearing is. the two impeachment trials, the january 6th committee, and there is a fatigue among the american public, and there's a danger of that happening when it lands on your shoulders. >> there is a fatigue in the hearings democrats have been having. people are over january 6th. when i'm in my district they
1:43 pm
don't talk about it at all. they are over those types of hearings but they want to know things about hunter biden's laptop and what happened in afghanistan, the botched withdrawal of troops, 13 and was the worst public relations disaster in our country's history, they want to know why we need 87,000 irs agents. there may be a little fatigue but the fatigue comes about from what the subject matter has been. dave: you didn't mention, it was an oversight what is happening at the border, in particular how it is being handled by mr. mayorkas. a lot of your colleagues think one order of the next house congress is to put up orders of impeachment by mayorkas.
1:44 pm
>> you are spot on, when i'm in the district i'm hearing about inflation the cost of gas and groceries, the southern border, particularly drugs coming across the border. i'm hearing about crime and education. those are the things the people in the district i represent are concerned with. dave: there was a red wave in georgia as there was in florida and the governors race. in both georgia and florida you had this extraordinary turnout for the republican candidate that won both elections, governor desantis and governor kemp. governor kemp will be on the campaign trail for herschel walker. why did kemp have such enormous turnout and might be tough to get the same turnout for herschel walker? >> brian kemp did a great job in his first term as governor, he didn't shut the state down help we kept running and in
1:45 pm
this state, we are in great shape as a result of the leadership of brian kemp, he deserved a second term in the people georgia recognize and understand that and rewarded him with that. herschel is going to be fine. i think republicans in the state of georgia learned an important lesson during the runoff and that is we have got to show up. this runoff is unlike any other in the sense that it depends on who gets their voters out. that is the key. we've got to turn out. we republicans got to turn out for herschel walker. we need them in the senate. dave: if warnock is as left-wing as you say, it is a divided state where you had somebody turning out in record numbers for a very conservative governor who kept the state open during the pandemic and did things conservative republicans do and yet they saw what warnock was doing in the senate, didn't it click with them that this guys so much the
1:46 pm
opposite of the guy we really like in governor kemp? >> it did but the amount of money rafael warnock had poured into this race, this was a national race, it is unheard of, the amount of money they spent in this race, and and we need were herschel walker in the senate, we need a conservative republican like herschel walker. that's why we will get him elected. dave: you're going on the campaign trail. >> i'm supporting him as much as i can. at every opportunity that i can. dave: appreciate you coming with us and congratulations in the turnout in the election, you made ally of those claims about the georgia voting law spouted by the president of the
1:47 pm
united states, when the opposite of what he said would happen happened. the people georgia deserve kudos for that. appreciate it. travel soaring to near pre-pandemic levels as 55 million americans on thanksgiving, a live look at how airports are handling the rush. ♪ ♪ i just want to fly ♪ put your arms around me baby ♪ put your arms around me baby ♪ ♪ among my patients, i often see them have teeth sensitivity as well as gum issues. does it worry me? absolutely. sensodyne sensitivity & gum gives us the dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend.
1:48 pm
1:49 pm
well, we fell in love through gaming. but now the internet lags and it throws the whole thing off. when did you first discover this lag? i signed us up for t-mobile home internet. ugh! but, we found other interests. i guess we have. [both] finch! let's go! oh yeah! it's not the same. what could you do to solve the problem?
1:50 pm
we could get xfinity? that's actually super adult of you to suggest. i can't wait to squad up. i love it when you talk nerdy to me. guy, guys, guys, we're still in session. and i don't know what the heck you're talking about. millions have made the switch from the big three to the best kept secret in wireless: xfinity mobile. that means millions are saving hundreds a year with the fastest mobile service. and now, introducing, the best price for two lines of unlimited. just $30 per line. there are millions of happy campers out there. and this is the perfect time to join them... add a line to your existing plan, or see for yourself how easy it is to save by talking to our helpful switch squad at your local xfinity store today.
1:51 pm
dave: tsa screened 2.4 million people a day before thanksgiving the most since 2018. jeff flock is live at philadelphia international airport. how are things running? jeff: pretty well. it will be a busy travel time but to see what is happening at philadelphia international, we take you to the arrival boards, one safe switchover, i see one delayed flight in philadelphia mirroring the rest of the country. look at the national numbers from flight aware, 33
1:52 pm
cancellations is all we got today. as a friend of mine used to say that ain't nothing compared to what it used to be. a thousand delays, you always get some delays and better than last year when it comes to travel in terms of numbers. 1.4 million yesterday on thanksgiving, better than it was a year ago. the airlines tell us, they reduced their schedules, not as many flights out there, not promising what they can't deliver, adjusting to absenteeism, more staff in reserve, the remote working is enabling some people to travel on their own schedule, not just on big travel days when people typically would get over work. all the flight reductions took the toll. they lost flights since the pandemic, 60 of those airports,
1:53 pm
mostly regional airports lost half their flights. another 14 lost all their air service. acosta go in the air, still costs a lot to go by land, 357 is a national average for regular, $0.20 more than it was. you got to go, just pay for it. dave: great to see you. back to the economy, reports that inflation is forcing americans to cut back on dining out. metro chairman and ceo zane tangle is here with us. are you seeing slow down. >> not at this point. we had a record thanksgiving day. dave: the fast food of
1:54 pm
expensive food, in an environment like this. >> and and now we have a nor'easter so it is a little more. if you are creative in restaurant -- restaurant tours generally are, you can navigate this and got to be bundling, given the consumer of feeling. and we are nondiscretionary, and and they are able to shape it. dave: not just the food in
1:55 pm
front of them. and you put a premium on service and it slipped so badly in some places, something won't go back to places i used to go to but you recognize how important it is explained. >> back to the future, people go out for one reason and that is to feel good, and in the memory business, it always are member a bad experience you exemplify as one you don't go back to certain places but remember a good experience and more so. if we understand that, and they comprehend and understand that, that's what we do. got to have great food and a price point and put in a plate
1:56 pm
and knives and forks, people do that but what they don't do are little things, and back to basics. and and people talking about the word trust. the most important element of any business, particularly in the service industry, your people, and the labor shortages came back, only 10 seconds but go for it. >> you and i discussed this many times and you and i are an example of it. trust is something it takes forever to build and seconds to go away. dave: you are trusted by your employees and that is paid off in your workforce. great to see you, thank you for
1:57 pm
being here, more cavuto coast-to-coast right after this. during walmart's black friday deals for days. every monday is a huge deal. get a $228 tcl 65" 4k roku smart tv. plus other hot deals. head to walmart's black friday deals for days.
1:58 pm
and i'm going to tell you about exciting medicare advantage plans that can provide broad coverage and still may save you money on monthly premiums and prescription drugs. with original medicare you are covered for hospital stays and doctor office visits but you have to meet a deductible for each, and then you're still responsible for 20% of the cost. next, let's look at a medicare supplement plan. as you can see, they cover the same things as original medicare, and they also cover your medicare deductibles and coinsurance. but they often have higher monthly premiums and no prescription drug coverage. now, let's take a look at humana's medicare advantage plans. with a humana medicare advantage plan, hospitals stays, doctor office visits and your original medicare deductibles are covered. and, of course, most humana medicare advantage plans include prescription
1:59 pm
drug coverage. with no copays or deductibles on tier 1 prescriptions, and zero dollars for routine vaccines, including shingles, at in-network retail pharmacies. in fact, in 2021, humana medicare advantage prescription drug plan members saved an estimated $9,600 on average on their prescription costs. most humana medicare advantage plans have coverage for vision and hearing. and dental coverage that includes two free cleanings a year, plus dentures, crowns, fillings and more! most humana medicare advantage plans include a silver sneakers fitness program at no extra cost. you get all of this for as low as a zero-dollar monthly plan premium in many areas; and your doctor and hospital may already be a part of humana's large network. there is no obligation, so call the number on your screen right now to see if your doctor is in our network; to find out if you could save on your prescriptions, and to get our free decision guide. humana, a more human way to healthcare.
2:00 pm
david: that does it forrousen "cavuto coast-to-coast". have a wonderful holiday weekend, everybody. see you next time. maria: happy thanksgiving weekend to all. welcome to the program that leeanne lysing the week that wat was and positionin

114 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on