tv Varney Company FOX Business January 3, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST
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♪ stuart: i think they are playing that because i am back. it is nice to be back. i feel well rested and i missed you all. i missed the excitement of my television. 10:00 eastern straight to the money. we started on the upside, the first few minutes of business, the dow up 200 points and now it is down 60 had the nasdaq down 8. that is where we are. the yield on the 10 year treasury coming down significantly, 3. 73%. the price of oil coming down $79 a barrel, bitcoin, $16,600
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per coin. that is the markets. now this. the house of representatives is back in business and the democrats, despite losing control, are laughing. they are laughing at the republicans struggling to elect the speaker without a speaker nothing gets done. members can't even be sworn in. this is a self-inflicted wound. the vast majority of republican members want kevin mccarthy, a handful don't want him, has a vote is about to be taken they seem determined to embarrass their own party. trump wants mccarthy, jim jordan and other conservatives want mccarthy. it is hard to understand their position. they can't win, they reduce chaos and division. it is just around of political infighting, nonsense and progress but for those who want to see a robust challenge to
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the increasingly leftist democrat party it is dismayed. we are about to raise taxes on business as we head into recession. about to spend a fortune on the border not keeping people out but to process millions more coming in. how will house republicans deal with these crazies if they embarrass their own leadership? the frontline headline in the new york post, stop sabotaging mccarthy's bid to be speaker. but see if charlie hurt is on the same page. welcome back to the program. are you on the same page as the new york post? >> i do understand the concerns the conservative wing of the republican party has. i don't see the problem if they have no option, they don't have a candidate they can put forward which suggests they don't have any business picking who the next leader is.
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if they failed to win the united states senate, it is slimmer than they expected this. at least in the republican party they are dealing with a set of catastrophic crises such as the open border as $30 trillion in debt and it has become the norm in congress to pass trillion dollar bills that are paid for. the reason we have this rip between mccarthy and these self-described conservatives, and trying to grapple with this issue. they don't even care about these issues and if they put it to a vote to the american people, many americans don't think those problems i listed are a sincere crisis. the problem is where do you go
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from here. americans don't care who the speaker is, they want to speaker and want to move on and the only person who is standing there with a viable option is kevin mccarthy. it will be interesting to watch, the odds that he doesn't get it on the first round. he winds up getting it. there are no alternatives at the moment. neil: stuart: donald trump blames pro-life republicans and mitch mcconnell for the party's losses in the midterms. is that fair? >> i think he is right about mitch mcconnell, they failed to understand things that are concerning americans and without a doubt the issue of
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abortion did hurt republicans, arguing the point democrats as a party supports ninth month abortion but the fact that he goes after pro-life voters and blames them, pro-life voters are the most dutiful voters we have in this country, as the most pro-life president we ever had, donald trump should know that or knows that. going after them and attacking them, claiming they stayed home because they got what they want is a stupid thing to say. stuart: we believe it right there, a stupid thing to say. see you again later. vice president harris is demanding negative covid tests from senators and their guests at today's swearing in ceremony. lauren: she doesn't want to get covid again. she administers the oath of office two hours from now and
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the office is requiring duly elected incoming senators, their spouses and guests produce a negative and, quote, medically administered covid test 24 hours prior to the ceremony. at noon today. i would watch for who if anyone doesn't show up or opt out. neil: stuart: can you serve in the senate if you are not sworn in? >> good question. stuart: seems like gamesmanship to me. what is the point of this? lauren: not getting covid. the white house has the same policy for guests meeting president biden. stuart: masking up all over the place. lauren: testing. this is regardless of vaccination status. if there is any hope we are moving forward, there is no factual environment on this one. stuart: the cofounder of home depot, great guy, is blasting socialism, he says it ruined america's work ethic.
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and people earned their success, talking about manufacturing distributors, and people work for us. that is why capitalism works, nobody works, nobody gives a damn, just give it to me, send me money, don't want to work, i'm too lazy, too fat, too stupid. an entire generation of people. scott shelladdy is here, happy to have you here. what do you say to bernie and socialism is something for nothing? >> he's preaching to the choir. i say that to my family and friends but i sound like an old
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man. we see them in that category. universal basic income, 7 or 8 pilot programs in california, capitalism is not deemed to be the capitalism i grew up in in the school. it is demonized. socialism is an actual thing that kids think might work. this time around it might. i agree with 100% of them which i feel, i am 57 years old and i have a third eye when i talk about it with colleagues and family. they would rather be friends with their leaders rather than respect their leaders. instead of respecting those guys, they would rather have a leader that was 3 wins and 30
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losses rather than bobby knight which was 30 wins and 3 losses because he is too tough. that's the problem and it stems from education and you see that to the left in the 1980s and this is the culmination. stuart: earlier on the show, market watch was with us, he said 2,022, last year was the beginning of a lost decade. he was voicing my worst fears that for a decade the stock market goes nowhere just as i'm about to retire. what do you say to that? a lost decade? think that is going to happen? >> could be 1970s all over again and a large part of that was stagflation. they will see jobs pilaf here, unemployment rate will go up and at the same time these two things go hand in hand. when you have a congress that approves $1.7 trillion spending bill in the middle of an inflationary period is
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unconscionable but almost convinced themselves it is okay because they deserve it. the initial question you asked about socialism and what people believe they are owed and the entitlements, it goes hand-in-hand with congress voting for what they just voted for because watch what happens to inflation, it is like they skipped out on that class and want to ignore the laws of nature. that is a problem. we will have joblessness rise and you could see a period where you won't see any decent gains in the stock market. folks think we will go back to those days of 15% or 20% returns, when we are happy to get 6 or 7 or 8, i think he's right. stuart: time is up but happy new year to you, see you later. companies offering big incentives to get workers to stay at their companies, details please. lauren: the cost to retain
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workers benefits employs, wages up 5.5% this year. okay. that's the most since workers began 25 years ago. i think this is more important. if you switch to a job you will raise wages on average 7.7%. you are ahead of inflation on that trade. this week is pivotal, wednesday you get the jobs report the number of job openings falling, the job market tightening as the fed would like. and also the average wage gains we will find on friday when we get the jobs report. stuart: that's go from the economy to the stock market. starting with disney, it is now a winner at $88 a share. lauren: box office win for avatar, the way of water, the highest grossing imax film of the year, one.-- 1.4 billion in
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accounting. they say it will hit the disney plus, there's treating service january 20th. stuart: show me the chinese electric carmakers, they are all surging, tell me why. lauren: lee otto up for, the trail reported a 19% increase to record numbers in december despite the shutdown and everything covid going on in china. they are littering numbers that are very strong. of the when the gaming companies, nice again. lauren: wells fargo upgraded them to overweight and bumped the price target all the way to 101 from 74 and they cite optimism on the chinese. stuart: hundreds of cuban migrants flood the florida keys forcing a national park to shut down. phil keating has the report from miami coming up. buffalo bills safety hamlin is in critical condition after collapsing on the field. we have the latest on his condition. ftx founder sam bankman-fried expected to plead not guilty in
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that is a $12 loss. $110 a share, 70%. the disgraced ftx founder sam bankman-fried do back in federal court, connell mcshane is at the courthouse. what can we expect? charles: we can expect them to plead not guilty to all charges leverage against him. he will be expected to enter a plea, ronnie abrams, the judge has recused herself, and advisor to sam bankman-fried, ftx at one point. bankman-fried, managing to secure the $250 million bond package awaiting trial. two other people will coastline as well.
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his lawyer, mark cohen, he's trying to keep their identities anonymous because he says the parents have been receiving threats. i am quoting, there is serious cause for concern that the shortage will face similar intrusions as well as threats and ask if their names appear unredacted to on their bonds or identities are otherwise publicly disclosed. that has been filed. bankman-fried was walking out of this courthouse, he was free on bail but also fully aware the two of his close associates had turned against caroline ellison reported to be his girlfriend at one time and a roommate at mit, co-founder of ftx. both of them pleaded guilty to charges and both agreed to testify as spf faces a total of 8 federal account starting with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and down the list to include alleged campaign-finance violation from and reported to be the second largest
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democratic mega donor, george soros in the last election cycle. he will be in here in person at 2:00 pm and we are told by a person familiar with the case, expect sam bankman-fried to plead not guilty to all charges against him. stuart: just before the sirens arrive. a lot of people don't know this but bohemian regulators seized $3.5 billion of ftx crypto assets. greg jarrett joins me now. you are our legal analyst. will be get that money back in america? >> a percentage of it will have to be negotiated with the authorities, they will say we are first in line. unlike the bernie madoff ripoff, he did actually have some tangible assets that were
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clawback, $64 billion bernie madoff embezzled, 14 billion was actually retrieved with the customers. sam bankman-fried, a lot of money he stole from customers and gave to alameda research was thrown out the window. and risky bets in failing companies or crypto currencies. we see on a percentage basis, a whole lot less money retrieved. stuart: how far back will they go to clawback? your customer of ftx, you made some money, took your money out, regulators could clawback the gain, before it fell to pieces. just as they did with the made off case. >> they might be able to try to
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do that, ill-gotten gains in the system. with what sam bankman-fried did, spend money on things that are completely worthless and insolvent. that's the lions share of the money, the stolen customer accounts over to alameda research which is a hedge fund, they threw the money away. a lot of the money vanished into thin air which is how i describe crypto currency to begin with, it's not based on anything but thin air. stuart: is he going to jail? >> absolutely. there is no such thing as a slamdunk case but this is as close as it gets. the paper trail is immensely compelling of fraud and
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conspiracy and embezzlement and now prosecutors have the benefit of two of his cronies who decided to plead guilty in exchange for testifying against him. i wouldn't be surprised if somewhere down the road the defendant tries to do a deal instead of spending the rest of his life behind bars, maybe 25, 30 years, they will try to do the deal because he is guilty, they have him dead to rights. stuart: we believe it there, see you again soon. back to you. we have a lawyer in colorado accusing the department of justice of trying to conceal documents about hunter biden and james biden. what information is being concealed? >> communications involving business dealings, kevin evans, or back-and-forth with the doj for two years now, to get public records released.
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evans claims the doj admits, 400 documents related to his and glories, they will not confirm or deny whether those documents exist, he feels he and the american people are being played. and on january 9th. 9. stuart: we will dig into it. a new york times article, short people are better for the planet. and florida governor desantis, they don't want him to run for president in 2024. joe is next. ♪
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apple is down sharply 3.5%. lauren: the nikkei we reporting lower demand for wearable devices, and apple has notified some of its suppliers for going to those devices. we are talking about pc demand being demand but now these are the categories as well. stuart: that is taking steam out of the dow. is paypal up or down? lauren: a nice day, they got an upgrade by truest to buy, truest based said the stock was killed down 60% and investors got two negative and they say it is $295 a share. stuart: than we have molson coors, the gear people, they are down 4. 4%. lauren: wells fargo cut them to
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underweight, it continues for all of fiscal 2023 meeting volumes remain under pressure. stuart: happy new year, big smile. hundreds of migrants arriving the holiday -- florida keys for the holiday weekend, 600 from cuba and other parts of the caribbean. phil keating is in miami. what is the latest on this? >> reporter: the current wave of illegal cuban migration to the us is the largest we've seen in the last decade. the current overwhelming trend of the past 12 months is overwhelming not only the federal government but the florida keys, the u.s. customs and border protection facility were all of these human arrivals will be brought for processing, bus after bus, van after van and this will take likely all week long but over the new york new year's weekend, they arrived at their
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abodes often up and down the florida keys escalating the weekend with separate landings and 200 arriving in other areas. they are textured to escape cuba, its communist government at economic disaster. they closed the park for the first time ever. it will remain close to the public for two days or longer so personnel can provide humanitarian relief. it is 70 miles west of key west and there are no services. it is a historic place for tourists but the only way in or out is by boat or seaplane. they are uninhabited so if you don't bring your own food or water you will have none. the monroe county sheriff it is criticizing the fed say it shows lack of a working plan but the federal government to deal with mass migration issue, that was foreseeable. the cubans make the perilous 90 mile journey over open ocean to get the keys which leads to
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death, search and rescue operations and interdiction set see by the us coast guard. once they arrived the process takes hours. it is a logistical challenge for the department of homeland security. all these migrants are taken to key west and have to be run on buses in band and driven 5 hours to get here where they will likely plead political asylum which is far from guaranteed and if denied they go back to cuba. stuart: what a mess. thanks very much indeed. vanity fair kicking off the new year with a hit piece on governor desantis. a comprehensive guide to why rhonda santos's presidency would be as terrifying as a trump one. joe concha, why are they going after desantis on the first trading day of 2023? >> florida governor ron
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desantis is the biggest threat to the democratic party in regards to them holding the white house in 2024. the midterms were underwhelming for the republican party. they barely took back the house, they were supposed to take back of the senate. the one big winner other about the inside was desantis, won florida by 20 points, won in a deep blue county like miami-dade, palm beach. what we are seeing, these think pieces which is an oxymoron in this case arguing desantis is more dangerous than donald trump and on par with hitler and stalin. it is 31 flavors of stupid but when you look at the numbers desantis is the most popular governor in the country and a good chunk of democrats and independents reelected him in his state. these pieces resonate with far left leaders, objective people look at desantis's record in florida and see the exodus from states like new york, california, illinois to florida
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and they see and accomplish governor and potential president in 2024 or 2028 if he decides not to run, still only 44 years old, plenty of time but the negativity from the press, something desantis is used to by now. stuart: you cover the media and you created a list of the media's top winners and losers, you wrote this, take us through the winners first please. >> sub stack has another huge winner, only got better in 22, more journalists are leaving their employers, popular writers, glenn greenwald, the list is long. the top 10 writers on sub stack collectively earned $20 million. a lot of money to be made through the subscript and model and the number went up in the past year. that's who i see as a big winner in 2022.
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stuart: $20 million is a lot of money. you give us the winners and now give us the losers. >> i thought truth social and digital platforms as a loser. i looked at the numbers again. not really an opinion, the company lost $6.5 million its first year, some is not its fault, google is continuing to block truth social, it is very popular, they are not getting 40% of the smart phone market. it's like opening a store and some people not having access to that store. this is donald trump's social media and ever. on twitter, 88 million followers but on truth social barely has 5 million. i would have thought more people would migrate over to follow him but it has been a fraction. we will see if he can turn things around in 2023, never bet against donald trump. stuart: thanks very much, happy new year, see you again soon.
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a new piece in the new york times argues that short people are better for the planet. i guess you are happy about that. lauren: i wish i was. it is a guest essay in the new york times, shall i read the headline? there's never been a better time to be short. short people don't just save resources, but as resources become scarce or because of the earth's growing population, global warming, they may be best suited to long-term survival and she goes on to say short people, tall people should purposefully mate with short people to have short children. my husband is 6 foot 3 which i have 3 children and two are very tall for their age so you can't just mate with someone who is the opposite height and produce the result you want. and how is being short good for the environment?
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short people can be fat and eat a lot. stuart: you wanted this story. lauren: i did not want this story. i think the new york times in writing this piece is being heightist. is that a word? stuart: am i allowed -- you are over 5 feet tall. 5 foot one. lauren: i am sure it admittedly so. stuart: and you are good for the planet. thank you. parent still struggle to get their hands on children's medication, baby formula, more retailers limiting purchasers. lydia breaks it down next. ♪ ♪
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stuart: the actor jeremy renner suffered serious injuries after he was involved in a snowplow accident on new year's day. lauren: he had to undergo a second surgery and is in critical condition. one of his snowplows which he was using to plow his family out of their home in nevada because blunt chest trauma. tmz is reporting this machine, a snow cat, ran over his leg. he lost a lot of blood. a doctor who was a neighbor made a tourniquet until he could be airlifted to a nearby hospital. he is a huge fan of heavy machinery, he has 200 fire trucks and snowplows, he likes to use them and post pictures like you are looking at, on his big property. stuart: good the doctor was there. here's another one for you. the house just wrapped up an investigation into the fda's
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approval of the alzheimer's drug, what did they find? lauren: crazy report. 18 month congressional investigation found the fda's approval was highly irregular. it did not listen to officials in the fda the question the evidence biogen provided on this drug and also slammed biogen executives for wanting to make history by setting the price at $50,000 and medicare would cover most of that and they were spending 2. 5 times as much as they spent to develop a drug to market it, to convince people it was worth the high price tag. none of this work to. here is the rub. biogen has another all-time's drug they are seeking fda approval for. this will be under the microscope, what happened -- stuart: and the stock is up. biogenesis a fraction. it is the new year but parents
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are having the same issue when it comes to finding their children's medications. any signees shortages are coming to a end? >> no and there are signs it is getting worse because we have another major retailer joining others and limning purchases of children's pain relievers and fever reducers, limning purchases to two products for in-store and online. this is a problem plaguing parents because demand has surged to 65% higher than it was last year amid the pandemic and manufacturers are struggling to keep up having not anticipated the demand. another problem plaguing parents, the baby formula shortage is persisting. major retailers limit purchases in their stores and online, parents tell us specialty formulas remain hardest to buy. one massachusetts mother spoke with us, a 20-year-old son with spinal muscular atrophy
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requires a diet of strictly specialty form you love. >> we are trying to feed our kids and to not be able to feed our kids the right formula they need is terrifying. absolutely terrifying. lauren: the next frontier of this formula problem is the cost. in an effort to boost the supply tariffs on and sported an important form lower suspended but those tariffs on formula imports are coming get back. we talk to the maker of a formula from the uk, they will try to absorb as much of the increased cost as possible but listen to this. >> we really hope it isn't going to be passed on but a lot of these brands are focused on profits. it is another obstacle. >> reporter: their estimates the tariffs could be 17 to 25%.
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new year, old problems. parents need medications but they are harder to find, formula is still scarce and it will get more expensive. stuart: never got to the bottom of this. after all this time. thank you very much indeed. elon musk is set to release a new batch of twitter files this week and doctor fauci is expected to be the main focus, we are on it. buffalo bills player hamlin collapsed on the field after tackling an opponent during last night's game, brian kilmeade's next as the sports world comes together in prayer. , plus points for your future travels. so you can think about the next trip. and the next trip and the next next trip. so wherever you go,
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their worlds would be so much smaller. braille allows me to read with my class. without braille, i could not do my job at mit. it allows me to be connected to the world. to find out more, go to nbp.org because braille literacy, is literacy. stuart: i want to start with the markets are down a little. show me chesler. that stock is taking a huge hit, down 10%. you may remember in the last 10 days elon musk said to his people don't be bothered by stock market craziness. hope they are not bothered because chesler is down $110 per share. almost on the button, $10 — it is 10:50 one eastern time meeting brian kilmeade will miraculously appear.
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dinar hamlin, critical condition, cardiac arrest after collapsing on monday night, medical personnel had to give him cpr on the field. this is terrible news. do we need to protect players more and if so, how do we do it? >> depends on what it is. early speculation in the university of pittsburgh, we have others like doctor ne neisheiwat who thinks your heart beats and then between beats go into cardiac arrest and of someone stand straight up and falls backwards almost unconscious that is telltale of what happened, the good news is there's a different relater right there on the field, the best medical staff in the country, there is always an emergency center ready to go any time an nfl team is playing in any area in any city big or
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small, cutting edge medical facility so the question is how much damage was done and what happened as jim gray brought up last night, that it is rare for someone to have a preexisting condition when people are so heavily tested, he is 2 years out of college football, the combineds give you every test under the sun. as callous as it sounds, you are an investment, they spent $12 million on you. you got to kick the tires, having a thorough test on things like the hard, seem to be the type of thing that happens. in baseball and lacrosse balls can hit you directly in this area. if it does happen we heard from a heart surgeon that for a couple days you might keep him in a coma to make sure his nerves have a chance to fully heal. stuart: what a story. let's move on. elon musk to using the release
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of new twitter files, could relate information on doctor anthony fauci. when these files are released, what is the big deal here? is it whether or not covid came from the wuhan lab? >> what fauci was doing behind the scenes, to make sure it is a different view his view kept changing depending on who he was interviewed with but always against trump and pro shut down, no handshaking, don't leave without four masks in the goggles so anybody, what he was doing behind the scenes, in science where they are supposed to have contradictory opinions were squelched. whenever twitter revealed it is an the tenth hour when it comes to facebook, think about it. we know about the e-mail exchanges fauci was having with members of the media, certain members of power, certain political figures, people in
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the medical community to make sure contradictory views weren't put forward. from stanford, looked at doctor atlas as the enemy inside the trump administration which what was he doing on social media. president biden walked up to the cameras and said the message of social mood media, stop printing untruths, you're killing people. the bigger question, 2 and a half years later, what are the untruths? can you get it outside? the cloth masks work? know. can you shake hands? yes. canopy picked up on surfaces? no. everything fauci was telling us, it looks as though the intent to make sure his mood of the day was not under -- there was no contradictory views. that's when people will realize anthony fauci has two sides. he looks like the grandfatherly
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figure everybody liked from the money, the outstanding shortstop of the yankees. everyone thought he was great. you find out behind the scenes he was a different story and i can't wait to see him answer these questions. of the one we will find out this week with the twitter files. thank you, see you again soon. happy new year to you. new lawsuit claims twitter not paying rent on its headquarters in san francisco. lauren: one hundred $36,000 in back rent and looking to save money, they close their seattle offices, two floors in san francisco where they are getting sued for not paying rent and cut their cleaning staff and security in their office as well, elon musk said we are losing money like $4 million a day, you don't pay your rent, probably trying to renegotiate lower rent. stuart: a negotiator, this guy. still had, mercedes schlapp,
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nigel farage, we will talk about the border, david avella. where are we going with some of the issues that define america? some recent developments have me worried. the economy, crime, culture wars, the world was turned upside down. that is "my take" and it is next. ♪ (other money manager) different how? aren't we all just looking for the hottest stocks? (fisher investments) nope. we use diversified strategies to position our clients' portfolios for their long-term goals. (other money manager) but you still sell investments that generate high commissions for you, right? (fisher investments) no, we don't sell commission products. we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client's best interest. (other money manager) so when do you make more money, only when your clients make more money? (fisher investments) yep. we do better when our clients do better. at fisher investments, we're clearly different.
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