Skip to main content

tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  January 18, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST

10:00 am
stuart: good morning. it is 10:00 eastern. straight to the money this wednesday morning bring. a modest rally, stocks, dowse up 50, nasdaq up 100 points. the 10 year treasury is down to
10:01 am
a 4-month low, 339, favorable financial inflation news pushing interest rates down and stocks up a little. oil jumped to a 2-month high. oil is looking at $82 a barrel and rising. a look at bitcoin holding its gains, we have 21,430 as the price for your bitcoin. we have the latest news on homebuilder sentiment. the number. lauren: it rose, went up for the first time in 13 months. that means one third say business conditions are good. it is a crummy number. stuart: a look at homebuilder stocks. lauren: people jump back in. finally the mob seems to have lost one.
10:02 am
in st. paul, minnesota of the authorities admitted they were wrong. this is significant. a teacher shown a picture of the prophet mohammed, one student objected number showing the image was islamohphobic, the teacher was fired. using the term islamofphobic was flawed. that is it? just flawed? they are dancing around, scared of academic freedom. free-speech the gum at be debate should be the priority, not the cringing apologies for the slightest perceived offense. struggling for money, enrollment, so many seem to have no backbone. they cave to show sensitivity. the teacher warned her students she was about to display the prophet mohammed's image, went out of her way not to offend, the student still complained and the teacher was let go, fired. i get the impression there's a
10:03 am
new activist class of students. it starts with propaganda from leftist teachers, then goes on to colleges where activists seek out every possible insensitivity. they are looking forward. as for the fired teacher, she will carry the label for the rest of her career. of colleges want to avoid this, get a grip. academic freedom, free speech, above all else. second hour of varney just getting started. liz peek is with us. we are both smiling. the mob lost this one. >> did they really lose, the teacher was fired. i don't blame the teachers in these situations. i blame the trustees of these colleges who allowed the
10:04 am
administrations to become cowardly and bowing to the mob. the teachers, faculties at these university self-described themselves as 60% to 70%, very liberal or leftist. they are not talking liberal anymore but the other 40%. who is hiring those people? who is deciding students should tell the administration and teachers what to do? without is not the case when i was in college 100 years ago. they are not there to dictate and sadly what we have seen is not softened a weakened student body passing through these institutions, and and i fear for them in terms of their competitiveness, to lose it out with the competition. this is awful.
10:05 am
stuart: fox digital analysis shows president biden hosted many visitors at his home in bloomington including senator chuck schumer and joe manchin and hunter biden. all these revelations put a end to the idea that president biden could make a run in 2024? >> i think it makes it really hard. all this comes to light, was leaked as he was about to make his announcement. who doesn't want president biden to run? almost every democrat. we've seen polling, 70% of the country doesn't want him to run, 57% of democrats, think of the score of democrat hopefuls, gavin newsom, amy klobuchar, hakeem jeffries for all i know, eric adams who hoped to be the 2024 democrat candidate. none of them want this to happen. we have a confluence of a big
10:06 am
scandal, they can try to dismiss it. it is a scandal to mishandle documents, the way it is handled is horrible. the gop majority in the house is planning to investigate all kinds of aspects of president biden's business career which looks tawdry, very much connected with hunter biden's misdeeds. that's a problem for president biden, the other element, the trifecta, elon musk and twitter. this is not going to be hidden under a rock, not going to be suppressed by the media. they have to pay attention because elon musk is going to let it out on twitter. stuart: i never thought about that. the left last twitter. liz: this is a powerful thing that is happening in our country it is high time. stuart: thank you for being here. the white house counsel's office was just hit with an ethics complaint over their
10:07 am
involvement in biden's classified documents. lauren: this is from a government watchdog, correct the public trust. listen to these words. the american public not tolerate a 2-tiered system of justice well-connected insiders subject to a lower standard of scrutiny than the normal citizen. white house attorneys in positions that created conflicts of interest, we are witnessing a series betrayal of plummeting trust. it creates the specter of possible obstruction of a congressional investigation. president biden said i'm going to be the most ethical, the most transparent president, now we are literally in an information vacuum. taxpayer resources are being used to the benefit of the president. 's attorneys are going in, a document but i'm not going to look at it. the white house counsel establishing house clearance, the justice department get me out of here. stuart: that was a strongly worded statement. serious stuff.
10:08 am
at this moment, we need to go back to the markets. gains all around but nothing much except for the nasdaq. up one hundred 22, better than one person. solid gain in the nasdaq. david is back with us, 2023, all doom and gloom. you are in cash, that is where you are right now. >> there is no question cash is king here, where liquidity is more scarce. 2022 was the beginning of what is likely a much longer ballgame. 2023 we will see rate cuts really take effect into our markets. cpi is starting to come down, typically takes 270 days for
10:09 am
the fed rate cuts to continue. we are looking at mid april last year, one 1/4, 4% of rate hikes that have come in. everything was priced fairly until the fed started hiking everything. as i look at things now, we've got 30 portfolios, we are allocated in the market, still great opportunities to participate, and things are moving in the right direction. stuart: if things go your way and work out the way you say they will work out, will be hit new lows for the dow, s&p and nasdaq in the next 4 or 5 months? >> i do believe that's accurate. typically following the fed pivot we see the biggest downside in the market cycle. here is the deal, the markets pricing and the fed pivot but they are not pricing in the recession so we are scratching our heads, how can you have a
10:10 am
pivot without recession looking at historical information, a lot of things facing us including the debt ceiling being hit tomorrow, $31.4 trillion so we can't even elect a house of representatives without 13 votes. how is that going when we have mixed congress and white house that is resistant to that? stuart: i call that doom and gloom, see you again soon. i have a question. which generation is driving luxury sales? >> young ones. very young. millennials up until 40 and jens he, that group is responsible for all the growth we saw in the luxury market last year. here's the issue. shouldn't say it is an issue. what is concerning to me, they are getting not only richer but younger, by 2030, younger
10:11 am
generation, millennials, alpha, under the age of 13 years old, the biggest buyers of luxury, 80% of all purchases world wide and the average age is 15 years old so it is going down. of 15-year-old buying a bag, the classic flag bag, that's what it is called, thousands of dollars, it is smaller, cheaper than the larger versions but that's what the kids want, the placement of 60% during covid. stuart: there are that many rich kids in america? >> rich parents are buying this stuff for their kids. teenagers working and saving all their money to buy a multiple thousand dollar bet. stuart: they are driving luxury sales. >> they see it on tiktok and social media and want it. young kids see it on social
10:12 am
media feeds and wanted. >> my 10-year-old niece gave me her christmas list and i didn't recognize many of the products. all high end. i don't even use or heard of. i wouldn't call it luxury but it is expensive for that age group, $100 yoga pants. stuart: back to everyday ordinary middle america. that means the stock market. jetblue, not that much. >> second time i've said this in 5 days, a plane bumped into another plane at jfk, this time it was two jetblue flights, when into contact with another which was parked and unoccupied, happened during pushback, both planes are out of service, no interest. stuart: what about united? looking at a big jump in profits and they are only up $0.07. lauren: because of this travel resurgence, expect full-year profit to quadruple so why are they up?
10:13 am
labor right now, their pilots are picketing, not happy with scheduling, not happy with pay, pay has gone up, they have a host of complaints, its bottom line issue. and united stock is up 39% thus far. they have a recovery so far. stuart: it is not the gap, it is gap. lauren: they own banana republic, old navy, in addition to the need -- morgan stanley upgrades to equal weight, things get a lot better in the second half of the year, inventories normalized. retail sales, closing, 3%, even though you had all those clearances in december. stuart: a couple pairs of jeans. stuart: at a total of several. a senior engineer at tesla
10:14 am
reveals videos used to promote their self driving technology. it was staged. we will tell you about that. the liberal elites gather in switzerland, roll tape. >> almost extraterrestrial to think about, quote, saving the planet. stuart: will cane is going to come shortly and deal with the climate czar's latest comment in the next hour. the white house wants speaker mccarthy to release details of backdoor deals he made in order to secure his bid for speaker. the admin iteration claims those deals would devastate the economy. david schweikert takes on next. ♪
10:15 am
10:16 am
10:17 am
10:18 am
10:19 am
stuart: stocks are in the green following a favorable inflation report, dollars up 8, the nasdaq is up. speaker mccarthy calling for immediate negotiations as the debt that approaches. tell me more. ashley: mccarthy says the government is 6 months from running out of cash, and negotiations should begin right now to avoid all the last minute drama. take a listen. >> why don't we sit down now and change this behavior that we would put ourselves in a more fiscally strong position, make the future generation make our nation stronger, make the economics stronger, who wants
10:20 am
to put in the nation in some type of threat at the last minute of destiny? find the compromise and find the commonsense compromise that puts us back to a balanced budget. ashley: when you use the word common sense congress doesn't always come to mind, republicans have demanded deep spending cuts in exchange for raising the debt limit but democrats say no way, the limit must be raised without any conditions. all of us expected to come to a head as soon as june. stuart: shutdown the government but not till june. the white house, the white house wants speaker mccarthy to release details of any agreements with conservative members to get their vote. unprecedented tax hike on the middle class, national abortion ban, just a glimpse of the secret back room deal speaker mccarthy made with extreme amaga members. what other bargains did speaker
10:21 am
mccarthy make beyond closed doors? the american people have the right to know. that's from the white house. son david schweikert from arizona jointly now. are they just diverting attention away from the document scandal? >> you nailed it. the left, the white house, democratic colleagues, are desperate for the public not to understand the financial, fiscal crisis that is upon us. think about this. last year we borrowed $57,000 a second. every second last year. the numbers are falling off the rails. now it is time to have an honest discussion of how you actually start to right the ship and the white house will do anything to avoid the discussion of what they did to this economy, the debt, the deficits.
10:22 am
stuart: do you think you could get a deal without shutting the government hours it -- closer and closer to the actual deadline. is that what is going to happen? the public won't see it either way. >> you need those stressors. this is an uncomfortable conversation. the financial press will make it seem the world is coming to a end, we've been through this before. when we need those stressors to force honest negotiations. many are trying to lay out a series of policies, that tell the truth about how difficult the numbers are. in 10 years we are heading towards a $2 trillion a year
10:23 am
structural deficit. over the next 30 years, every dime of borrowing and we will borrow one hundred trillion dollars, 70% is the shortfall in medicare, 25% of the shortfall in social security. how do you explain that to the public. how do you explain that to the political class? stuart: good question. we need a tax increase, more government revenue so we don't have to borrow so much. if you want to cut spending, taking food out of the mouths of elderly people or babies, you cause a lot of pain, the vice president is in your state tomorrow. she's talking green energy, not the border. what do you make of that? >> it is more what the democrats did last year with their inflation bill. it is pandering. it is financing.
10:24 am
think about the spending in this piece of legislation the democrats did when they had absolute control. that money goes to the folks that right democrats checks. this is their attempt to keep their base in line while the fiscal cliff is coming crashing towards us. stuart: thank you very much for joining us this morning. speaker mccarthy packing republicans on house, it is, preparing for investigations into biden and his family. aishah hasnie on capitol hill. when will we see the first hearings? >> reporter: not right now. they are still investigating. who is really upset about this, the white house this morning having serious heartburn over committee assignments, getting powerful positions, republican firebrands and holdouts, taking it for the gavel which includes
10:25 am
scott perry, byron donalds, and anna luna, they are led by congress and james comer who looking for china's donations at the pen biden center. marjorie taylor green and paul gosar will have a seat on oversight. expect fireworks at any future hearings, there was a statement directly at the president, president biden, be prepared, we are going to uncover every corrupt business dealing, every foreign entanglements, every abuse of power and every check cut for the big guy. the white house responding this morning blasting these appointments, the spokesman for oversight, chairman comer said he wanted the committee's work to be credible but republicans were handing the keys, to amaga
10:26 am
numbers of the caucus, violent rhetoric and dangerous conspiracy theories. the judiciary committee was finalized, matt gaetz, andy biggs, chip roy will all stay on board, keep the pressure on mccarthy. the subcommittee on the weaponization of the government that has subpoena power. in terms of the biden documents, they will start issuing subpoenas as soon as the committee is finalized with democratic members and they begin to meet. they said they want to talk to biden's family numbers but we don't know yet if they will actually subpoena those members. stuart: i wonder if these hearings will be on television, in prime time. >> reporter: prime time likely january 6th committee, they will be televised. stuart: the largest rv maker signed a deal with elon musk's space x.
10:27 am
we will tell you what industry gets out of that deal. homebuilder confidence eroded a few points in january. the ceo of the national association of homebuilders is next. ♪
10:28 am
cole hauser is an award winning actor who has starred in good will hunting too fast, too furious and the current hit show yellowstone. beyond his impressive career, he is a proud supporter of the tunnel to towers foundation. i was able to spend some time with cole and his family to reflect on those who have sacrificed so much to defend our freedom. i know how much you care about america and our veterans and all the things. but you have such a platform now. yeah. and to share that with us that we need to get the word out that we have to take care of these great heroes and their families. you know, as i started to be more and more successful, i was like, how can i help? but when i heard of the tunnel of the towers, and i met brandon in idaho and his family, i was like, wow. there's actually a charity where we know where the money's.
10:29 am
going to go. we have 95.1% of every dollar goes to our programs. and i think brandon's a great spokesman for t2t and and his wife, shannon, has two daughters. i mean, oh, my god. they're just special families. so pretty much, if you put your life on the line, if something goes bad, they're there. that's awesome. yeah. they're incredible people, man. you saw all the stuff we put in these homes, right? i was i was blown away. and they deserve it. they earned it. this is not of course, we give them a mortgage free home, but look what they gave up. they gave up their bodies so, cole, why should americans give donate help? tunnel to towers foundation. i mean, is there any better organization to help the people that has fought for this country and the freedoms that we have? it's that simple. it is that let's take care of each other. and you're going to join us on that mission. thank you. hey, i'm cole hauser. i want you to join me in supporting our nation's heroes
10:30 am
and their families. it's only $11 a month. go to t2t dot org. ♪ ♪ wow, we're crunching tons of polygons here! what's going on? where's regina? hi, i'm ladonna. i invest in invesco qqq, a fund that gives me access to the nasdaq-100 innovations, like real time cgi. okay... yeah... oh. don't worry i got it! become an agent of innovation with invesco qqq
10:31 am
stuart: the news i'm about to break has no impact on the market. jay powell, chairman of the federal reserve has tested positive for covid. the dow is turned south. down 30 points. mild symptoms for jay powell, nasdaq composite is up one hundred points. looking at the movers. and education company is down 12%. lauren: it is a competitor. it is amazing. once chat started, the numbers went down.
10:32 am
this semester, they are seeing a decline in students and they can take them in and asked the artificial intelligence. we when it is so easy. everyone has a phone. lauren: oral tests are the way of the future. i will give your test in person, you will talk to me so you can't cheat. stuart: it is down 12%. oakley, the oat milk people. lauren: they are going to six. they turned bullish on the stock, plant-based beverages, it is resilient and the new manufacturing deal that opened up. stuart: jb hunt, a trucking company, what is the story? they are up. two in a big way. earnings are unimpressive. lauren: i don't know why there up.
10:33 am
they are spending $9 million in appreciation to keep their drivers and other workers. stuart: at the top of the hour we talk about homebuilder confidence. it rose a little, unexpectedly. just one third say conditions are good. jerry howard is ceo of the nahb, obvious question, is housing getting better or worse? >> this is a good sign. the index rose four points, they have to put this in perspective. last year we were at 83. it is a positive sign. it evolves from the fact that builders in the field think the fed will stop its aggressive rate raises. that's a positive sign. it is too early to pop corks and sing happy days are here again.
10:34 am
stuart: we got a shot at this slump being over. there's a chance of this, not necessarily right now but in the future. >> we are hopeful this will be a trend for stability, and upwards towards the end of the year. stuart: i was in florida recently, saw no problem whatsoever with homebuilding. they were busy down there. not just reconstructing after the hurricane, is florida still the hottest market in the country? >> one of them. florida, the carolinas, out west, you have some places that are hot but florida and the carolinas take the cake. stuart: a question i asked you before, people building smaller homes. the trend in the early part of the -- they are building bigger and bigger. is that still in place or would it be smaller and smaller?
10:35 am
>> the pandemic changed things a little bit. the pandemic times, people wanted extra room because there were more people at home more often and they went to the home office. we started going bigger and the pandemic times, interesting to see as the pandemic, if we go to smaller houses. the younger generations have been more inclined to accept smaller houses, we will see if the trend continues. stuart: a small improvement in the housing market. thanks, see you later. the world's largest rv maker, for industries, teaming up with elon musk's space x. i think this is about times link. is that true? ashley: i thought they would send rvs into space like the
10:36 am
winnebago in that movie space balls but not yet. it will start adding space x's starling to its suvs you and give more reliable internet connectivity in the road. who would want that. they launched star link last year and promises fast wi-fi to travelers, that signed the deal. it will be the first he original a put manufacturer to work with space x or oversee 17 rvmakers but only four, will offer starling as an optional add on. up to now, they used unreliable mobile hotspots, wi-fi routers to connect to the internet but in space, in fear you will have the internet. stuart: in a bid to stave off bankruptcy twitter is having a major yard sale, musk is
10:37 am
selling everything from twitter logos to lounge chairs to espresso machines. the attorney general of virginia investigating, after 13 high schools failed to tell students about their national merit recognition in time for college scholarships. a fairfax county's mom whose merit award mister early action deadlines. we will be back. ♪ ♪
10:38 am
we got the house! you did! pods handles the driving. pack at your pace. store your things until you're ready. then we deliver to your new home - across town or across the country. pods, your personal moving and storage team. a must in your medicine cabinet! less sick days! cold coming on? zicam is the number one cold shortening brand! highly recommend it! zifans love zicam's unique zinc formula. it shortens colds! zicam. zinc that cold!
10:39 am
10:40 am
10:41 am
stuart: failing our children, a dozen high schools in virginia failed to tell students about their merit awards in time for college scholarship deadlines.
10:42 am
the superintendent of fairfax county schools is speaking out. lauren: she understands why parents are angry that came out of a meeting with parents in fairfax county and her comments are shedding light on how this happened. initially we heard this is one school, thomas jefferson high school didn't notify students of their status, this was a unique situation that involved human error but last night we got an acknowledgment that this happened in multiple schools, and the superintendent blamed a lack of standardized process and this is possibly gone on for years. watch here. >> and several schools, we did not notify students prior to november 1st and if a student did early decision to university of virginia they wouldn't have known, we don't
10:43 am
have a consistent process for all principals and staff. >> that commendation would help the application rate. >> there's a belief that it would help them. an application possibly. >> reporter: you have an acknowledgment this could have had an impact on student applications to colleges. this affected students across 16 schools in 3 counties, fairfax, loudoun and prince william counties. they are investigate and want to know if any students were discriminated in this process of not notifying the combination. stuart: better find out. shiwana nashayour son is one of the students, did it affect his application for college? >> thanks for having me on.
10:44 am
my son goes to thomas jefferson, his notification was delayed. he didn't receive it until november 21st, after the deadline passed for early admissions and acceptance. we are waiting to hear back from colleges. we got a few rejections. that's part of the process. we are waiting to hear back from a number of schools especially the ones he's hopeful for. we have to wait and see. stuart: the bottom of this is the demand for equity, equal outcomes. awarding scholarships and merit awards is the opposite of equity. is that what this is about? >> that something the attorney general is looking into. a major problem we are seeing in the public school systems, they stop focusing on academic excellence. academics were the first and primary thing they focused on, there was a delay giving out these awards.
10:45 am
there wouldn't be this pause and this wait to make sure they could hand them out in a way that was discrete and wasn't going to hurt the feelings of the other students who didn't receive it. stuart: seems to me a lot of this discrimination. i call it just commission, is against asian americans. what do you say? >> at my son's high school, thomas jefferson high school, it is over 73%, do the math, likely a lot of asian kids that were impacted. stuart: it is the wrong race that is getting ahead. that is the story. that is blatant discrimination. >> that is what the ag is looking into. i'm happy he's taking it seriously, looking into the situation as well as the policy that was changed at thomas jefferson high school. stuart: thank you for joining us. tell us what is going on. we would love to hear it.
10:46 am
the border patrol union going after vice president kamala harris, slamming her for doing nothing to stop the surge of migrants. a farmer in arizona says migrants are contaminating his crops, threatening food security. my question, are they contaminating crops? that farmer will explain. he's on the show next. knowing where you came from, it gives you a sense of “this is who i am”. oh my goodness... wow, look at all those! you get hungry for more and then you're just like, “wow, i'm learning about my family.” yeah, yep. which one, what'd you find?
10:47 am
lorraine banks, look, county of macomb, michigan? look at grandma... hey grandma! unbelievable. everybody deserves to know who they are and where they came from. ohhh...cool. this whole journey has been such a huge gift for our family.
10:48 am
so... i know you and george were struggling with the possibility of having to move. how's that going? we found a way to make bathing safer with a kohler walk-in bath. a kohler walk-in bath provides a secure, spa-like bathing experience in the comfort of your own home. a kohler walk-in bath has one of the lowest step-ins of any walk-in bath for easy entry and exit.
10:49 am
it features textured surfaces, convenient handrails for more stability, and a wide door for easier mobility. kohler® walk-in baths include two hydrotherapies— whirlpool jets and our patented bubblemassage™ to help soothe sore muscles in your feet, legs, and back. a kohler-certified installer will install everything quickly and conveniently in as little as a day. they made us feel completely comfortable in our home. and, yes, it's affordable. i wish we would have looked into it sooner. think i might look into one myself. stay in the home and life you've built for years to come. call... to receive 50% off installation of your kohler walk-in bath. and take advantage of our special low monthly payment financing.
10:50 am
stuart: to the border where another smuggling attempt has been that in tragedy. what happened? >> reporter: it happens every day. that is what we are dealing within this unprecedented crisis. if you go to my drone i want to show you this sector, the busiest sector. in just the first one hundred 10 days of this fiscal year they arrested 400 criminal aliens, 7 of them sex offenders and seized 33 weapons. let me show you, since i have been on the ground in eagle
10:51 am
pass for 12 days, they had 5500 known got aways, in 61 a day. the chief of the del rio sector, jason owens, the violence the cartel brings, if you look at this graphic, a migrant, gunshot wound at the hands of the cartel. that migrant was not life-threatening. if we go to the east, to the rio grande valley and show you some video shot early this morning, these migrants, by the elite brush unit, they were got aways, if you mention that crash, look at this video in texas, a smuggler lost control of his car, crashed, three migrants airlifted to the
10:52 am
hospital, one fled on foot, that when i got away. the chief of police had this to say. >> it increased 100% from last year. the amount of stolen vehicle recoveries regarding human smuggling, citizens being apprehended. >> reporter: i mentioned those got aways because your next guest can talk about this. the got aways have gone across the branches and farms and property, and border patrol officials say we have got to get out of the business of transporting migrants and back to enforcing got aways in the dark of night to get this under control. stuart: thank you. let's proceed to our guest, alex muller, from the produce company in arizona.
10:53 am
migrants are contaminating crops as they cross the border. how are they contaminating crops? >> last year we had an incident where 500 people across the border, border patrol couldn't matter processing all the people, a few of the groups, became impatient and walked into the farm roads and parked on the corner of ranchers and asking for rides, calling uber, border patrol is overwhelmed in that moment. something that is not really in our wheelhouse, that is something the government could deal with. stuart: i don't want to go too far on this, this threatens the nation's food security. are you going to go that far?
10:54 am
>> if it is not managed properly, we are basically witnessing this on these ranches, the whole world crossing the border, the whole world is represented in these are the people they are capturing, border patrol is taxed to the limit. what about people who they are not capturing. stuart: if you call the police does anything happen? >> it is not really in their wheelhouse either. they didn't know what to do. it was 30 people, 15 were pregnant girls, there were kids, what is the local sheriffs department going to do with that? >> it is a crisis and that is a fact, thank you for being with us, much obliged to you. we have presidents in yuma,
10:55 am
arizona warning about the cartel crisis. what are they saying? ashley: i lived in your life or 3 years but it was never like thisthe mexican cartels are endangerin watch this. >> it is not a political discussion, this is national security, human trafficking of narcotics. >> they run this border, people and drugs across. it is big-money and people. ashley: a local farmer because of a ticking time bomb in yuma, 70% increase in migrant crossings between 20 to one-2022 and nearly one hundred known or suspected terrorists
10:56 am
were arrested at the southern border last year. that compares over the previous five years to 26 arrests. a huge threat in many ways. stuart: it is a crisis. will kane, shannon bream and brent bozell. there's a battle coming in ukraine and we are seeing some real movement from the us and allies. and ukraine could win this. that is "my take" and it is next. ♪ ♪ ready or not ♪ you are come, you can't hide ♪ going to find you and take it slowly ♪ ready or not ♪ you can't hide ♪ ♪ going to find you ♪ and make you want me ♪ i'm bill lockwood, current caretaker and owner.
10:57 am
when covid hit, we had some challenges like a lot of businesses did. i heard about the payroll tax refund, it allowed us to keep the amount of people that we needed and the people that have been here taking care of us. see if your business may qualify. go to getrefunds.com. if you have this... and you get this... you could end up with this... unexpected out-of-pocket costs. which for those on medicare, or soon to be, is a good reason to take charge of your health care. so consider this. an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan from unitedhealthcare. why? because medicare alone doesn't pay for everything. and what it doesn't pay for, like deductibles and copays, could really add up. even thousands of dollars a year. medicare supplement plans help by paying some of what medicare doesn't...
10:58 am
and making your out-of-pocket costs a lot more predictable. call unitedhealthcare today and ask for your free decision guide. learn more about plan options and rates to fit your needs. now if you like this... greater freedom... you'll love that medicare supplement plans have no networks and no referrals needed... see any doctor. any specialist. anywhere in the u.s. as long as they accept medicare patients. these types of plans also give you more flexibility when traveling in the u.s. your plan goes with you... anywhere you go in the country. even better, these are the only plans of their kind endorsed by aarp. call unitedhealthcare today for your free decision guide. so if you have this and want less out-of-pocket costs...
10:59 am
and more peace of mind... consider adding this. an aarp medicare supplement plan. take charge of your health care today. just use this...or this to call unitedhealthcare about an aarp medicare supplement plan.
11:00 am
>> yes. i think it's rich that karine jean-pierre is basically, in essence, saying, listen, i've answered the question, don't ask it anymore, we don't the know what the answer is. >> it's interesting that all of this comes to light, was leaked just as he was about to make his announcement. so who doesn't want joe biden to run? >> these next two weeks are critical because we have a lot of earnings coming out from mega-cap tech companies next week and then a fed meeting after that. if the market stays resilient through that, that'll be saying a lot, but i don't think it will once we ge

61 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on