tv Varney Company FOX Business February 13, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EST
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♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates, and borrow up to $100k. sofi. get your money right. >> the american people are pissed off and that's a bad thing. if this is now four air devices from china, that's a big, big deal, and we need definitive action from the white house. >> it's very clear at this point that china is preparing for something, for war against us and our president has no idea who his real enemies are his oath is to protect us from exactly this kind of foreign invasion. >> the market is cheering that the feds have won in their fight against inflation but that's premature. i think the fight has against inflation is far from over.
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the market is way ahead of itself here. >> the cpi is the most important economic report we will see. if this number in the cpi does not decline, you can't justify a market that, you can't justify them pivoting or even slowing the process of raising rates. we're an american man, we're an american man, we come into your house, we'll lock your party down ♪ ashley: can't help but sing along, we're an american band, there's fox square in midtown manhattan on this monday morning , good morning, everyone. it is 11 a.m., i can't believe it's already 11 a.m. on the east coast on this monday, february 13. i'm ashley webster in today for stuart. let's take a look at the markets for you. we started out flat but it gained nice ground the dow up 275 at this hour, the s&p up nearly 1% the nasdaq gaining
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more ground up one and one-tenth percent after all three major indices lost ground last week. big tech names for you only alphabet moving slightly lower but meta and microsoft up more than 3% amazon and apple also up more than 1%. let's take a look at the 10-year treasury as well. that started to fall back a little bit this morning maybe explaining the rise, but it's essentially flat. the 10 year yield at 3.74%. so no real movement there. all right, now this. a new op-ed, it reads this. florida governor ron desantis is the gop's sunshining future. i love it. miranda devine wrote that and she joins me now. good morning to you, miranda. it seems like this is less about ron desantis and more about the gop field that will soon take shape for 2024. desantis has a great florida resume but the bench is pretty
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deep. >> look, that's so true, stuart , and the point of the column is that you would much rather be a republican voter going into 2024 than a democrat and the democrats are just stuck. they have joe biden who will be 82 if he were to win a second term at the beginning of it and who has lots of problems at the moment and whose last two years have been way less than stellar, and he's insisting that he's, you know, has an open mind and looks like he wants to run. they're even changing the way the primaries work to suit him, and then even if they were somehow to persuade him not to run again, kamala harris who is absolutely unelectable but very difficult to dislodge because as a woman of color, she's a first and, you know, the democratic party is all about identity
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politics and virtual signals so there's no way they can shunt her aside and so they really locked into this disaster for them and electoral looming disaster and it's not clear how they can get out of it. on the other hand, the republicans have an embarrassment of riches. they have a very deep bench. they have donald trump who had a successful presidency, what ever other problems he might have in convincing sort of, you know, independents or republicans that he's got what it takes to do it again, but coming, nipping at his heels is a governor, ron desantis, who has a book out at the end of the month, which is all about how turning florida into a blueprint for the nation. ashley: that sounds presidential to me, but miranda, i want to get into this issue. south carolina governor nikki haley and other potential candidates is set to launch her bid this week. this is interesting, a new op-ed
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in politico titled "nikki haley 's woman problem", that op-ed questions her chances with what they call maximal sexism in republican politics. miranda do you think republicans only want a male to head the party? >> of course not. that's just the typical slander of conserves and republicans that they are somehow sexist, not true. if nikki haley has what it takes , she will be president. if she doesn't, she won't. the difference between republicans and democrats is that republicans don't just jeti son merit in favor of characteristics of people like their sex and color of their skin. instead, they choose the best person for the job. margaret thatcher, the most successful british prime minister, was a woman, so
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conservatives are not sexist. they just want the best person for the job, because they want to fix the problems in the country. they don't just want to have, you know, some symbol to wave as the first-ever this or first -ever that. ashley: right. very quickly, miranda. now there are reports of senator tim scott is preparing for a presidential run. to your point, there's a lot of strong candidates out there. >> yeah. i mean, it's incredible. the republicans have probably the strongest field that we've seen in many many years. ashley: yeah. >> they're young. they are energetic, they are fresh. they have the make america great again flavor, the american-first sensibility and yet, they haven't got a lot of the baggage that the former donald trump had largely because he was attacked at every stage even before he became president. ashley: yeah. >> i think these younger, more
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nimble candidates have seen what happened to donald trump and they will be strapping on the armor. ashley: can't wait. it's always fun to report on. it's going to be a fun couple of years leading up to the election miranda devine great stuff. thank you for speaking with us. >> sure is. thanks, stuart. ashley: let's check the markets if we can, you're welcome. i wanted to be called stuart. let's have a look at the markets for you. we are moving higher the dow up nearly 300 points, the s&p up nearly 1%. good time to bring in jason katz jason, good morning to you. i mean, i could say what are the catalysts you're looking for this week but i think the big one is tomorrow with the cpi, right? >> sure, and ashley, i wouldn't discount ppi or retail sales or the fact we have the balance of earnings season but to your point, all eyes are on cpi, which we expect to come down from roughly 6.5 to 6.2, so the bond market has gotten the
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memo that maybe we're having fits and starts with respect to inflation abating on the good side. we all could agree that service inflation is going to take a lot longer. stocks, however, have not gotten the memo that we're getting these fits and starts on goods inflation, so i don't want to quite go out on a limb and say the cpi is a binary number because every cpi number we get in the forthcoming months will be pivotal but the next leg of this market will clearly hinge on the direction of this number and i think it may not cool off as much as we hope, so i don't think it's setting up for anything ominous but perhaps a little bit of disappointment heading into that number. ashley: you know, there's a theme from a number of analysts in recent days, jason, who have said investors markets just not paying enough attention to what the fed is really telling them and this reliance on the pivot and the fact that they are going to start taking their foot off the gas pedal is completely wrong, and then they are going
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to be called out because this is going to go on for longer than they really think it is. would you agree? >> i would totally agree, and the three decades on wall street , i don't know if i've ever seen such a confused marketplace. no one knows what to root for. you have the soft landing camp that's obviously cheering these robust job numbers, but counterintuitively the stronger the job market the higher the fed goes the longer they stay, the increased risk of recession. then you have those rooting for bad news which, you know, why anyone would do that because bad news is bad news, which could lead to a recession. i think what we need to root for is number one, cpi ppi directionally confirming that inflation is improving and number two, we need to see job participation up-tick and then lastly, to your earlier point, we need to see a fed that comes up for air. forget about a pivot. it's not happening. they have made it abundantly clear. we need a breather and a pause and i think you'll get that in the latter part of this year.
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ashley: so tomorrow, if it comes in hot, hotter-than-expected do we see a big sell-off? >> yeah, i think that you're going to see a move in one direction or another anywhere from 1% to 2% so i don't think it's going to be anything catacl ysmic, should it be a little bit hotter. ashley: fantastic information as always, jason, thank you so much. thanks for being here. let's bring lauren in. lauren, you have some movers let's begin with stu's one of his favorite. i won't say. lauren: would that be microsoft? ashley: it be. he's smiling right now. it's up more than 3.5%. lauren: 272 a share. so they have chatgpt obviously and they have invited some users to use bing search that already incorporates chatgpt into it so invitation only and it's a preview. are people really going to stop using chrome and safari to use b
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ing because of the ai potential? i think the answer might be yes, because they are seeing a lot of sign-ups already. i don't know. i'm not going to switch over. anyway, i wasn't invited also. ralph lauren, bank of america upgraded them to buy. they gave them a price target of 145. they say all this cautiousness is already baked in. speaking of bank of america and upgrades, fastly, that it's a company that helps app developer s double upgrade at b of a to buy. they say look investors get in here, get in on the ground floor and they like the diversified products and the turnaround by the new ceo who came over back in september from cisco. ashley: who wouldn't invite lauren simonetti? if they don't they aren't worth it. one more for you, lauren, before we move on. a new study shows how much remote work is costing new york city. what's the number? lauren: more than $12 billion a year, according to bloomberg news. ashley: wow.
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lauren: they found workers spend an average of 30% less time in the office compared to before the pandemic, and because of that, they are spending about $4,700 less on things like food and entertainment near their jobs. another survey last month found less than 10% of new york city workers have returned to work full-time. look, yes, you save money by working from home, but i come in everyday. i want a $4,700 bonus or raise. isn't that fair? is that fair? ashley: you've got it. lauren: you're great. ashley: no problems here. i agree. sign up on that. lauren: thank you, ashley. ashley: unfortunately i don't sign off on anything. you're welcome but you have my support. lauren, thank you so much. now this , robots are going woke of course they are. fox just verified reports that chatgpt shows bias against donald trump. it also refuses to support fossil fuels. big surprise, not really.
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we're all over it. the nationwide tiktok ban could be closer than you think. senate majority leader chuck schumer thinks it needs to be looked at. tommy harry reed en is going to weigh in on that and calls are growing for the u.s. economic ties with china, but is that really realistic? connell mcshane is taking a deep dive into china's chokehold and our supply chain, and that's next. ♪ everybody wants to rule the world ♪ we all have a purpose in life - a “why.” no matter your purpose, at pnc private bank we will work with you every step of the way to help you achieve it. so let us focus on the how. just tell us - what's your why? ♪ choosing miracle-ear was a great decision. like when i decided to host family movie nights.
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leave immediately as the war in ukraine ramps up. they are worried about wrongful detentions. the department also warning americans, "do not travel to russia as their ability to help u.s. citizens in russia is severely limited" that warning from the state department. stay away from russia basically. next case, the chinese spy flight along with multiple unidentified objects have led to calls for the u.s. to break free economically from china. sounds great. well, experts say it's not really a realistic option. connell mcshane joins us now. good morning, connell. are the experts right? connell: good morning, ashley. the numbers show they are for now at least. political relations at this point look to be at a low point but if you just look at numbers, business in many ways is booming. last time i reported from china in-person was june of 2019 we visited huawei headquarters and the buzzword even back then was "deep coupling" calls were going
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louder for an economic separation between these two powers but now, years later the latest data just in shows trade between the u.s. and china is at a record with the experts telling us that for these companies, cutting ties is much easier said than done. >> i think we are, it just takes a long time, and you don't see it immediately. even if they don't leave china they build alternative supply chains somewhere else. that's all going on but it takes a lot of time and they aren't all going to do it. connell: that's because even though china can be the biggest threat to many of these american companies, it also still maybe their best customer. the former undersecretary of commerce frank lavin is still helping u.s. companies to do business in china and says those selling consumer products simply don't want to give up on a huge market. >> if you're nike, it's a fabulous year there and you aren't going to pull out, but, but if you are nike you might be putting a disproportion at effort into india or other
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markets just as a way of sorting edging your china exposure. connell: really going on. india, indonesia, vietnam will be the relative winners long term in this. in fact, one of the americas top 10 trading partners, ranked eighth new previously tenth but these experts say this idea of decoupling from china is probably a misnomer. it's really a diversification and that is going to take time. ashley? ashley: yeah. a lot of it i think. connell, thank you very much, great stuff. meantime the governor of michigan, gretchen whitmer was pressed for still having an active account on tiktok despite the national security risk. come on in here, lauren. what exactly did the governor have to say? lauren: what she said is exactly why tiktok should be banned. the governor said she trusted so much, ashley, that she put it on one device with nothing else on that one device. listen here. >> we use tiktok on one device that has nothing else on it.
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it is a communication tool. we don't do it because it's fun. although some people think what i put out there can be fun on occasion. whether we like it or not, that is a tool for disseminating important information and that's how we use it. lauren: to young voters, disseminating information to young people who are on tiktok. ashley: all right lauren: that's her justification. ashley: forget the security risk s, get the votes. senate majority leader chuck schumer, lauren, weighing in on the debate to shutdown tiktok. let's roll that tape. >> this won't make my daughters happy but how about banning tiktok? >> well that's a great question it's something that should be looked at. we do know there's chinese ownership of the company that owns tiktok, and so there's some people in the commerce committee that are looking into that right now. we'll see where they come out. ashley: we've known they have been owned by a chinese company for a long time. tomi lahren joins me now. great to see you, tomi.
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do we need to take tougher action against tiktok? >> why has it taken so long for us to have this conversation we've known for so long what tiktok is doing. we know who owns tiktok. this shouldn't even be a conversation at this point, but, as you mentioned with several governors and several prominent democrats, they are in a real conundrum here because they have a love affair with tiktok because they view their future voters as tiktok viewers, watch ers and active users and beyond that it's really difficult issue for the white house when president biden invites tiktokers to the white house to push the covid vaccine, so they are going to be in a real tough spot. i think they are also really going to anger a lot of those young voters if they do come out with this strong national security stance against tiktok so they have to weigh that here. however, i would say i think national security comes in a little higher on the priority list. i'll also say this. we're talking now about spy balloons. ufo's possibly aliens. that little device your kids
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spend a lot of their day on and maybe even adults in the room spend their day on that's far more intrusive and you don't even realize it. it's in your pocket. tiktok is a danger. ban it now. ashley: very good. we hear you loud and clear. another one for you, tomi. you say that social media and big tech have finally been exposed for their liberal agenda explain more on that. >> well, exposed. we have known this has been going on for many years especially if you have a large platform and you're a conservative we know we've been censored, silenced, the whole lot of it. we knew its been happening but we're getting validation of this and last week, when the democrats looked at the house oversight committee hear ing and they called it a waste of time and resources, that angered me to my very core. you know most americans might not care if prominent conservatives were deplatformed or shadow banned. might not even care the president of the united states at the time was de platformed from his social media. however, when it comes to the debate on covid, there was no debate allowed to have happened
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on the social media platforms when people wanted information the most, that conversation was almost completely shutdown prominent doctors conservative accounts, americans were censor ed and silenced on that very important issue that impacts our country for generations to come. it's criminal, and these companies need to be held liable for it and then you take into account that big government was also working with big tech to shutdown certain voices and certain platforms? that is unamerican at-best. ashley: and you know what's interesting? when we got the document dumped from twitter and elon musk, the outrage. where was the outrage? democrats are like oh, this is just republicans, you know, whin ing on but i found it outrageous. >> well they use it to their advantage. they weren't being censored and silenced so why would they care? they use it as a tool, especially those running against republicans, they love the fact that their republican opponents and republican ideas and concept s were silenced or were in some ways reduced and that is actually what the white house
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digital director said to facebook. he wanted people like me and tucker carlson specifically to be "reduced" . it happened, big tech was happy to do it and that is a big problem. ashley: it is a huge problem. tomi lahren fired up on this monday morning. tomi, thank you very much for joining us and bringing the heat as they say. by the way speaking of big tech memes, tweets and snark comments are the fda's new public health weapons. okay, explain that one, lauren. lauren: so the fda feels they can't tackle misinformation on an individual basis. it's overwhelming, so at times when they need to just set the record straight, they don't want to engage in a back and forth, so they often use jokes, memes, snark as their weapon, and they are doing this as 37% of americans say they trust the fda. that's it. quick example. damar hamlin of the buffalo bills when he collapsed on the field? the twitter trolls blamed the covid-19 vaccine for the
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cardiac arrest. the fda commissioner later came out and he called those trolls snake oil salesmen, but never really addressed the issue, so they are using memes and they should just put a statement out. ashley: instead of name-calling. very good. lauren, thank you. workers with high school diploma s just saw the biggest wage gains in more than 20 years meantime, people with college degrees are seeing wages decline interesting. we're on it. celebrity investor kevin o'leary thinks artificial intelligence is about to take off. he also believes it could be as disruptive as amazon. kevin o'leary joins me now. ♪ ♪
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check the markets, and we can see we've been on the way up the dow up 272 points, after a very flat start. we've gained some momentum getting back some of the losses from last week. the nasdaq up 1.25% the s&p up nearly 1%. susan li joins me now. you have some movers for us, susan. let's begin with the stocks from china. >> yeah, and you knew that was taylor swift. they didn't need to write that for you. message in a bottle. so yeah, china internet stocks today leading this advance. i saw baidu was up the most on the s&p and the nasdaq this morning, and that's because of those chatgpt artificial intelligence euphoria, after beijing said they would support leading china tech companies that can build artificial intelligence. the challenge can'tgpt, so baidu already earning chat bot in the works, alibaba said they were building their chatgpt equivalent to incorporate into their social media and then pdd rallying today one of the big gainers
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after its temu discount retailer app has been the number one most downloaded app in the u.s. by the way the past two months running two super bowl commercials last night and a pop of $7 million for 30 seconds and they spent $1 billion in the u.s. marketing campaign so far. i also want to show you apple which has accelerated this morning after evercore this morning said that consumer demand for apple products is as strong as it was at the start of last year. also that cloud communications company just announced they are laying off 17% of their workforce. they know the ft is reporting that meta is doing another round of job cuts after laying off 11,000 last year, and then final ly, zillow, which just got a big upgrade from evercore. the equivalent of a buy calling it outperform with $61 and evercore says that the housing market will bounce back quickly, they say, and airbnb by the way is set to report its net profits earnings and expected to report a tripling in profit when it
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reports this week, a tripling think of that 236% because of the best summer travel season they've seen in three years, average analyst is calling airbnb a $120 stock. ashley: people want to get out and about. have some vacation. susan, thank you very much. now this. talking of chatgpt, the artificial intelligence bot is accused of having woke bias. of course. let's take me through this lauren. lauren: it's a work in progress, right? it's only informed until 2021 so somewhat old, but early on it is considered woke. so fox news digital asked chatgp t about president donald trump and chatgpt said no, "i don't have personal opinions or political bias" but then, fox news digital said well why don't you write a poem about president joe biden and they did and it started with"he's a leader with a heart of gold" so there you have it. like i said, work in progress,
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but early on. ashley: [laughter] all right all right we get the picture, lauren, thank you very much. now i want to bring in celebrity investor kevin o'leary. kevin, great to see you this morning. what do you make of the rise of artificial intelligence like chatgpt? is this a game changer? >> i think it is, actually, and you can see it reflected in the diminishment of the market cap of google. it makes sense, because you think about the format of what chatgpt is. it's not brain surgery. they are basically scraping the internet itself in a new way so they are taking data you could get on google which you find in all of the links listed and people are buying prominens on those links. it's a form of advertising. you don't need to do that any more on chatgpt, so it's going to effect how it's advertised, more of a subscription model. last week, i started just looking at my own use of both google and chatgpt. i'm sort of up to 30% of my search days now and i was forced to buy the subscription service
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last week at 20 bucks a month because 100 million people a day are logging on and jamming up the system and you get priority with the $20 fee, so as a result , as an investor i said to myself okay, let's trim back on google, which i've done, and let's buy into this round at this crazy valuation of 29 billion, but i like to own a piece of the first mover in the space. so this is the proverbial google killer and i'd remind you. you've been listening for a decade-long about how they are investing in moon shots. the only moon shot google should have invested in was this ,ai. they missed it. this is like microsoft missing the internet on the first iteration when gates wrote this book. he never mentioned the internet. it nearly cleaned him out. ashley: i'm just so addicted to google, kevin. i just can't imagine jumping over to bing, but i get your point but i want to get on to this issue before we run out of time because you, sir, are getting a lot of attention for
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this tweet about your definition of success, and you wrote, "you may lose your wife, you may lose your dog, your mother may hate you, one of those things matter." what matters is that you achieve success and become free. then, you can do whatever you like. now, kevin, are you surprised what kind of pushback you got for that, and do you still defend that statement? >> 100%. if you're an entrepreneur you know exactly what i'm talking about. you're going to work 25 hours a day, eight days a week. they wrote about it when the beatles first put it out there. this is what it takes to succeed , as an entrepreneur. if you can't do it, if that statement makes you uncomfortable you are not an entrepreneur. don't even try. ashley: but even at the expense of family? that's the argument back saying wait a minute where is your quality of life? >> look you're going to sacrifice quality of life with your family in your early years and the reason you do it and what's inherent in that
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statement is you're buying freedom for yourself and your whole family. that's the whole idea. you sacrifice to gain this back later in life and if you don't have the guts to do it, don't even try. ashley: that's why you're on shark tank. you're always so clear and to the point. kevin, let me go to bring up ftx got to mention that, sam bankman-fried, of course we know you were an initial investor in ftx. are you done with investing in cryptos? how has it changed you in that sector? >> no, no, no. in fact, i have doubled down. i've bought, one of my best performing assets frankly is bitcoin since the beginning of the year. i've bought more, but what i am doing is spending a lot more time on the hill. what i like about the downside, look ftx was horrific. the whole thing is a disaster. everybody gets it and those of us that invested in it looked like idiots. however investing 8 out of my 10 investments are the two that win
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and in this case it looks like alleged fraud but my point is it doesn't stop what i do everyday. i get up every morning and invest in entrepreneurs but now this ftx hearing that occurred late last year on the hill has poked the bear and regulators are now really looking at regulation. you saw gensler make a move last week. he's on a war path and backed by a lot of people including people like me who want to see regulation. we want to see some guardrails. i'm tired of going to the hill for hearings every six months for the next crypto company that blows up and goes to zero. everybody is sick of that. it's now time for regulation. ashley: i hope you can get some of your money back, kevin but we do appreciate you being on the show today. always forthright and to the point and we love it. kevin o'leary thank you very much. >> thank you. ashley: now this. the kansas city, oh, thank you, the kansas city chiefs we know they are the super bowl champs. one of their quarterbacks is now retiring. we'll tell you who that is. meantime, a nurse is making
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ashley: guess what? your college degree used to almost guarantee a higher paycheck, right? well, not anymore. come in lauren. how much are wages for college grads dipped over the last year? lauren: more than 7%, bringing the median salary to $52000. basically, meaning, everything gained for this segment of the workforce has been erased since the pandemic.
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but look at this. wages for those with only a high school diploma rose 6% last year , that's the most in two decades to just over $34,000, so you're still on average making less than a colleague with a bachelor's degree, but those high school diplomas, their wages are catching up and that underscores demand by the economy for service sector workers which typically don't require college degrees. ashley: right. very interesting. lauren, thank you very much. talking of interesting, now this a nurse is making millions of dollars just by selling her school notes on the internet. watch this. >> how i organize my notes to effectively study in nursing school by answering only two questions. i like to call this the what and the why? i promise everything will click and you will be a way-better student and nurse if you understand the what and the why. ashley: that is nurse stephanie bags and she joins us
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this morning. stephanie, congratulations, first off. tell me how did you get started selling your notes? did you find of just fall into this? tell me the back story. >> yeah, first off, thank you for having me, but yes. ashley: sure. >> i fell right into it. it was very unintentional. i got started selling my notes when i graduated nursing school. i was studying for the boards exam, what we call the nclex for nursing, and it was right when the pandemic happened so i had nobody to study with. i would teach myself to the wall and i would record it, and then i posted that on to social media and people loved it. they asked to buy my study sheet s so i created a shop that eventually became viral and yeah , so now i sell study sheets i passed the boards a long time ago and now i sell them for students approaching the boards exam taking tests in
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nursing school. ashley: so essentially, you did all of the hard work. you boiled down all of the key facts for each subject and then you're selling those notes. it's almost like selling cheat sheets, but it's not cheat sheet s. it's your work. >> yeah. ashley: how much do you charge for those? >> so if you buy a study sheet just one single study sheet on one condition, it's $2 a sheet. i do sell them in bundles of specific classes, so pediatric bundle, critical care bundle, and those are 30 to $40 and that includes like 50 to 60 medical conditions, and then i sell all of them in one big giant bundle for pretty much all of nursing school and that is $150. ashley: that's a bargain but you've made millions, is that right? >> yes, i have. i hit 2 million last year.
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ashley: that is fantastic. is this your full time job or are you a nurse and a note- seller? >> i am, so this is my full time job, but i also work in the er as an er nurse and then i also teach college-age student s at a university too so i am an instructor also. ashley: you are the very definition of an entrepreneur. congratulations, stephanie. all your hard work is paying off , and it's one of the great stories. i really love this story and it's all down to you and your hard work so congratulations. >> thank you. ashley: oh, yeah, thank you. it's very interesting and inspirational. let's move on, stephanie, thank you. let's take a look at the dow 30 stocks to get a sense of the markets. we've been up nicely now after a flat opening and as you can see a lot more green than red. the dow up 334 points, led by microsoft. yes, stu, you can keep smiling and nike up at the top. chevron and walt disney down at the bottom. all right, now, take a look at
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this. it's a joe montana game-used jersey from the 1980s. it is up for auction right now and the bids are already hundreds of thousands of dollars of course, ken goldin is going to be here to show it off and many more, next. ♪ for businesses of all sizes, there are a lot of choices when it comes to your internet and technology needs. when you choose comcast business internet, you choose the largest, fastest reliable network. you choose advanced security for total peace of mind. and you choose a next generation 10g network
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ashley: kansas city chiefs are super bowl champions and mvp quarterback patrick mahomes has big plans to celebrate. roll tape. >> patrick mahomes you and the kansas city chiefs just won the super bowl. what are you going to do next? >> i'm going to disneyland! ashley: yes, he is. all right when you wish upon a star, you go to disneyland, after winning the supers bowl. chad henney is celebrating by retiring and making the announcement after the big game this was his second super bowl win with the chiefs. what a jamie spears jalen hurts
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for the eagles unbelievable game as well. ken goldin is here with some priceless sports memorabilia up for auction. good morning to you, ken. let's talk about this joe montana jersey. boy was he ever great. it was worn in a super bowl, right? >> correct this is very unique. it's part of the joe montana collection, which is currently available at goldin.com and this was worn by joe montana when he won super bowl mvp in super bowl xix; however, the day before, the day he was supposed to play in super bowl xxiii instead of wearing the standard team issued jersey his wife took out his old jersey and said you did so well with this one first time, why don't you wear it again. the nfl never noticed that he was wearing a slightly different jersey than the rest of his teammates. they of course won that super bowl, meaning that joe montana wore this jersey in two super bowl championships which would
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never happened to. so it's truly unique and truly historic and of course joe was four for four played four super bowls won all four and three times was the mvp. ashley: montana to jerry rice. how much would that go for , do you think, ken? >> well the current bidding right now at goldin is i believe about half a million. we expect this to easily exceed $1 million, possibly approach or exceed 2 million and become the most valuable football piece of gaming used equipment ever worn. ashley: amazing. of course with the chiefs win yesterday, i was wondering how much the memorabilia of patrick mahomes gained and you have a signed card, right? >> yes so this is a very special rookie card. it is his stars and stripes 201. it's limited only 13. i believe the current bidding this one is actually, sorry, i have to use the word "only", it's only 55,000.
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we expect it to sell it in around the $1 55,000 range. ashley: wow how about jaylen hurts? you have a signed rookie card. >> this is a buy. this is i believe only at $5,000 so this is a limited edition rookie card, and it is the midnight, with the i believe that is, is that the , yeah, the patchmen and this is also available to hurts right now a relative bargain. this may go for $25,000 compared to mahomes. ashley: last one, quickly. of course tom brady, he has retired, we believe. you have a signed rookie card? >> yes, actually, mr. wonderful was admiring this one in the green room with me earlier. this was his 2000 playoff championship ticket limited only 100. this one will exceed $500,000.
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ashley: wow. if only i had the money to buy. always great stuff. ken goldin, thank you so much for joining us today. always fun to look at the memorabilia and how much money they fetch. ken, thank you. now it's time for the monday trivia question. thank you. which website debuted on valentine's day back in 2005 was it facebook, youtube, twitter, or my space? the answer right after this. . .
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♪. ashley: all right, earlier we asked you which website debuted on valentine's day back in 2005? facebook, youtube, twitter, myspace. lauren what say you? >> facebook? ashley: facebook, yeah, that is not bad. i was going with twitter. but you know what, i think we're both wrong. let's have a look. the answer is, youtube. i feel it has been around long every than that. i've done everything i can. lauren has done so much more. that is i h it for "varney & company." "coast to coast" starts right now. neil: ♪ neil: think about it, u.s. jets downed four objects in the last eight days. the alaskan governor mike dunleavy wants a heads up when that wil
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