tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business May 11, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT
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i will guess 173 million women living in america. what say you, ashley? >> i was going to go for that too. we're talking legally, right? number they, 10.5 million. stuart: we're both wrong. i was right. 167.5 million. thanks ash. send in "friday feedback." what do you want to know about us. email us at varney viewers.com. "coast to coast" started almost immediately. like right now. neil: 42 ends at 11:59 tonight. getting ready for a surge at the border already on.
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first the border and the ending of a measure for three years and this two administrations has served as a blunt tool to stall an unending illegal migrant surge. former texas land commissioner george p. bush, says he is worried for the country. texas ranch owner mike hayes is really worried for, well his ranch. remember when he showed the damage done by migrants to his property? you see what happened since. what he fears now. signs of a debt ceiling selloff? hard to say. you would think stocks would be topping on another tame, tamer inflation report but not today. could it be going nowhere debt talks are seeming the more of a possibility? robert kiyosaki says, rich man, poor man. finally, some good news.
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eureka. buffets are back. the golden moment for golden corral is on, so is the ceo. food for thought just when you were starving for hope. welcome, i'm neil cavuto. looking forward to the whole buffet thing but i digress. our biggest story, trouble at the border. caroline shively has more as we await for the countdown for 42 to end. caroline? >> reporter: hi, neil. they opened up gate 40 at el paso on the border wall three hours ago. since then we seen hundreds of might might be grants ushered in vehicles and buses by the border patrol. dozens of families coming through the gate. men, women, children, many have come to border to apply for asylum. 10,000 migrant apprehensionses
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yesterday, third day in a row we've seen the 10,000 migrant. this week has highest ever totals recorded for border patrol. cbc has 107,000 migrants in federal custody. capacity across the border is 10,000. several sectors are well-over can't right now. here in texas the national guard is at the border putting up razor wire and turning people around that try to sneak over. here is more from the national guard. >> my soldiers are citizen soldiers. we're the texas army national guard. we're here defending not just the border of united states but the border of texas where my soldiers live. so they're defending their hometown. >> reporter: looking over the gate at least 100 more migrants are on the other side of that border, razor wire, if they all come in, one gate in a border 2000 miles long, 12 hours before title 42 expires.
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neil: thank you, caroline. 11:59 tonight that three-year long feature ends. mike hayes is watching things closely. you remember mike he was a great guest on his show. outlining a problem at his ranch as migrants really ransacked it, destroyed much of it. he is kind to join us now. that ranch is the double m ran. he is the owner. good to have you back. first off, how is your ranch holding up these days? >> it is about the same. we've had, we've had a big influx in people been coming through the last month or two for sure, possibly more than i ever seen since i owned the ranch going on nine years now but we're waiting to see what happens tonight for sure. neil: you're right there at the border. could you explain what happens and what's left, what you wake up to a lot of mornings? >> well, recently, we've had to even lock our inner gates for different fields. they will leave the gates open,
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cows will get out. symptomped fences down, cut the fences. we're getting up to fence damage every day. we can see, i can look out the window to see mexico from the window. it has gotten bad. we had to, like i said we had to lock all of our gates even inside of the ranch. they will leave them open or they will go right beside it stomp them down and clothes, waking up to clothes, all kind of shoes, backpacks laying everywhere, you know. it it is definitely getting worse. neil: we had some images what you were dealing with. if we can show them, melinda, full screen, so we see what he had to deal with but i'm just wondering mike, now you know title 42 ends, at least that was a bandaid on this where a lot of those trying to get into the country would be first held in places like mexico. that stops, which means that the activity that you're seeing on
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your ranch only going to increase, right? >> yeah. that's what they say but you know, you got to realize too that the people that is really decent people, they do try to come across the right way. the majority of the people that we deal with is the ones that can get through a legal way. they are hiding something or have issues with the law or been deported multiple times. and so you know, after so many times they, i guess they're under the pretense that they would be locked up or something. gets them more aggressive. the ones from further south down in haiti, things like that, they're way more aggressive than the neighboring country that we deal with. so it is getting to be, i told you before, that it is destabilized. it is. not just me. it is all the ranchers, all of our neighbors, we're all dealing with this stuff. i don't know. it's, it a crisis that's for
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sure. neil: how big is your ranp, mike? >> i'm right under a thousand acres. neil: so a thousand acres is a lot of places for a lot of people to hide. how sure are you now, even on the thousand acres you have right now that many aren't hiding somewhere, somewhere now? >> oh, we do. we got levees where, spillways go around us. irrigation canals. there is drain ditches in beside them. we can ride by look down they hear us coming, they hide. sleeping in the barns, feed sheds. i walked in on groups in the hay. you just never know. it's dangerous thing. you never know who you are dealing with you know. they know who we are but we don't know who they are. neil: i'm curious what do you do? in that event, title 42 going
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away, situation could get worse. we're told there is a difference this time. the administration deployed 1500 troops to the border. not sure exactly what they are going to do. they will be out manned by the sheer number of migrants trying to get into the country, but what do you think of all that? >> let me tell you, they say they send troops here but they don't help the border patrol. they are basically doing paperwork. they are there, they want to works. they can't. their hands are tied. the administration, how can you fix something you ain't even come to look at yourself? it's, politics, that is all it is. neil: mike, best of luck to you. can't believe what you're dealing with. it is your home, for god's sake. mike hayes, double m ranch owner. he is living proof how this is affecting average americans trying to get by doing what they're trying to do. hecker to garza is within of them.
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he has a big title addressing this. he can help the country out. easier said than done. hector is the national border pa control council vice president. hector, we always seem to talk during times of strife. you're dealing head on in a way you never did before. this could get very dicey in the next 12 who plus hours, right? >> let's make it clear, it is very busy down at the border. look at some images in brownsville, texas, look at some images in el paso. mike grant camps in mexico, some of the reports in the mexican side holding 16 to 20,000 migrants in a migrant camp out there waiting for title 42 to end. it is very difficult. we're out here trying our best as agents. our detention centers are
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quickly getting overcrowded. it is a difficult time for our country. we have never seen this in the history of our country before. neil: you know, hector, apparently a different message trying to get into those getting into this country from anywhere. on tiktok, one of the most popular handles, title 42. viewed, 96 million times, the gist of may 11th you cannot be deported. title 42 has come to an end. come to america. what do you make of that? >> so those are some of the cartels marketing strategies. they're using social media. they're using tiktok, they're using facebook, instagram, everybody is publicizing coming to the country legally, arrested processed being released. that is not only marketing strategy but it is reality for what is happening on the border. again people are coming to the country legally, being processed being released. it is a very real marketing
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strategy what is actually happening on the border under the biden administration. neil: better than 1.2 million have been apprehended at the border i believe the end of last month. it has obviously gone significantly higher since that time and they're are all these indications we could look at 10,000 or more per day. that will build up aggressively tomorrow and in future days. do those numbers jibe with what you're dealing with? >> they do. as a matter of fact couple days we're seeing about 8,000 of the 10,000 apprehensions per day, 8,000 for sure. 10,000 apprehensions through the u.s. border patrol. those are alarming numbers. at some point we had up to 27, 25 million people in our custody. it's true situation getting out of control. the federal government will have to use a lot of resources from other federal agencies to be
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able to handle this crisis. the problem is, that we're dealing with human life, children, women, families. it is difficult to be able to deal with that while at the same time trying to arrest stop drug smugglers and fentanyl coming across the border. neil: we watched someone swimming his way in the rio grande trying to get into this country. a lot hoe got information to this country maybe courtesy of cartels on tiktok, title 42 is over, many believe that, putting their lives on the line, putting a lot of money on the line to make it happen to get here. what do you think of that? >> well it is very clear, neil, that all people have to do is get from the countries, make it to the u.s.-mexico border, cross the border illegally, claim asylum they will get released into the united states. that is the main driver. it doesn't matter what biden says. if biden says use the cpb application or to go through their country's consulate. doesn't matter, people will
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continue to come because it has been reality for the past two years under this administration that people can just come to the border, cross illegally, they will get released into the u.s. that is a fact. that is why people are coming. they will continue to come as long as we allow people to be released under capture and release program. neil: amazing. tells you if people read something on tiktok, 96 million times that was before i came here to do the show. shows you how widespread that false rumor is. thank you very much, my friend. hector garza following all of that. we'll continue to follow a selloff on wall and broad, relatively tame, i said at the outset of the show, a tamer inflation report. that is not what is at issue hire. growing feeling of a debt crisis, fears of another bank crisis. robert kiyosaki has you covered how to handle that crisis, not with stocks.
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slowing just like they were on the retail front but no benefit for stocks today. didn't help obviously pacwest other regional banks are under pressure but there is this growing fear we could be approaching a debt crisis the longer these talks drag on, closer to what some say could be default. robert kiyosaki has protection ideas for but they're not in stocks. rich dad, poor dad sensation, robert, good to see you. we have a lot of angst and anxiety. build it on the banks, debt talks seem to linger on and on without producing results. people are afraid. they're anxious. what do you make of it all? >> well i don't blame them but i will say something, thank you for 25 years letting me say things that are off the wall but fox should stop calling it mainstream media. they should all the other side the marksest marxist stream med.
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they blast trump but cover up the biden crime family. you guys are the last guys out there speaking. it is disgusting. neil: if you don't mind i try to avoid politics out here. if you look at the concern knew we have a debt crisis building a bank crisis growing. you have found greater ways to get around that. in the past you've been looking to things like gold and siller. all the more so now. could you spell it out what investors should do? >> the biggest point here, 25 years, neil you let me speak about this little thing, called silver. 25 years ago this was 3 bucks. today it is $35. that is why all these years i said, i don't save this. i don't save dollars. i save tangible metals, silver
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and gold and i have some bitcoin. but i just don't trust the government. that is my sad part. neil: when you say you don't trust bitcoin, i not bitcoin, but stocks in that sense, where do you find more of your faith? in silver, obviously a cheaper investment choice, even these days, gold maybe second to that, but where does about it coin fit into that or cryptocurrencies at all? >> well this is the same panic that the people now feel in the banking system. they don't trust our money. that's the problem. we don't trust our banks anymore. we don't trust our government. look at the border crisis and all this. so, and they're not fixing the problem, they just print more money. they keep printing more and more of this here. they wonder why people get nervous. that is why i call gold and silver god's money and bitcoin, some of the cryptos peoples
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money. but i think the biggest problem is we don't trust our government anymore, treasury, fed. neil: the less you trust your government more you rely on assets hopefully little to do what the government is doing, right? that is where gold and silver come in but they have not enjoyed the run up some would have thought with this. would they enjoy more of for example, if we default? i guess all bets are off, right? >> i agree 100%. the problem here the first act when biden did came into office was cut off the keystone xl pipeline, many people don't know this, my background is oil. his first act, day one, when he cut off the keystone xl pipeline inflation became systemic, not transitory. so when he cut off the keystone xl pipeline oil, i was selling oil at $30 a barrel under trump, and then my oil went to $130 a barrel, it
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peaked. now it is about $70 a barrel. when biden cut down the keystone xl pipeline, then gets us out of afghanistan, doing business with rogue nations, when he cut off the keystone xl pipeline he crushed the middle class. neil: so could i is you bring us up to today. could you really help me out today with what is going on? you mentioned silver, it is 24.40 the ounce. gold is little north of 2020 the ounce. where do you see them both going, both of those investments? >> right now i count the number he of ounces i think silver will hit 100 in three years. jibbing rick kertz is the guy i listen to. he is gold will get to 15,000. what biden is doing is criminal. neil: all right, want to stick
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to the numbers here but robert, thank you very much, robert kiyosaki. i take know political aspersions against anyone this is not politics show, it isn't. left or right. we're following the green, following money how you feel about that. meantime we take you up to date what is happening with the debt crisis stuff. that is real fact whether you're on the right or the left. the solution some say is middle ground that could involve the president of the united states employing something called the 14th amendment. we'll explain and explore after this. ♪. meet the future. a chef. a designer. and, ooh, an engineer. all learning to save and spend their money with chase. the chef's cooking up firsts with her new debit card.
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more than 25% on news last week it had a drain of 9 1/2% of available deposits. crisis does not necessarily mean but threat over to some other regional banks. we have ro khanna joining us, the california congressman, sits on the house oversight committee among others. congressman, are you worried we're looking at another bank crisis here? >> i'm not but i think we need to take action to guarranty the depositors in regional banks to avoid the type fate that happened to silicon valley bank or first republic. neil: all right, now, as far as i know there has been nothing that pacwest has done been spurious or unusual like silicon valley bank or to a lesser extent signature but something is awry here and i'm wondering if it is spreading a contagion where people who deposit money at these banks are saying you know what? , i will go to a bigger bank. does that worry you. >> you're absolutely right.
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what's happening is that people are saying go to jpmorgan, go to citibank, bank of america because basically those banks are too big to fail. we know that the money will be safe. that has led also to short selling, where short sellers unfortunately going after some of these regional banks. what would end this, to do what we did in 2008 or in the cares act temporarily say that all depositors in our regional banks will be guaranteed. you can charge a small fee to those accounts over 250,000. but we need regional banks in america. i want banks in youngstown and raleigh, north carolina. i don't want just four banks. neil: there already has been a move on the part of the fdic to levy a special assessment. i think it is limited just to the big banks, congressman, for about $15.8 billion to bail out the likes of svb and signature, some of these other ones and that the bigger banks will bear
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the responsibility for this but does that also mean that the bigger banks are going to have their customers bear the responsibility for this? in other words they will pass those fees on to them? >> i think that is a legitimate concern and it's not like the big banks have an interest in seeing the banking system get hurt because as you point out the fdic often levees the fees on them. i come to the point we have to stablize the system. i would rather fees being on accounts over 250,000. you can pay .01, .05% on that account, basically mandatory insurance. when we're out on the roads you have to buy insurance. if you're sitting with a bank account over 250,000 require those accounts to buy insurance. if the bank has a problem the fdic can step in, we all don't have to pay for it. neil: we'll watch it closely, congressman, thank you very much. congressman ro khanna on that.
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we take you back to the border. you know we're less than 11 hours away from title 42 three years been the policy for two administrations. it all goes away. a lot of people in texas fear disaster is striking. george p. bush is next. ♪ i have type 2 diabetes, ♪ ♪ but i manage it well. ♪ ♪ it's a little pill with a big story to tell. ♪ ♪ i take once-daily jardiance, ♪ ♪ at each day's staaart. ♪ ♪ as time went on it was easy to seee ♪ ♪ i'm lowering my a1c. ♪ jardiance works 24/7 in your body to flush out some sugar! and for adults with type 2 diabetes and known heart disease, jardiance can lower the risk of cardiovascular death, too.
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♪. neil: you don't have to be at the border to have a problem with what is going on at the border. oddly enough in new york's orange county there has been a state of emergency declared oaf new york city's migrant plan where a lot of migrants making their way to the big apple are headed north to places like orange county, those residents are not too keen on it. nor some of the people duly-elected politicians responding to those residents. let's go to lydia hu in orangeburg, new york with more. >> reporter: neil, that's right. we're in rockland county there have not been migrants sent here
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just yet from new york city. you're right, nearby orange county, an hour away from where we are buses of migrants have been sent from new york city en route to a town called newburgh today. that follows on a message from the new york city's mayor office last night that they were going to pause on the plan to send migrants to the new york area suburbs. so local county executives who have been vehemently opposed to receiving migrants from new york are not pleased. listen to this, this is statement we just got from the orange county executive stephen new house, a bus arriving at a hotel in his count today, he says, various local officials, his police department were not notified these bus was be arriving today. sadly you cannot trust the word of new york city's mayor and the leadership of new york. now, new york city mayor's spokesperson for that office did tell us about the bus having
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arrived in orange county today. that is right, they did put their plans on pause but they never changed their plans. this was always the plan. now like i said, row khaliders upset local leaders upset. rockland county where i am got a temporary restraining order preventing this hotel from accepting migrants in the foreseeable future. that is setting the stage for a court battle to unfold here early next week. mayor adams spoke earlier this morning at a press conference about these legal challenges to his plans. he says he will take them up in court. listen to this. >> to challenge all of the legal obstacles that are attempting to be placed in our way. we're going to challenge them because it would set a bad precedent if someone is saying in the state of new york you're not allowed to come here. this is a statewide issue. it is not like new york just all
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of sudden, we're going to send people and transport them to other municipalities. we're coordinating. >> reporter: now, as a sanctuary city, neil, new york city has received tens of thousands of migrants during this crisis. it is considering closing streets for housing for them, putting them in central park. as well mayor adams added today during his press conference sending the migrants to surrounding suburbs doing all of that, roughly 340 men, that would take care of only one quarter of 1% of the migrants new york city has received just to give you a sense of the scale. back to you. neil: that is a pretty stunning figure right there. thank you very much, lydia hu. i want to explore this more with george p. bush, former texas land commissioner. commissioner thanks for coming. >> good to be with you. neil: let me ask you about this, if i interpreted mayor eric
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adams correctly, what he is petitioning for, new york city, sanctuary city welcomes illegals, migrants, illegal or other, he wants that to apply to the state. that's how i'm reading that. what do you think of that? >> well, yes, the beauty of "the federalist" system allows for cities and states to make their own direction but reality the source of the problem lies with the federal government and that's why many including in my state of texas want this administration to get more serious and to change their policies so that we tighten the border, expedite the asylum process and work in a way in which congress, for once will create a process by which it is easier to come here legally than illegally. so, i will allow new york to figure out their situation. i just know that by the last estimate new york city alone five million dollars a daymare adams said we'll share that burden with the rest of the state of new york and so for people like in texas we say that is essentially a drop in the
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bucket. we right behind me will be appropriating billions of dollars on a annual basis not only secure the border, but deal with the administrative aspects of this historic, historically high tide of illegal immigration. high time whether blue states, red states, we recognize this is national security issue that affects safety, health within our communities. hopefully we can come together on this, and have an administration that will reverse its policies to strengthen our country. neil: you know, there is a message on tiktok right now that's apparently been viewed more than 96 million times, george, which just cutting to the chase, it's telling those the world over, may 11th, you cannot be deported. title 42 has come to an end in america. what do you make of that? that is going out to a world of refugees seeking protection in the united states. >> well, it is a crisis in
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leadership. we've seen this the last two years. this is nothing new, yes, records are being broken daily. in fact there is an estimate today there will be 1,000 encounters but, neil, to put this new context we have only 19,000 border agents when i talk to border patrol leaders half the front line folks are doing the paperwork, taking care of children. even if everybody is forward-deployed with 1500 coming from the department of defense just this week, that is just, it is not enough. it is not sustainable. and we need leadership that counteracts these narratives, whether on social media, send tall american countries or mexican drug cartels are profiting from this historically high flow of human and regret fully fentanyl trades and other illicit activities. it is too little too late but we can do reverse the policy, keep title 42 in place. i understand in congress
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democrats are willing to work with republicans to temporarily keep it in place, help the border patrol, backfill these honorable professionals trying to secure communities whether that be on the border or i.c.e. but right now, neil, the fact is, that you know, as long as you get in, there are rumors that there are selective releases into the country without any kind of requirement to appear for, before a federal immigration judge. in which case the incentive is still there for people all over the world to come to our country, to do so illegally because it is easier than to wait several ways to do it the legal way and the honorable way. neil: one of the features the new plan administration wants to put in place, when 42 ends, george you know this far better than i, catch you in the border sneak in, going back forbidden to try five years. if you voluntarily go back, you got me, you can try again without any details how soon you
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can try again but what do you think of that? >> i think it is good in principle but awfully difficult to execute, and the reason why, neil, prior to this administration's change, this was the case before that at least when people were processed through our ports of entry and other locations which folks are coming across, getting their notice to appear we at least grabbed some of their personally identifiable information. and now my understanding is that the tide will be so overwhelmingly, there will be selective areas along the border we'll release people without issuing the notice to appear before a federal immigration. we can say we will empower i.c.e. to go out and interdict folks if they're here illegally, overstaying a travel visa, just flowing, coming through the border, applying for asylum, in terms of execution we won't have information on the tens of thousands now, hundreds of thousands of people that will come across on a monthly basis. so that's the challenge.
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so we need to work on the source of the issue. that is working on multilateral basis with countries in the northern triangle. several democrats stepped forward including congressman cuellar creating processing centers south of the border. if folks honorably come here the legal way can do in country of origin. a sense of security that we don't have that the secret is out of the bag, incentive for people, whether individual trying to come across or the cartel that profits in the order of several thousands of dollars for every person they transit across the border. neil: meanwhile, we have this debt ceiling crisis building. president trump said last night at the cnn town hall, i don't know if you caught it, that he thinks republicans should hang tough and that if they don't get their spending cuts, go ahead and default. what do you think of that? >> well as a fiscal conservative was honestly slightly
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disappointed with the plan pass passed through the house. i understand speaker mccarthyed that to get a coalition to sustain some plan. my concern about the other side. they speak a good game we put people out on the streets they don't come forward with proposals of their own. we spent trillions of dollars under the biden administration. that is unsustainable. close to spending a trillion more than what we're bringing in as government. neil: to force the issue, that is all i'm asking, that is what president trump is saying? if they don't budge, democrats go ahead and default? >> that is his style of negotiation. ultimately he himself would try to close the deal towards the end. there is nothing wrong with being, being cavalier about it at this stage but we only have two weeks left. investment grade quality ratings -- neil: just to understand, gorge
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p george p. bush doesn't think default is an option. >> we can't. we've been downgraded from aaa to double a, we lose investment quality. if we lose flight to u.s. where people all over the world invest that is problematic for the economy when we're trying to recover from a highly inflationary time period. neil: george p. bush, thank you very much. good catching up with you. >> thank you,. neil: jackie deangelis taking to the next big show right after this show. >> good afternoon, neil. title 42 is set to expire tonight. we'll take you live to the border to show you live video with the surge coming. we'll take you to new york where you see the spillover effect in the country. byron donalds is talking about the hunter biden investigation. and bank worries about the deposits do persist. we cover you on every angle that will be
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it will release your fat and it will release you. neil: got a selloff continuing right now. a lot has to do with concerns about pacwest, the western regional bank under selling pressure today. it is not taking the whole sector with it, but that on top of debt ceiling worries whether they will screw something up on this whole thing has some
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investors worried. jay woods, chief global strategist. good to see you. >> thanks for having me. neil: are you concerned, "whack-a-mole," which one will be a concern today. pacwest again today but what do you think? >> i'm concerned, most importantly i watch. is price action. when they first started happening they, they investors were starting to attack every bank. regional bank index since march 7th down 38%. kre down 36%. s&p 500 is up 1%. neil: do you think it is overdone? >> i think it is overdone. what i'm seeing with pacwest it is isolating. they're focusing what regional banks have the problems. when western alliance ceo said no, our deposits went up. everything turned around. premarket banks were getting hit across the board. now it is limited to pac wes. neil: they said deposits were down almost 10%. >> 10%.
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neil: let me ask you what jamie dimon said out of the blue. you shouldn't short bank stocks, i'm sure thinking his own included but that adds to the fear, what do you think? >> it can, when investors smell smoke think will short there may not be a fire everywhere they're looking. because short rules have changed over the rules and you can just sell stocks short on minus ticks it can accelerate and cause some fear. the upside if there is short interest and these things do stablize the rebound can be quick, it can be fast. investors could make a quick buck. neil: are you worried about the debt ceiling talks? do you worry we default? it is always out there. >> it's great headline. the market is not reacting like you would think we're panic laughted about it we talk about 2011 a lot. and when we defaulted on the debt ceiling our bond rating got, you know, downgraded. neil: right. >> there was also china problems. neil: what would happen if that happened again? >> if that happened again that would be a problem. neil: yeah. >> i think both sides in congress are well aware of the
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potential problems. you know, down on the floor what we talk about other than the knicks right now we're talking about, yeah, they're going to get this done. maybe they kick it down the road six months that would be fine. but there isn't that fear. i think we would like to have it done before the weekend, because over the weekend you know, regional banks could be problematic. neil: a little dicier, right? >> they do. close the books -- neil: are you like stocks, what? >> i don't love stocks. i like the leadership. the leadership is, you have apple, microsoft, near 52-week highs. now google, amazon are breaking out of recent ranges. these are the stocks you want to see lead. now, are we getting people to follow the generals? not right now. the breadth has been mixed but as we go through these negative headlines every time we dip lower we make a higher low. so we're making progress. people need to realize sideways is a direction. we spent months if not a year or two in the past going sideways this is constructive to my.
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neil: got it. sideways is a direction, jay woods, very good seeing you. sideways you go on a buffet line. buffets are coming back. golden corral is back with a vengance. we'll explore that good news, maybe food for thought, that things are not so dire after this. hey. what are you doing right now? you up for something impetuous? i'm a palm springs hotel. i got the desert air, .. de on a friday that a one night commitment on a saturday is a fine idea. maybe you heard of the rat pack? they hung out here all the time. so, pack a bag. or don't. you could be here in a few hours. meet me at hotels.com
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the rules. last time i was here -- >> fresh broccoli. neil: delicious. buffets are back. some numbers that are eye-popping across the board, people going back to buffets like they haven't since before covid. the golden corral ceo kind enough to join us. you are seeing it for yourself. >> things are going great comic so excited about that. our brand is sizzling, having a great experience, it was especially devastating, golden corral is doing fantastic and setting all-time records for
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our brands. we are excited about the return. the come back is greater than the setback. we 20 what is the most popular item on your buffet? what are people really drawn to? >> some core favorites, fried chicken, meatloaf, pot roast, the comfort foods, that's indicative of what's going on in our country. people looking for that comfort, that experience to give them that sense of home, family, and community. we feel we provide that different from everyone out there. the picture, people of our stake, i'm getting hungry just watching the show here. neil: i never seen a line around the salad area. how is that going?
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>> our salad bars are popular. there's a great alternative. our tagline is we are the only one for every one. whether you want to eat healthy or indulge a little bit. we have that opportunity, 160 items out every day, prepared from scratch. that is why we are having success now. more importantly our value, economy and listening to your previous two guests with the uncertainty out there people are looking for great value and golden corral can provide that. stuart: adam: watch closely. that is all the proof you need. the buffet is back. jackie: that was very clever going to the golden corral. brian: it is going to be a lot of fun. neil: i could
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