tv Varney Company FOX Business June 20, 2023 9:00am-10:00am EDT
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their -- >> and what if it's not good? >> what if everything old is new again? if you had a screen at all, they were showing one movie but if you she got up on the screens like that, you're opening up a lot of problems. >> some people on airplanes need to remember to bring their headphones when they're watching whatever they don't want to watch. >> under two hour flight, is not a reason to lean your chair all the way back. you have a real reason to lean back, okay? i love you but go ahead. >> doug collins, rebecca, thanks to both of you. that is it for us. maria bartiromo will be back tomorrow. stuart varney from bernie and company right now. >> good morning, everyone. donald trump wants to be less combative but the left and media
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allies won't let him. that's just part of brett baier's interview with the former president. it covered a lot of ground. hoax as trump calls it, biden's age china in covid and the spy balloon. throughout it all, trump was articulate and sharp. you will hear excellent growth the show. his news on china, first the antony blinken talks, the spin is the meeting lower the temperature between the u.s. and china but he made a major concession. he said the u.s. opposes taiwan independence. that's what xi jinping wanted and that's what he got. news this morning that china's economy is slowing. it's so bad they ramped up spending and cut interest rates. if they have economic problems, doesn't that give us leverage? to the markets, down after a three-day weekend, a little bit of red ink, not much. the dow aplenty, nasdaq 19.
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interest rates, who wasn't there. the two-year keeps edging up in terms of its yield, not good for tech stocks most of them today. the two are getting close to four and three quarters, 473 right now. that's the two-year. the tenure, still well below 4%. the two-year yield, way above the tenure. supposed to be recession indicator. the president goes to san francisco today, it will be interesting to see if his motorcade goes anywhere near the homeless camps in the drug markets that brought the city to the brink of collapse. the president will make a speech about a i and then collects a lot of money in a series of fundraisers and leaves town. the country is gripped by the search for the tours suffering with contact was lost sunday morning, not yet located. said to be enough air to last until thursday morning. tuesday, june 20, 2023. bernie and company is about to begin. ♪
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serious stuff tuesday morning. they've still not located the misting tourists suffering, time is running out. lauren is back with us. what's the latest? >> the limited window to find what's called a tourists submersible and five people on board. and launched around 5:00 a.m. sunday meaning it's about halfway through its four-day oxygen supply. that's enough until maybe noon on thursday so right now officials fear it sunk too far down for man's rescued they would have to bring the puzzle to the surface to get the people out. there's concern it could have got stuck in the remnants or near the titanic. it's owned by ocean gate expeditions. the goal was to get 12,000 feet underwater for tour of the 1912 titanic shipwreck at a cost of $250,000 a traveler.
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stuart: let's hope some good news. now this, former president trump set down for an exclusive interview with brett baier. join the conversation, he did he'd like to change his approach in the next election. >> what did you learn from your first term that you took from and changes you would make if you get elected? >> i would like to be less combative but i find the press is extremely dishonest and if i'm not combative, i don't get my word across. i don't think you could win if i'm not combative. these radical left maniacs would come after them at a level you've never seen before and they won't be able to withstand it. our country is sick. it's sick. we have people that will do anything and it's a sad thing. stuart: byron joins us for political commentary. his trump capable of being less
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combative? >> probably not. it was a good question and really interesting answer for about half a second when the former president said i'd like to be less combative and spent the rest of the time saying why he had to be combative. i think the reason he answered that in the beginning about being less combative he knows there a lot of polls that show republicans, many republicans very much support his policies he's pursued in office but they do have reservations about his behavior, his demeanor and they do find him to combative, two controversial and they would like a little less what they often call the drama so i think the beginning of the answer was trump is not to those people. stuart: overall, did the interview help trump with middle-of-the-road voters? >> i don't think so.
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it was a must watch interview, it covered a lot of things and talked about classified documents case, china and russia in all sorts of stuff. to me the most revealing part was brett cost trump about independent women voters who live in suburbs. very important voting group that abandoned trump in the 2020 election. the question was, what will you do to try to win foxsupport? trump's answer was first, let's get this straight. i wanted 2020, i won the 2020 election and that it was off to the races. talked a lot about all sorts of things about ballots and fake dollars and 51 experts in look at the tapes and picking anything he could to suggest against the evidence that he won the 2020 election which indicates to me he's not going to stop talking about.
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stuart: that's what many people want him to do that one. he's looking back. that's your biggest moment. >> they want him to move on. they want a candidate to move on because bill clinton always said elections are always about the future which is correct and there's a lot for trump to talk about for the future but given an easy question which is what you want to do to appeal to the voters, he could've talked about all sorts of policy issues but his response was let's get this straight -- i won the 2020 election. stuart: thanks very much for joining us. an interesting interview and we will have more later on. manhattan's va alvin bragg now facing a lawsuit over his prosecution of trump. >> withholding records. the heritage foundation once the case records. they want to know the house of department of justice before indicting trump for falsifying
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business records related to hush money payments to a porn star. heritage is suing because wright has not answered their freedom of information law request relating to the prosecution communications. they were the case records and communications. they have not gotten them, hence they are suing. stuart: i wonder how long that will take to organize. will dedicate to the market this tuesday morning. first time with an open in three days. jason katz joins us. i want to start with china. clearly slowing down, the cut interest rates several times and popped money into the economy. our banks lowered forecast for china. is this a plus or minus for america's economy and/or market? >> believe it or not, despite contrary wisdom, this is good for the u.s. economy. it's good because we have this
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charm offensive as evidenced by the meeting over the weekend. i think china realizes the u.s. and the rest of the west are learning lessons from covid beginning this near shoring and on showing so what we may lose in jobs to ai in the next decade, we will gain with respect to supplying goods and services not only to the u.s. but to our allies but make no mistake, if china gets sniffles, we are going to get a cold globally but i think it's worth the cold in the long run. stuart: you think we are going to get in to a recession next year. is that partly because of china slowing down, global economy slowing down? >> is this the calm before the storm or is this the end of the recession that never was? i think it's closer to the latter of the two but we be foolish to think in the face of china slowing down and all these interest rate hikes we will have an economic slowdown but as evidence by what's happening in the stock market and widening
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and the breadth of the market improving, it appears this hard landing is not a foregone conclusion so my second quarter next year we will be in a modest recession. however, looking at unemployment that probably doesn't go much beyond 4%. i'm looking at corporate don't fall off a cliff either so i think it's because i goldilocks, doesn't mean we're off to the races but there are some investable places in the market now. stuart: that's an interesting expression, very investable places in the market. you got to tell us what those areas are. >> a big company named after a fruit, the market cap of the company is greater than the russell 2000. the value of apple is greater than all the small cap stocks combined. stuart: sophia? >> i'm not saying cell apple, you're going to see a lot of catch up. stuart: i think the last time
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you're with us, he said there's an etf that covers the russell 2000 and i asked you and never forgotten. >> i wasn't allowed to tell you then, i'm not going to tell you now but you could easily look up. stuart: i could. i'm just waiting for our viewers to test you. thank you for joining us. we appreciate it. good stuff. some of the -- you recall head scratching sentences and words? if you don't recall, we'll refresh your memory. >> my name is joe biden, i'm doctor jill biden's husband and i choose ice cream chocolate chip. >> that movie, don't make me dark faced shoulder. stuart: we are told -- that is confusing to the president's staff as well. we'll tell you more about that. the search is still on for the subversive summary caring five people. what is it like inside now? we will hear from a former
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tuesday morning, first day of back after a three day weekend. a little bit of red ink but not that much. the search underway for the tourist submarine that went missing on the trip to the wreck of the titanic. ashley webster owned the story. much time until air runs out? >> it's a very good question but i would say less than 50 hours maybe sometime thursday so the race is on. it's believed the vessel probably has about 50 hours
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oxygen left. i'd say maybe slightly blessed. the coast guard coordinating with the search with canadian authorities says the vast remote area is a huge challenge. >> this is a complicated problem first because it's out there not quite in the middle of the ocean but near, a remote part, 900 miles from the coast here in massachusetts and we have to assume anything is possible at this time. stuart: the missing sub operated by ocean gate expedition, private company founded by stockton rush who's believed to be on board the missing sub, the company charges to $50000 a ticket to allow tourists to explore the titanic's wreckage. also on board, british billing or hamish harding pay for the space ride last year, he's a
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true adventurer also on board, pakistani and businessman. also reportedly on the vessel -- british citizens by the way. aerial search is being conducted in case the sub surface but no way of communicating. a remotely operated vehicle that can reach depth of 20000 feet is expected to be deployed. all thoughts now on the missing crew. >> i would say it's getting into a dire situation. it's going to be a very uncomfortable experience. stuart: ocean gate says it relies on elon musk starling to provide communications connection. unclear whether communications have played any role but we are just learning a commercial ship is on the scene.
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that's important because it has two remotely operated vessels that can go to extreme depths some of that can provide a clear picture what's going on. stuart: all right, thank you very much indeed. chris, former nuclear something officer, chris is with me in new york right now. what's it like inside the submarine? >> a very challenging situation. it depends on whether or not the whole is intact or not so let's assume it is intact. now the question is, do you have access to the electrical systems? is going to be huge keeping things like heaters working and maybe co2 scrubbers to clean the air. it's going to be very cold if it's on the bottom of the ocean floor. stuart: can they be rescued? i'm supposing they are 12,000 feet down, can they be rescued? >> as a former submariner during the news, it's going to be a challenging operation assuming they can even locate it so it
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becomes a different question to retrieve it from the bottom of the ocean if they can locate it. there's only a handful of assets in the world that can handle that and are they anywhere close to it? stuart: we heard a couple of ships are on the surface and may have submarine vehicles on board that can get down to that depth, it's a preliminary report, could an american nuclear sub located? >> american nuclear subs have some of the most capable sonar operators in the world and that would be instrumental detecting it so that's an option. stuart: tell me because you know, if you got a submersible 12,000 feet down and nuclear sub is within 500 miles, you will tell me it could contacted? >> it depends on a range of different scenarios and whether or not the crew is alive and able to transmit noise and energy that can be detected.
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this is in-depth but you've got the profile of sound that helps sound travel to water so you got pressure and temperature and salinity gradients so measuring and capturing energy is difficult because sound might not travel to the actual sen sensors. stuart: i'm not sure this is your area but i would imagine submarine tourism won't do well in light of this incident. >> it really should make people think twice in a lot of ways. we know less about the depths of the ocean in outer space, people have been with the titanic is in it appreciates the system that goes into military submarines keeping people safe at scholer depths but it makes you appreciate the marvel that submarines are. stuart: thank you for joining us and sharing your expertise.
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switching gears, let's get to politics. president biden gave a speech about conservation. i'm told he made strange claims. what strange claims? >> the year was wrong with the rest doesn't make much sense. i tried. maybe our viewers can try. >> maybe most important, committed by 2020 we will have conserved 30% of all the lands and waters in the united states has jurisdiction and reduce submissions of climate impact. >> i don't think that was the news, the news from the california trip is that he said climate change is the existential threat to humanity and commit 600 million to coastal communities. 47 million for california's electrical grade. where i took out of this, when air force one landed, gavin newsom physically put himself next to the president right a
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away. shook his hand and a congresswoman from california literally pulled him on stage, guiding him so i think both of those things speak. stuart: is in california, i did not see the homeless in san francisco. you probably will not see the homeless in san francisco. >> they don't want him to. stuart: check the opening bell. we will check the stock market. futures indicating a modest downside move. who will take you to wall street next. ♪
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futures suggest modest downside move of the opening bell tuesday morning. david nicholas is the market wants others to sit and he's with us today. he brought stock picks with you and want to go through this quickly. let's start with exxon. what is it going? >> this is the name we own in our firm, we've been buying more. it's a great way to get a name
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that will increase over time. it's paying three not given and it may not excite viewers but is the growth of the dividend, energy companies are some of the most profitable companies in the world so the name you can buy with great long-term outlooks. stuart: exxon delivers three and a half% dividend yield. next one -- coca-cola. why do you like it? where is it going? >> atlanta based company, a stable steward. anytime stock trades down, equivalent to 3% dividend, it's always a good buy. coke is extremely profitable, 60% profit margin is lucy stone and the economy, coca-cola will bring continuous profit to degrade by. stuart: $61 a share, where does it go to? >> we could at least see 10% from here, 67 range with a 3% dividend rained. stuart: window is your next
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picked. >> this is trading based on historical average but here's what's interesting about wen wendy's. it's introducing a i intuit menu ordering for their testing, you drive up to wendy's, a i will take your order so workers can focus on the food preparation such a great name, 8% growth year over year for same-store sales growth and pays for to have present dividend so goodbye. stuart: i'm listening to this and there's a modest dividend payment and an upside, it's just not as exciting as the good old days when you could look at nvidia go up $80 in a day or microsoft is up $10. i guess we got to be prepared to accept lesser gains in the future. would you agree? >> we had a great run but there are some signs parties cont continent, consumer sales along, if you look consumer savings,
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consumers amazing savings to adapt trillion to 700 billion. americans are sending the savings survey look at the rate, americans could be completely out of money by the end of this year so consumers break today with strong employment, good savings but going into next year it could spell trouble for the consumer which is why we don't want to sell stocks but it's time to add defensive names to our portfolio that pays dividends along the way. stuart: not going to set the world on fire but steady she goes. thanks for being with us. appreciate it. exxon, coke and wendy's. the opening bell is ringing. somebody is going to reach forward and pressed the button. eric adams presses the opening bell on the nasdaq this morning.
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we are running, going down the dow opening with the loss of maybe 170 points, half percentage. we are opening up after a three day weekend, opening downplayed the dow 30, i only see five winners. winners. the rest are losing. s&p down, not much but down .44%. the nasdaq composite is down .4% so uniform across the board, down less than half a percentage. big tech all over, mostly down. apple, amazon, medic, microsoft all on the downside. show me ali baba. a big shakeup. the ceo daniel is out. stock is down 2%. why is he out? >> he will focus on the cloud division and run it for artificial intelligence so i see it as him being in charge of the
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crown jewel instead of the entire ali baba group. who's in charge of the entire group? eddie, the chairman of ali baba's group so is in my opinion, internal shovel because ali baba splitting into six divisions headed up by close associates. stock is down but i don't see this as a big deal. stuart: i wonder what's going on in china, lowering interest rates, spending a lot of money. ali baba is down replacing the ceo. >> it opened up to covid but resurgence is not showing up in the economic data. stuart: let's go to tesla. they been on the upside and they are on the upside again at 1%. elon musk will meet with the prime minister today. >> and coming here on an official state visit, you have
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lawmakers in detroit telling general motors and ford to cut a lands on china. musk is said to be meeting, senior tesla officials have held lower-level meetings. what can you give us in terms of incentives? in another win for tesla, hyundai considering using tesla's charging alliance, so tesla superchargers make up about 60% of the superfast superchargers. the only issue is there a little different so they are not the fastest for the customers, maybe they can work together to improve that but convenient. stuart: if tesla's charger becomes the universal charger, they take a piece every time somebody charges the phone are on the charger. stuart: what about the white house using their own charging system? elon musk is never invited yet he has these meetings with
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foreign leaders. stuart: no wonder tesla is up and keeps on going up. if they get the universal charger situation going, they've got a lot of money. amazon must they've been at the bank of america's best stocks to buy. stuart: they previously removed amazon in november, they've changed their tune and set a price of 54, amazon at 124. stuart: everybody using jet ai including at&t. i can't figure out. >> it's for customer support. do you know when you can't get somebody on the phone and you revert to a chat bot and you talk to the computer? the computer never gives the answers you need so they can use artificial intelligence, and telecom, the most hated industry out there when it comes to customer service, it could be a big win. everybody and their mother is using official intelligence but this not going up.
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you have to show you can monetize it. we will use it but can make money off of it. stuart: you tell how much money we can make and the stock will go up. microsoft did that. cute game for diced therapeutics. i believe it's a company that makes drugs taken orally. >> $2.4 billion in cash and it's likely to pass regulatory muster so dice is known for world dr drugs. the likely will boost immune disease portfolio. lily is working on an ozempic like drug. of 22% this year. they've offered $48 a share. devices that a gain of 37%. stuart: ozempic is like artificial intelligence, a magic word. if something has ozempic --
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>> oral drug, not injection, it's huge. a new diet pill. stuart: paypal has a stock program, how much? >> they expect $5 billion in buybacks so a billion-dollar more than previously said following it deal with kkr with the buy now pay later european business. that is expected to close the second half of the year end when that does, you can see the $5 billion buyback. stuart: alert senator warren who detests stock buybacks. i'm interested in fedex because they report this afternoon, i think of fedex as an economic indicator. >> like apple, can fedex convince wall street the economy is not slowing down? that's the test because they are cutting costs and they see the economy slowing down trying to save money, they have this program where they can celebrate their express and ground shipping to eliminate root overlap so they might impress wall street in good numbers but
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what they say about the future is what everyone will want to know. stuart: fedex up a little bit. i think -- i saw housing stocks of really big. numbers came out earlier and i think that's why the homebuilders are up. >> 22% gain in may, housing starts at one year high. future groundbreaking rose more than 5%. we do have a lower stock market but the homebuyers are about one and a half% across the board. stuart: good indicator for the real estate market or industry. >> i'm tempted to list mine but where would i go? stuart: what's your interest rate? >> three and a half%. i didn't bother to refinance. stuart: okay. coming up, antony blinken met with xi jinping. listen to what he had to say.
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>> we do not support taiwan independence, we are not opposed to any changes by either side. we continue to expect peaceful resolution. >> we do not support independence of taiwan. xi jinping got what he wanted. brian kilmeade will comment. anheuser-busch starting partnership with bud light transgendered influence in dylan olejnik was not the best idea. details on that one for you. ♪
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these terms will likely keep him out of jail. no word on whether hunter will appear in court to enter his guilty plea. larry kudlow is with us this morning. i'll repeat, larry because it was with us. china's economy really slowing down. does that give us leverage? doesn't slow down the whole world economy? >> well, the answer is probably yes, slow down the world economy. a, absolutely not. with this disastrous trip. read the headlines. beijing brushoff u.s. military channel. antony blinken links on taiwan independence america sleeps, communist china builds influence in the caribbean.
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no discussion of the origins of covid. biden brushes off the chinese balloon and refusal to meet with secretary of defense austin, come on. this is appeasement at its worst matter how bad china's economy is. they are running hard all around the world. we are running soft. i think the worst . stuart: i want to know why we are running soft. consistently, we have a very soft approach to china. why? >> you are asking me for biden's foreign policy? is a week foreign policy from day one. stuart: we hear this about hunter in the laptop, this, that and the other. is that what they've got on our president? does not have an impact? >> i'm going to say to you that bribery is separate from the policy of the appeasement.
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this foreign policy disaster started in afghanistan with incredibly catastrophic withdrawal and leaving the airspace and $100 billion worth of high-tech equipment, that was the beginning. his diplomacy with putin before ukraine was a disaster. he's been soft on china from day one. i don't think you can simply attribute it to the bribery scandals are what he's got on it. this is a group that's never had a strong america first foreign policy. that's the long and short. it is diametrically opposed to the toughness on the world stage that donald trump -- i mean, look. trump is the guy who rang the warning bell on china during the 2016 campaign and during his presidency. trump is the guy jacked up
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tariffs as a way of punishing china's count. then they did come to the negotiating table. the biden krause afraid of their own shadow. they have a human rights policy, not tough america first policy. they are about to make yet another bad deal in iran. this is a travesty that they would go back and probably get $10 billion to iran which will be used to bomb israel, to launch terrorism across the middle east. look at the deal with saudi arabia. just because of human rights issues, they've ignored the rest of the alliance, not expanding the abraham accords. i need about an hour to go through the catastrophe so i want to say you can't just say
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what they have on biden. this is a general, poor worldview. an appeasement view from day o one. stuart: now i will change the subject and the domestically. a guest on cnn called out the disconnect between the white house and the american people. roll that tape. >> are these things people say, they are not in a great financial position so it's hard for them to receive a message from the president saying you guys are doing better, look what i've done. i think there's a disconnect that frankly, there's no easy answer for how the white house deals with that connect because they don't really have a way to fix it. >> the white house doesn't appear to see that disconnect. the keep piling on with this wonderful stuff about the economy. >> they think they are doing a specific 50 job. the biden's have taken the boom
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given to them by trump and turned it into a bust and quick facts, real wages continue to fall there. this is an important indicator and by the way, an indicator of presidential elections as well. real wages have dropped throughout biden's presidency, 93% of the terms, 26 straight months. a wall street journal but that wages for the bottom were falling so look that, prosperity look that up, it turns out two or 3% for the lowest falls, the two bottom fell by two or 3%. overall, wages dropped two and a half% after inflation. even though year-to-year change in cpi has slowed, the level of prices, the cpi has gone up
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15.6%. the level of energy prices have gone up 31%. the level of gasoline prices have gone up 35%. the level of grocery prices have gone up 20%. the level -- that's what people actually pay at the pump or the supermarket. this year-to-year change stuff doesn't allow. the biden's don't get this, inflation killed the economy. we are growing 1% for the last five quarters. this will be the sixth quarter some kind of like there china policy of using the economy. stuart: i will put you down as escaped on america's economy and joe biden. 4:00 p.m. here, foxbusiness. his work is coming up, brett baier sat down for an interview with donald trump, what was the biggest take away? brett baier is here. new york city grocers, city
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new york city council planning man facial recognition technology currently being used to stop shoplifters. madison is with us. the grocery store, they cannot be happy about this. >> they are not happy at all. they tell us this technology has been huge of a number but repeat offenders from shoplifting and helps them stay open especially in neighborhoods where access to fresh produce is hard to come by. carlos owned a grocery store in the bronx and says he's been using this for the last five months and he's seen at different. it's not only helped them prevent repeat offenders from shoplifting, it empowers employees because they know when to be on high alert when the system tells them they've spotted a repeat offender so supporters of the city council
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man on attack, they say the increase the risk of racial profiling and why they are against it. carlos says he wants to use the technology is already widely deployed. >> every corner return and i had an employee and two hours later, nypd had a picture and video of the accomplice. isn't that a good thing? >> carlos is far from alone using facial recognition technology in his grocery store anywhere from 30 to 40% of independent grocery store owners in new york city cusick. the reason being, the same group of people are the ones regularly shoplifting. 2022, 22000 shoplifting arrests. of those, 30% with the same 327 people. carlos is a latino business owner, the owner of that grocery store. he serves mostly brown and black
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communities and his position as if this man would go into effect, it would make the experience for those communities are dangerous in his store. stuart: thank you very much indeed. quick check of the market. nearly 200 points there. the ten year treasury yield had been going down, it's down five basis points, 371. the price of gold, not much movement use dose. they claim, same story. not much movement these days. 269 is your price. oil, low $70 a barrel, 70.01 to be precise. net gas going down a little bit, unchanged. 263. still ahead, brett baier, brian kilmeade, doctor marc siegel. the 10:00 hour is next. ♪
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