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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  July 11, 2023 9:00am-10:00am EDT

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these disputes often reveal true character of the family members involved but at the same time, it is a funny story, i can't help but wonder what we might find in her couch cushions whether it's the $10 million for ukraine the pentagon managed to uncover or maybe hunter biden's parmesan cheese, the possibilities are seemingly endless. >> two points here, i think people will be stunned to think aretha franklin, one of the greatest figures of all time, they are arguing over her will of $6 million. should be much more but i think they squandered a lot and everybody should take note, make sure you have your wells but not probably done no matter your worth and have consideration for your family. >> great to be with you this morning, thank you so much, have a good day, see you again tomorrow. varney & co. picks it up now. >> good morning, everyone.
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the president is in the sylvania at the nato summit, a big and important day. sweden will join nato. a big win for the west. ukraine may join but we don't know when. if they were to join while still at war with russia, are we brought into war with russia? lenski is furious at any delay he will find for a one-on-one for president biden. the hottest nato meeting in years. two corporate stories, amazon's prime day sales have started, another 45 hours to go. stock is trending a little higher. microsoft is going to lay off more workers, 10000 because this year but despite searching talk, more cuts are coming. some salespeople saying they were just laid off. tomorrow's inflation report keeping prices pretty much in check but i see a lot of green. the dow of over 100, nice game for the s&p, the nasdaq 33
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points higher. but going from what little change. 30,000 400, interest rates not much change. ten year yields this morning, just under 4% level, 397. the two-year getting close to 5% year, 486 to be precise. gas prices, first, little change for regular nationwide, averages 354 but look at this. washington state now has the most expensive gas in the entire country. more expensive than california, 4.95 for regular in the evergreen state. will try to explain what's going on there. president and temper will go away, public image has been shredded. in private he's an angry old man but staff is afraid to meet him one on one. disney's theme parks attendance signing. why? astronomically high cost for one but politics may play a role, too.
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disney's embrace of wokeness are going on well. magic is fading and so is the stock. would you buy a ticket to see a double movie future? the combination of barbie and oppenheimer. amc sold 20000 tickets, barbie and the building the atom bomb together for five hours, not sure i get that but it is tuesday july the 11th, 2023. varney & co. is about to begin. ♪ we are playing that again? two days in the row. a few more people on the street
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out there. his september beer, amazon prime day is upon us. i'm told it's a huge day for shoppers so can you tell me how much we typically spend in one month on amazon? >> $91.70, a month on average and amazon. stuart: not just time people, everyday. >> today alone prime day, $117. tremendous. what does it say about the consumer? is the consumer strong or is the consumer looking for a deal today on prime day? prime day asher talked $12 billion expected to hit 13 billion this year. jp morgan critics amazon will unseat walmart is the biggest retailer next year they have 300 million prime subscribers locally and typically if you are a prime number because of the perks and free shipping you spent $72 a month more than non- prime members.
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stuart: $91 a month on average, more than you expected or less? >> more than i expected. stuart: . an enormous amount of money. we told you about biden's bad temper, quick to anger, curses and some in the media are trying to spin it as a good thing. axios says being yelled at by the president has become internal initiation ceremony of biden doesn't yellow you, it could be a sign he doesn't respect to", you remember this in 2021x biden insisted he fire any staff who showed disrespect. >> i'm not joking when i say this. if you ever work with me and i hear you treat another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, i promise you i will fire you on the spot. on the spot. no if and's or but's.
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everybody, everybody should be treated with decency and dig dignity. that's been missing in a big way the last four years. stuart: charlie hurt joins us now. the real question is, why does it matter the president has a nasty temper? >> if you are getting things done, have as nasty temper you need and most voters would view it that way but what's funny is watching the mental gymnastics the press goes through to prop this guy up by his own standards, he should be firing himself on the spot but to read the story and realize the length the press will go to to prop them up and make him seem -- what they are claiming is the reason he drops f bombs and
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screams at them and tells them they don't know what they're talking about is -- it's so bad staffers avoid having private meetings with him because he's so with it, he's so on top of all of the details of governing america that he's got that from a grasp on the particulars which i don't think anybody believes, by the way but if you have to tell a benign lie that may be maliciously brought the guy, so be it. stuart: a benign life, you own that. [laughter] that's your expression. let's get serious. conservative -- >> i grew up trying to convince my parents everything i told him was a benign fly. [laughter] stuart: we two. a super pac spent millions on a new ad campaign. this campaign makes the case that trump is quote unelectable. they say the drama, chaos he brings to washington not what the benefits.
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what you say? >> always shooting at least in the right direction. unfortunately they get a lot of things wrong and these are the same people who six years ago in 2015 that donald trump was going to become -- not a true conservative -- he was a wolf in sheep's clothing when it came to conservative ideals and donald trump get selected which they said would never happened and he becomes the most conservative president we've had since at least ronald reagan. these people, they've got the right ideas about things but they are terrible at politics and the biggest reason i think donald trump will get the nomination and went is growth has declared and they will spend millions in places like iowa trying to convince voters he can't win and that should be a
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good time to people that donald trump can win. stuart: i find politics extremely exciting these days. thank you very much indeed. see you later. as we draw closer to next month i may debate on fox news, let's look at what the candidates are doing to meet the financial criteria they need to qualify. we know trump and desantis, they raise enough money, what about the others? >> nikki haley raised 7.3 million in the second quarter from direct donations but if you add in what her super past raise, 19 million, that's a big sum for a candidate only at 3% according to the latest fox news polls. ramaswamy signing a small group of fundraisers is cartel and he says he preferred to democratize the system so he's paying supporters 10% commission. if a fundraiser for him. i think he's brilliant.
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it's different, he speaks to people. he called out systems and then the north dakota governor offering $20 gift cards to anyone giving his campaign at least a dollar. he's a billionaire, he wants to draw in enough donors, he's essentially paying them so he can make the debate stage next month. this is creative, i'm not sure it's legal. stuart: politics is enjoyable at the moment. >> you can give government a dollar and get $20 visa gift card. sounds like a deal. [laughter] stuart: check the futures. we will turn to money. i see green and i like it. up 100 for the dow, 11 s&p. thirty for the nasdaq. i want to talk about meta. your calling threads, a nothing burger. they brought in 100 million users in four or five days. >> they are giving out money for
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people to sign up so if this was rossdale's competition and converted on three out of four out of 100, terrible. you get fired. 2 billion instagram users so converting to 100 million users is three to 4%, not that impressive. think about chat gpt went from zero, started with something that didn't exist and went to 100 million users in two months. tik tok in nine months. facebook meta- is just converting existing users so testament to the power of the network like we see with apple, they roll out a new product and they know it's going to sell well. i just don't know that this is a testament to something new in fancy. what is expanding the network but the second is textbased media pop forms are not it. twitter is not. if i look at my teens, pictures or videos. instagram took off because of reels and photos.
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my kids spend the majority of the time on tik tok. it's endless mindless rolling with endless content. that's not what twitter is or will ever be. i think they're elbowing their way into this textbased social media and it doesn't make sense. stuart: slam on meta, interesting. makes for being here, appreciate it. futures one more time, i see green, thousand 100 and the s&p and nasdaq a little high. in 1998, wanted to get into medical school, he taught his office would increase if he pretended to be black. he's going to give his story next. sweden joining nato, ukraine talking about it. i'll be going is that for the west? we'll deal with that next. ♪
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well well, nice patch of green on the left-hand side of the screen. tomorrow the important elation numbers at 830. some suspicion inflation rate will come down easing pressure on the fed to raise rates. that's why is little green to today. senators will receive a briefing today on how enemies are using artificial intelligence. aisha hussey is on capitol hill. we have any idea what the senators will give today? >> it's all classified we probably won't find out what they actually heard from these
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defense officials but it's important as congress considers regularly a i, the second of three all senator briefings led by senate majority leader chuck schumer. today's briefing will take place inside a skiff. secure area for classified information and among reefers will be director of national intelligence admiral haynes and deputy secretary of defense kathleen hicks. in may haynes told senators her departments were working with industry experts to try to understand ai's possible use but she admitted they still didn't have their hands around potential impact or threat of ai. lawmakers are expecting a different answer today. >> this briefing will be critical for senators to learn more how we use ai to protect our country and how it's being used by our adversaries and what we can do to make sure we
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maintain our advantages. we have no time to waste. >> the fear here is falling behind adversaries like china. which is already ahead of the u.s. regulating the i and some have begun introducing legislation like preventing ai from perhaps launching nukes by itself but don't expect legislation to pass anytime soon chuck schumer has pretty much indicated will take congress a matter of months before we see anything past. stuart: preventing nukes from launching themselves, that would be a good objective. >> you remember those old movies. we don't want that. [laughter] stuart: now this, turkey has agreed to back sweden's bid to join nato. president biden calls it historic moment. james is with us this morning. i want to deal with sweden, ukraine later. including them and nato, surely a big win for the west, right?
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>> when you add sweden, they've always been nato friendly but when they are fully integrated into the command structure, it does a couple of things, it adds a hundred miles to the russians and turns baltic sea into a nato lake and gives nato extended plat form into the arctic so when people talk about taking russia's two or three years to rebuild their military, the reality is because of the new strategic obstacle they face, we are looking at five years, maybe a decade before russia has the capacity or capability to talk about an offensive against nato. stuart: that sounds good to me. i want to talk about ukraine. they may join nato. if ukraine joined nato while at work with russia, are we, america, also at work with
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russia? >> i think you answered the questions. nato has article five which means if we invoke article five and attack, and attack against one is an attack against all. there's no way if they attack that nato would agree to trigger article five so where's the logic for joining nato? the reality is there's no precedent for our country in a conflict to join nato and i don't see a way forward that nato would break that tradition. stuart: zelenskyy is furious about this. >> well the reality is they are not going to get into nato so he can be as furious as he wants. what ensures a free and stable nato, long-term security assistance and help rebuild the country and he's going to get that so that's the important thing and when the fighting stops, they will get nato and they will be off the table. stuart: they will shoot down
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u.s. air force if they intrude in north korea's airspace, are they just making trouble for us? >> i don't think they are trying but they like -- they are in a tough place. they can't afford to start world war three, they wouldn't survive and probably they have a strong south korean government probe u.s., strong japanese government pro- u.s. and for the first time in a long time south korean government japanese government want to work together and they are anti- chinese so you have northeast triangle, u.s., south korea and japan, a formidable problem if you want to cause trouble. stuart: thank you very much, see you again soon. later this morning president biden leads turkeys president, do we know what they are going to discuss? do not u.s. giving fighter jets to turkey and a path towards membership for turkey in the european union. this after turkey agree to drop his long resistance to sweden
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becoming the 32nd member of nato so biden will hold a meeting with them today at 11:00 a.m. tomorrow he meets with the president of ukraine zelenskyy. that will be contentious. the president reluctant to allow ukraine into nato because of the war and they will discuss ukraine's path to membership and security assistance. maybe they can agree on faster path for ukraine to enter nato when the war ends. more favorable language for zelenskyy but either way, you have nato standing together and said unified front for president putin. stuart: it's a hot meeting. thank you so much. check futures, the green is still there. dow up 100, nasdaq may be up 20. opening bell is next. ♪
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left-hand side of the screen, still looking down. dow 120. david nicholas with me this morning.
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you know i read your stuff, your saying one more rate hike, 25 basis points and done. that's a bullish outlook, isn't it? >> it is. we could see the lowest cpi inflation in two years, down from 9% the could be little over 3%. why? used car prices are coming down, energy coming on, goods prices are coming down. here's where we will see inflation, the housing and shelter costs and service inflation because service inflation is tied to wages. wages paid stubbornly high so i'm looking for improvement and i think we will see some but i think the market this week will be the worst behind us, i think bears are wrong, i think we get a bullish run up this week and as everything to do with the report, we will get wednesday. >> next case, was the biggest risk to the market right now? >> i've been pretty clear, it's geopolitical.
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we are in the middle of a war in ukraine. america is very involved through funding the war, ammo and equipment but you have the china risk, this is something i'm watching closely. china is preparing for war whether we like it or not, china is preparing for war. wall street is under estimating the risk of what it entails so that's where i see wrists and hopefully does not escalate, were to de-escalate but that's the big risk. stuart: is something that just happens, you can't really forecast it, a black swan event. i just wonder how you invest thinking about a black swan event that may or may not ha happen. >> that's the hardest risk to diversify, a risk we don't know but you have to watch that which is why you want a balanced approach, treasuries and equities because treasuries will provide good support for the portfolio.
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stuart: who put up on the screen, the yield on the six month treasury is 5.52%, way above inflation rate. not exactly a bargain but not a bad yield. >> that's right and the market surprised investors in this opportunity, ipos are coming, box coming to market in treasury so a lot of excitement. stuart: essentially you see prices going up this year? >> that's correct, i'm excited, i think the bears are wrong, city downgraded the market, i think it's wrong, they will have egg on their face. [laughter] stuart: thanks very much. we will see you again real soon. a few seconds the market opens, will see someone will lean forward and pressed the button. there he goes, he's reaching for the button. the market is open. [laughter] >> so exciting.
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stuart: is. >> it's exhilarating to be on the platform. stuart: you and i were together doing that and it's exciting the markets going up. i don't know what's wrong with making money. [laughter] stuart: if you were socialist -- go away. look at the dow 30, the majority are in the green and the dow opened up 144 points this is exciting. s&p 500 also on the upside to the tune of .81%. the nasdaq composite .13% so the big game is for the dow industrials. big tech, do we have uniformity there? we don't. meta, amazon, apple up. microsoft, awful but down. stay on microsoft right now, 330 a share, down .45%.
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they've announced more layoffs, how many? >> a local filing, 276 jobs in customer service and sales, maybe more but it's on top of the 10000 previously announced. the bottom line is tech layoffs are slowing but not stopping. companies still making money, they are pinching when they can so look at all of tech for all of this year, to 16000 job cuts. stuart: that's a lot. people thought it was secure. >> you get huge raises, work from home, nobody would bother you. it's changed. stuart: apple, i know they've launched an online store what do we know anything? >> the super up in china 1.2 billion users so apple selling full-line of their products on it. they have 20% share of the slowing chinese smart phone market but apple is a status
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symbol in china. india, the group is near and apple suppliers fauci so they would become the first indian company to assemble the iphone. look at apple shares, down slightly at 188. for apple to be $3 trillion again, shares need to trade at 190 -- i looked it up again because you are talking about yesterday. stuart: close to 3 trillion. let's look at disney. that stock is gradually coming down. forty cents, $88 a share. it's been trending down. has anything to do with low attendance at the theme parks? >> look at wait times, anybody who goes to disney those who are spending an arm and a leg and waiting forever on the lines. these are wait times over the july 4 weekend, one of the slowest weakens in nearly a
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decade across all parks. look at magic kingdom, he waited 25 minutes but that was 34 minutes last year. why is this happening? yes, it costs an arm and a leg and temperatures were really hot but it is there something out there? stuart: theme park fatigue? >> disney batik. something is changing at disney. i know you have more but you might keep us waiting. stuart: bit coin -- wait a minute. ridiculous headlines. somebody thinks want $20000 a year, can you say pump and dump? >> standard charter says $120,000 by the end of 2024 for one bit coin 30,000 400 now. they say it gets to 50 this year, i can see 50 maybe next year.
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$120,000 a token? this is why minors are holding on longer because they know could they can fetch higher prices so that's supply and demand. stuart: i just don't like when somebody says outrageous, it's going to the moon. >> city said 318,000. stuart: amc selling dover tickets to the barbie movie, that's about the creation of a nuclear bomb. they sound like two completely different movies. >> these are strange if you will. why would a person buy a ticket to see barbie on the same day and spend five hours and nine minutes in a theater seat? i have no idea but it's happening. it started on the internet as a mean putting photos together, main characters, it looked odd and people are buying the
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doubleheader. amc sold 20000 such tickets. movies open next week in the 21st. >> barbie is for kids and the other is not. >> not for kids. wouldn't it be cool if movies kept interesting offering a discount if you see any two movies in one day? stuart: next is zillow, i think the stock is way up which implies somebody's bullish on it. >> upgrades to buy the price target by nearly 50% to $62 and the reason is huge. housing is improving into next year and destabilization mortgage rates. stuart: very nice again. thanks very much. look at the big board, six minutes with the business, .4%. dow winners of the top we have 3m caterpillar, idm is back.
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s&p 500, the winner is gypsy. sc. i thought there was a j. your brands -- why are you laughing? the nasdaq composite, the winners on the list, read them on the screen when they put them on the screen. a little delay there. marvel, paypal, lululemon. look at the ten year treasury, the ten year treasury yield, i had earlier close to 4%, that's where it is. 3.98. price of gold this morning not doing much recently, 1937 an ounce. but coin 30,000 dollars a coin. the price of oil moving up easily, $73 a barrel. not cast to 69 and the average price for a gallon of regular is
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3.54. california is 488 and as we told you earlier, the state of washington it is 4.95, highest in the nation. coming up, one chicago suburb paying reparations, they called it a test run for the whole country. an opinion piece on msnbc calls exercising and keeping fit the far right way of life. clay travis will get into that. unhappy with the left climate plans but do they have a plan of their own? i put it to larry kudlow. larry is next. ♪
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12 minutes into the training session, nasdaq turned south a little the dow holding onto a 20-point cane.
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there are constant reports of super high temperatures across the country, massive flooding, wildfires. i asked governor desantis what his climate plan would be. he said he would just reverse biden's plan. come on in, larry kudlow. increasing oil production, that is the governor's plan. that's not conventional climate plan. republicans have any plan for climate other than reversing biden? >> is not just oil, it's natural gas. i saw governor desantis respons. i don't think it was comprehensive enough. the united states has the cleanest oil and natural gas in the world. that's why it is important to go
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back to the trump policies which would reopen drilling and pipelining and lng terminals, that's what you want to do. the last 20 years if you look at the numbers, the last 20 years, the united states reduced carbon emissions by 1.1 billion, that's by far the biggest production and carbon of any country in the world. by far, not even close if you look at the chart we run our show periodically. places like china and india and saudi arabia, they are increasing carbon emissions because of coal primarily but also dirty oil in the case of saudi arabia so drill baby drill is -- now it will keep inflation
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down, promote economic growth but also consistent with technological changes that have reduced carbon emissions. stuart: change the subject, overseas. zelenskyy of ukraine, he will meet with biden. curious that the delay in getting ukraine into nato are we slow walking, preventing ukraine when? >> that's a very difficult question, a very difficult question. the nato problem you've got certain countries in nato, turkey being one that don't want ukraine and i think the proposals that will be on the table are longer-range, i don't think you're talking about this year, i think you're talking sometime in ten years or longer.
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this war -- i'm not an expert, you have to talk to general keane or someone like that. yes, biden is probably slow walked military shipments and so forth. he has from the very beginning but that said, we have now poured 130, $150 billion into this war. nato countries from reports of only put in about 20 or 25 billion. it really is a european problem so what should the united states do over time? i'm very attracted to trump's policies where he would somehow enforce cease-fire -- not force but negotiate cease-fire. is it a stalemate, hundreds of thousands of people are getting killed, ukrainians -- everybody
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is rooting for them, pro- democracy. we think international rules and boundaries should be observed. the russians are wrong, they are clearly the bad guy but the question is, what do we do about it? it doesn't look like anything is changing and i think to take another 150 billion and pour it into ukraine for military and or humanitarian purposes, it's never ending, it will be difficult to do that. a lot of people will scratch their head and say why can't you have korean solution? stuart: i just want to see ukraine push russian troops out of the territory they've occupied for 14, 15 months. that i think would be a win. >> just say it, this is what we want and this is what we will push for. >> there's nothing wrong theoretically, nothing wrong in
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terms of international relations, i agree. that is the optimal solution. the question is, can it be done? you've got to ask jack keane about this and people a lot smarter than i am. stuart: i am. >> financially, this will be very difficult and again, hundreds of thousands of people are losing their lives over there and how long can it last before you have -- i think of it like south korea, north korea solution. it may not be optimal. stuart: i will try to get general keane on the show and ask him, how do we win? a long story but thank you for being with us. watching you this afternoon. 4:00 kudlow. first lady jill biden hits the
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campaign trail. what is she focus on? >> two weeks to focus on bidenomics. this is the list. pittsburgh pennsylvania, columbus, ohio and at the city new jersey. battleground states, biden needs to convince voters his economic policies are helping them and it shows he's at the center -- the economy of the center and it's all hands on deck because jill is touting it, to. stuart: i do hope new jersey is a battleground state. reports say president biden lashes out at staff behind closed doors. we've seen his temper flare up in public before. >> asked the right question. why would i take a test? come on, man. stuart: mollie hemingway will respond to have the media is spinning biden's temper.
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it's prime day, amazon's biggest shopping day of the year next, madison alworth, at an amazon facility checking out the deals. ♪ the new dexcom g7 sends your glucose numbers to your phone and watch, so you can always see where you're heading, without fingersticks.
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amazon's prime day in full swing, madison alworth an amazon facility in new york. break down all the deals we will see today. >> i was waiting for that question because look at this table of deals. i will highlight the ones that caught my eye. i want to start with this laptop, lg grand laptop. that's normally $1700, 41 today, closer to 1000 i thought i would also say ring, i know people love the ring cameras, that's typically $60 for amazon prime day, $30, 50% off. then i have some friends that cannot live without this thing, typically tonight again, 30% off today.
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209 and i know you love to be outside, this is something my family swears by for camping or going to the beach, normally $ $40, today just 14. 64% off and i've got to go with my girl barbie because i'm excited for the movie, barbie doll house, typically $45, now 30% off so $30, 99 cents. all of the deals are exciting. amazon, they love their everyday item deals. diapers, toilet paper, their product and bring the customers back so our to bring kadian, the essentials, how important are they for the customer and for you on the retention? >> sometimes the barbie set will be as important as getting paper towels, a birthday party or stocking up for holiday party around the corner so we have to think about how we meet our customers where they are so a great program called cert safe,
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allows to save overtime recurring orders so about essentials and paper towels, diapers, all of the above. just get what they need that day but also for the future. >> same day delivery facility meeting someone -- [inaudible] two hours, four hours. what difference does it make to have the delivery speed others can't keep up with? >> you want the fastest delivery because that helps keep us above competition but what we are looking at is more how we get the right product and customers in the fastest way possible. >> amazing. thank you so much. tons of deals, i've been fascinated how quickly these things move and some of you are selling online, crazy deals today and tomorrow. stuart: you got a lot of people except about a 40-dollar yeti.
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thanks, everybody. >> i am excited. stuart: still ahead, mollie hemingway, jimmy favor will be with us and attorney general tennessee jonathan, the 10:00 hour of varney & co. is next. .. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪ ♪ i'm orlando and i'm living with hiv. i don't have to worry about daily hiv pills because i switched to every-other-month cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete long-acting hiv treatment you can get every other month.
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