tv Varney Company FOX Business July 19, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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ah, these bills are crazy. she has no idea she's sitting on a goldmine. well she doesn't know that if she owns a life insurance policy of $100,000 or more she can sell all or part of it to coventry for cash. even a term policy. even a term policy? even a term policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com.
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stuart: spend a little time with me. is that directed at me? i'm not a big spender. i am cheaper. i'm utterly cheap and everybody knows it. good morning, it is 10:00 eastern. this is your money at work, dow jones average up 200 points, 30,153, the s&p up 20, the nasdaq close to 40 points at 14,391. the 10 year treasury deal going down not much but it is down 377. the price of oil hasn't been changed, it is going up recently. it is at $76 a barrel. bitcoin dropped to the $20,000 level earlier inched back to $30,024. back to the markets, now this.
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the president has a new $475 billion student loan give away. in case you didn't know it, students -- karine jean-pierre used that word, she says we taxpayers owe those who borrowed money for us. that's nonsense. this is the world turned upside down, where does it end? do you have to pay your rent, there are demands for rent relief, how about your mortgage. you can walk away from all kinds of responsibilities. we are establishing an entitlement mentality, so many questions these days, and and the -- if you are deserving it you are owed it. it is a shift of america down the entitlement road.
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by virtue of merit, you demand to help without it. you exist so pay your self. you exist, so pay me and i will vote for you. that's the direction they are taking us in. second hour of varney just getting started. ♪ stuart: bring on liz peek. welcome back to the show, good to see you. why are the democrats creating a society based on entitlement? >> it's to pay that -- based on dependency. the more people who depend on the government's largess, the more people will inevitably eventually vote for them because they can threaten to
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withhold that largess, withhold that money for student loans or rent or free medical care and whereas the republican party celebrates individual responsibility and freedom, democrats don't like that. they want people dependent on the government because they wield power over those people. you are totally on point here. the problem is eventually as we all know as margaret thatcher said, eventually you run out of other people's money. are the other people? the middle class, the middle-class hard-working americans funding all this stuff. in the case of student loans, it is especially annoying and unfair because it is basically higher income, getting the student loan payoffs. i have data in the recent column showing that. it's not a middle-class hand out or lower income hand out but a hand out to people who spend millions more over their
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lifetime because they are getting in most cases an advanced degree but also a college degree which will learn the more money. this is offensive on every front but i think it is part and parcel of the bigger picture. stuart: i read your new op-ed. you are saying the middle-class is snubbing president biden. how so? make your case. >> what we know right away, most recent data, they are not sending president biden a $200 campaign donations that were a bedrock of obama's campaign. only half as much came from those smaller donors for president biden. polling tells us the middle-class has no love for this president. they get it. they are paying their taxes and all their money is going for example in new york to housing, feeding, schooling illegal immigrants. who think that's appropriate? who think that is fair?
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the middle-class is been shafted by president biden, middle-class joe as he likes to position himself. they've lost $9,000 in income, $2.5 trillion in wealth, their prospects are not very good going forward because of this president. stuart: i don't think he will be the candidate in november's election and i think we agree on this. >> i agree with you one hundred%. every day that goes by he looks frail or. less able to do his job. stuart: with the israeli president, that was not good. as always, see you again soon. people saw a boost in their credit rating during the pandemic. i understand credit scores are going to come up a little. >> delinquencies will revert to
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the pre-covid levels, they are setting more money aside for potential bad loans. credit card charge offs, that rose to 4.8% from 2.7% a year ago. it is worse in synchrony but it is happening at banks like citi and jpmorgan as well. the worry is borrowers will see recently improved credit go back to subprime and the bottom line is the consumer, this is the argument. is the economy good? the consumer feels they are just hanging on. whatever pay gains they have made inflation has been eating away at that and interest rates are going up. and american consumer hanging on. of the one hanging on, back to the markets please, plenty of green on the market this morning, dow is up 200, nasdaq is up another 30.
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david, same question as a lot of other folks on the show, interest rate cycle seems to be winding down, interest rate increase cycle, inflation 3% consumer level, profits have been good, surely this is rally time. are you buying in? >> good morning. i am. for the record i'm not -- dollar cost averaging into the strength we are seeing, this is important we have certain risks on assets and risk off affects but i don't believe this is a business as usual market like we've been used to seeing. there is still a record amount of cash sloshing around on market. it will take time for things to burn off. the rally is best described as a pivot rally between what happens every single time the
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market understands that we are stopping viking tightening cycle and we see equities improve from that point which i believe it's important to check out the market went down in 2022 because of inflation and interest rate hikes but we never hit an official recession. it's important to understand we are not trying to retrace losses after a recession but of not gotten there. stuart: i see a list of winners on the market and unitedhealth is in there again. stock has gone, you have been buying healthcare companies. why? >> that is right. healthcare looks solid right now. there's a lot of deferred surgeries that have gone in to this covid timeframe so still very bullish right now. also think commodities are looking strong especially as the us dollar starts to slip and if it goes lower, metal
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miners that own, oddities that go up in value if inflation goes up, also help us in the event we have selloffs and last thing, we are going away from china and more friend shoring to places like india so there's a strong trend developing right now, india has 2.5 million graduates on an annualized basis, that around for a while as we see them develop here. stuart: the second person to talk about investing in india, very interesting. always good, thanks for joining us, see you soon. united healthcare. >> one of the reasons, people are getting new perfect after covid, those surgeries you don't have to do right away but it is a stock that is on the post earnings tear, it is up
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again today, up almost 3%. ubs raised their price target to $520, the news today in addition to that is competitor is up 7% with those shares, they given upbeat forecast because costs are going down. stuart: tell me about lululemon. >> no one ever talked about it since they bought it, it is that device that is like your personal trainer, a mirror but it can train you virtually. 100 people have been laid off. annual high of 391. stuart: cinemark down. >> jpmorgan down on the hollywood strike. they say the strike, if a movie is finished and about to be released the actors prayer the strike rules cannot promote the movie and that will hurt everybody at least in the
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short-term. jpmorgan sees a compounding effect of this in late summer or early fall introducing the price target. stuart: tell me about a possible strike with serious consequences. >> ups workers are angry because their paycheck is not going as far. the news is in 13 days these workers who handle and deliver the packages could go out on strike in 13 days time. ups handles one quarter of all shipments. it is 18 million packages a day. the estimate is they can hire nonunion workers to fill some gaps but the estimate is 4 million of those packages would be mia in the process so if you are an amazon customer ups moving that amazon item, or piece of equipped or drug for surgery, you could be out of luck. this is a huge deal, what's
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happening at ups. >> 13 days to go before strike, 13 days, irs whistleblowers, testify in the hunter biden case today, one of them could link president biden to hunter's business dealings, you can bet we are all over it. the president slumped in his chair mumbling during his meeting with the president of israel, donald trump says he's embarrassing us on the world stage. >> our country is no longer respected. he can't put together two sentences. he is almost incapable of talking. stuart: kristin white and worked at the state department under the trump administration. i will ask if he agrees with his former boss. russian airstrikes target the southern city of odesa after the key bridge in crimea was bombed. where grain is being prepared, despite russia pulling out, alex reports after this.
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stuart: 50 minutes into the trading session, down just rails up 235, above 35,000, nasdaq up 26, s&p up 18. russian troops bombarded the ukrainian city of odesa using drones and missiles, second night in a row. this is a big deal because that city's where the grain is shipped out. is it a big deal? >> it is a tremendous ideal and this hellish night according to ukrainian officials in odesa as russia launched for a second night in a row a large amount of missiles and attack drones
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for the southern port city. ukraine's military says they fired missiles and drones across the country with most of them, the agriculture minister, 60,000 tons of grain, you can see some of those attacks targeting grain supply depots in this video right here. odesa is where most of the country's grain is exported at least where it was before russia pulled out of the black sea deal last summer. the race is on to find a way to export the food and supplies the country needs. the united nations is floating ideas of how neighboring countries can lend their support and poland, croatia, romania and bulgaria offering to pass shipments through the territory for the worsening food crises we've seen in
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africa as well as in the middle east. volodymyr zelenskyy address this issue urging the nations to continue working with them to say, quote, we can use the black secor door. we are not afraid. and investigation is underway after a fire broke out at russian training ground in crimea evacuating 2,000 people. this shows the fire and the explosions in the area. there's been no specifically named because of what took place when investigation is underway but it is reminding viewers that this is just two days after those explosions we saw on the bridge to crimea so a lot of concern about what this will mean especially the attacks we've seen in ukraine in a couple days. stuart: the us will advance $1.3 billion of military aid to ukraine. that would include counter
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drone systems, air defenses, exploding drones, ammunition. we are giving them so much, why is there counteroffensive going so slowly? >> this is the risk of fighting a war of attrition with a larger repository of manpower, resources and sanctions applied by the biden administration have not been as affected as advertised. you have this counteroffensive reminiscent of french planes in world war i, as well as having widely anticipated counteroffensive that never happened, and you bump against modern warfare, something like that where you have hardening of the lines and war of attrition. stuart: is america ready to
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fund and finance a war of attrition? >> they thought ukraine would be a win to wash away the humiliation of being run out of afghanistan and failing there. if you looks at, the polls are not as advertised as they were but support from this is declines, you see republican candidates pushing for an agreement especially governor ron desantis and donald trump and if you compare this with disappointing results in iraq, afghanistan, syria, libya, the american public does tire on these efforts and also there is this concern this is detracting from needed concern to deter the war with china. stuart: the townhall.
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and watch this, roll it. >> the countries no longer respected. three years ago, energy independent, powerful and terry, totally rebuilt, the president announced three days ago which he should never have said, that we have no ammunition. what do you think china says when they hear we have no ammunition? it's a very sad thing. i don't think he can put together two sentences, almost incapable of talking. we have the potential of a war beyond the war with russia and ukraine. if i were president that would have never happened. stuart: let me pick up on that. i'm sure you saw our president mumbling and stumbling in front of his relapse president yesterday. how does that look on the world stage? >> doesn't look good. reminds one of the final leaders of the soviet union where it's clear people were not in command which means
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their staff is in command, the white house is running things. when president biden can pull it together at critical times including when he more or less beat donald trump and a presidential debate in 2020, people are concerned about this and it doesn't look good but biden does have this charm, i don't think he will end up as the democratic nominee. difficult to believe 2,024 will be a perfect rematch of 2,020. stuart: i find it hard to believe the democrats will vote and accept president biden for another six years. don't think it will happen. thanks for joining us. always a pleasure. we are learning more about the us soldier who has been declaimed -- detained in north korea. with the pentagon saying? ashley: the us soldier crossed into north korea on purpose but they are still trying to gather details. take a listen.
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>> we are still trying to learn but what we do know is one of our servicemembers who was on a tour willfully and without authorization car across the military demarcation line, foremost concern about the welfare, we will remain focused on this, and this will develop in the next few days and hours. >> private second class travis king of the military confirming he was on a civilian tour of the dmz and was not on duty at the time he crossed over the border into north korea but with forces to get him back at a time when tensions are high between the us and pyongyang the military says it is working with north korea's military to
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resolve this. stuart: former acting dhs secretary chad wolf says biden is cooking the books at the border, the white house is hiding the real number of illegal crossings to convince everyone that their border security strategy is working. tom homan on that. karine jean-pierre justifies biden's student loan push saying borrowers are owed relief. watch this. >> these are borrowers who have been making payments for decades. stuart: that an interesting twist. former education secretary bill bennett will take you there. bill bennett is next. ♪
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a million cars a year ahead of earnings. stuart: of that thing has been on a tear. jetblue, what have we got? lauren: a new rewards program so passengers can earn points when shopping reading at a restaurant or parking at an airport, 100 airports. the ftc's new drop tools, guidelines on mergers. morgan stanley says mn day activities coming up. do any of those draft guidelines help jetblue which is up 6% by spirit. stuart: constellation brand. lauren: shares at a record high the stock is going to $300. they like additions the company made to the board of directors, there rival makes bud light, losing floorspace, cold space, freezer space and display space on store shelves.
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4% at a high. stuart: congress holds the purse strings and biden is under fire for trying to pay off people's student loan debt without working. with congress to do it. hillary vaughan on capitol hill. tell me this. >> reporter: the white house thinks they owe it to people to help them or save them from paying what they owe to the government on their student loans. >> they are owed this relief. republican elected officials, with the government for giving billions in business loans are still objecting to including their own constituents. >> reporter: republicans in the senate are trying to address the real cause of why college is so extensive and how people make a decision after taking thousands of dollars in loans for their education, to make sure they don't get stuck paying for degree not worth the price tag, tallying up how much
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monthly payments would be, how long to payoff the loan and forecast for students how much money they would make with the degree they are paying for. democrats think the best way to avoid taking out a bad loan for bad degrees make college completely free. bernie sanders and pramila payapal proposing tuition for families making $250,000 a year. >> a quarter of a million every year, is that helping people who need it the most? >> 250,000 for a married couple that includes kids depending on where you live. not even talking about top percentages. >> reporter: one group, the education data initiative puts the cost of that plan at $700 billion, they will pay for it through raising taxes on wall street.
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stuart: as you heard, student loan borrowers are owed relief. good to bring in bill bennett. this is the world turned upside down. how can they be owed relief? >> do you know the world upside down when it was most famously played? yorktown. your team lost. moving on. here we go. that's right. island you money as you turn around and tell me i owe you that money. this is ridiculous. it is crazy. running a end around the supreme court, don't think it will work. a larger issue i'm glad you got
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to and that hillary segment because it's about saving higher education. higher education is in trouble, enrollment is down, return on investment which they dread to hear, how much they will make by investing this much in college education, something these colleges don't want you to look at and half the students, enrolling in college never finished so they have debt and no degree. stuart: is college worth it? a big general question, is college worth it? >> if you get into stanford it is worth it, if you get into princeton it is worth it. the prestige of those degrees carry you along and so on. a lot of other places, it isn't. i did a book called is college worth it. people should look in and make the inquiry. if you read college catalog these are great works of fiction. if you go here, the moon and
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the stars, everything is yours, the world is your oyster and so on, students find that it is not the case. we are seeing many dramatic increases in salaries for jobs that don't require higher education like welding and being an electrician, all sorts of things. also this notion that higher ed is not something a lot of people want to go through particularly males. graduation rate now is 50% female, 42% male. feminization of american higher education is another story for another day. stuart: it is. i always like to talk about marijuana with you. >> why do you always like to talk about marijuana? stuart: we have a huge problem here. i was in favor of legalization
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but technology comes along and produces these they paying --vaping devices, nobody knows what you're doing, there's a profound effect on high schools. how do they know if these kids are high in high school? you don't know. a lot of them probably are. i don't know what you can do about this but i think this is a huge problem. >> hard to put the genie back in the bottle. this marijuana is not the marijuana of the 60s. it's extremely powerful. remember this too. more young people are in treatment for marijuana than all other drugs combined. this is a potent, dangerous, drug, it can be deadly when you get out on the road. and now we've got vaping. state need to reconsider. we don't need any more effort to make students dumber, less attentive and less focused.
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you've seen those reading and math scores, students less brain worthy than they are now. stuart: you know what you are talking about and appreciate it. come back soon. see you. now this. illinois set to be the first state to eliminate cash bail. critics are worried this new law would keep criminals on the streets. we have the story from a story from chicago. the administration takes its most drastic step against the wuhan lab in china cutting off it's funding. grady trimble has that story next. ♪
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the administration cut the spunt -- funding for the wuhan lab in china. >> the biden administration says the wuhan lab didn't follow safety protocols, and refused to handle documents about those safety protocols. health and human services department in a memo announcing the suspension of money to the lab, the association that the wuhan institute of virology research likely violated protocols of the nih regarding biosafety is undisputed. as such, there is risk the lab, not only previously violated but currently violating and will continue to violate protocols of the nih on biosafety. health and human services says the wuhan lab won't get another dollar from the us government but the lab already received one. $4 million in us grants from
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2014 to 2019, since the start of the pandemic the lab has come under increased scrutiny because of the controversial gain of function research done there and suspicion the covid may have leaked from it. the suspension of funding comes as we are learning top scientists who publicly denied the lab leak theory actually believe it was possible if not likely. that according to new messages released by independent journalist matt taibbi, and two of their colleagues. >> top scientists, top advisers to doctor anthony fauci misled congress when they claimed what they were doing was science, the messages show they were engaged in politics, responding to what they called higher ups, pressure from their bosses and openly working to deceive reporters. >> gop lawmakers claim the federal government worked with big tech platforms like
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facebook, google, and twitter to suppress the lab leak theory on their platforms. we now know that theory according to several government agencies could be legitimate. stuart: thanks very much indeed. there is a huge argument with drug prices and pricing. johnson & johnson is suing the administration. this is about drug pricing. ashley: yes. it is about the constitution. j&j suing the administration over medicare's new powers to cut drug prices, becoming 1/3 big pharma company to challenge the controversial provision in the inflation reduction act but also filed in federal district court in new jersey, argues the medicare negotiations violate the first and fifth amendments of the u.s. constitution. the company believes this provision doesn't involve through negotiations since the
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government unilaterally dictates drug prices and is nothing but congressional overreach, the same argument made by drug lou makers merck and bristol-myers squibb. the administration says it will defend that provision that aims to make drugs more affordable especially for older americans. stuart: many thanks. jason alldean under attack over his new country song. we have the response to the critics coming up. prince harry and meghan markel's one hundred million dollar netflix deal is in trouble because of the hollywood strike. neil sean has details and joins me next. ♪ at t. rowe price our strategic investing approach
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the deal is in trouble, what does that mean? >> good afternoon. some say this is a blessing. the story goes that harry and meghan had to shut down production. this is a great pr statement. they don't have anything in production, they are talking about doing something with prince harry which is as dollars it could be. even with the inclusion of david and elton john. then but snubbed recently by the emmys. when you come out and support the hollywood strike that may win them back with favorable funds in the industry. this dichotomy going on, it doesn't in many people's mind make sense because if you have
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the biggest downloaded streaming thing in the history in that company and you've got nothing, that says quite a bit. there's plenty of space yet. stuart: i've not seen much of them, not bursting into the headlines. are they still together? >> they need to be. over the last three months, 10 strategic pr spins, just before the coronation, we saw the thing in the farmers market, and that was literally set up to detract from wimbledon. stuart: kate middleton stole the show, and one hands down.
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do you think meghan markle is jealous? >> a lot of people said that, they are good-looking men, the problem, one of them thought they could take the crown, the crown belongs to the future queen of england. people were absolutely -- brad pitt was a little shy to even speak. the debate about when people stand up and that kind of stuff. a lot of people want to see the return of that. the duke of kent suggested only senior members do that has complexes came on and when you look at resplendent and green, the 3 visits made this year alongside queen camilla and prince william, they stole the
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show and more than that there is this jealousy from front covers. you can feel it from meghan markle, a lady who lives in normal mode. stuart: are fine ending to a good interview. we are still on the royal family. kanga charles allegedly annoyed at his son prince william. you've got a comment on this. ashley: childs is royally miffed after prince william told him he's got to start paying rent in country cottage. and william inherited. reports not only demanding rent but move your stuff out of your home so it could be regular holiday rental.
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the king apparently not amused but agreed to his son's terms, the home will be available to rent after september, after the king gets the movers in. stuart: how much do you think that would be? ashley: good question. i would say at top of the market. apparently more country mansion than a cottage. they are under selling it. i want to find out how much to charge. stuart: thank you very much, got to get back to the markets, i thought it was good. nasdaq is up 50. 13 points. 10 year treasury yield, show me, it is going down a bit, 377. oil going up recently, that means gas prices going up. oil now at $76 a barrel.
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bitcoin a couple hours ago at $29,000 a coin, still they are, 29-8 to be precise. big show coming, sandra smith on biden mumbling at losing his train of thought during the meeting with the president of israel. former acting ice director tom homan on the border crisis. 100,000 migrants waiting in mexico to cross the border into america. jason rantz on squad members voting against the house's pro israel resolution. the 11:00 hour of "varney and company" is next. ♪
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