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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  July 19, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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>> varney trivia brought you by christian healthcare ministries, healthcare puts you in control. stuart: dna is written in a special alphabet using the letters a, t, c, and what? ashley: number 4, h. >> i was going to go with that as well. hardest question. we when i'm going with be. the answer is g. it stands for what? quinine. never heard of it. sorry we stumped you. coast-to-coast starts now. adam: no fighting it and no doubting at, stocks knocking it
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out of the park again. earnings helping, inflation using, the breath of this rally expanding. a lot of folks are worrying 8 days into this rally in the epic battle between the bulls and the bears is far from over. take it from boxing legend oscars la jolla in the early rounds of this. what does the champ make of this? one of the greatest boxers of all time is here to take on stocks taking off but his whole new career taking off and an incredible documentary, i will be very careful what i ask him because the champ is talking to me face-to-face, that means he is here face-to-face. here and only here, which means i have nowhere to hide. "the opening bell" rings.
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some excited for this show. welcome, i am neil cavuto. more with one of my athletes ever in just a few minutes. at least today, luke lloyd is strategic wealth partner who can pick apart what is happening today. microsoft and a lot of tech stocks at record levels. this is widening out but what do you think? >> today will set the stage for technology earnings, the biggest driver of returns so far this year. what's interesting is earnings, the tonality changed on the earnings calls, how companies are going to prepare and how are companies going to get back in growth mode given a soft landing? that's much more bullish tone giving investors optimism which is driving the market higher. i think elon musk is going to
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have some interesting insights about the state of chesler but what he has seen economically, it could be a big market mover in bulls and bears, he's been active on twitter. i hate to speculate too much but he's been an outspoken by the federal reserve raising rates too much saying small words like interesting to describe nvidia's valuation. a lot of insights, everybody should tune in. neil: i look at the macro trends going on. inflation is a worry for a lot of folks but not as much of a worry. you've got reminders of that in the uk where inflation was less than thought, new zealand slowing for the second month in a row. a trend going on globally here. never want to jump the gun on this but do we have to worry about this as much? >> towards the backwards part
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of that, the eighth or ninth inning with regards to rate hikes and inflation. inflation will be sticky regarding 2% target. it will be very hard to keep it under 2% but rate hikes on the table. as we head into that, what is interesting, you see this in the financial sector with earnings as well. there's opportunities in the financial sector. revenues are pretty high. margins getting compressed. pockets in the financial sector are becoming attractive. we believe the am and a market is positioned for recovery in 24's interest rates stabilize and management teams have better visibility, rates go 0% to 6%, no one has visibility. next year if rates remain the same they don't go up or down, a lot more visibility. we picked up a stock in the
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financial sector, am and a advisory firm, they could benefit from the environment next year. neil: it was flawless minus your baseball analogy, the eighth and ninth inning. we have oscar de la hoya joining us soon. the eighth and ninth, your take on earnings is very early, among companies reporting, 8/10, more are beating estimates. there's again to this that everyone says if you beat it like i used to do, i tell them i'm going to get all afters, and ds and a couple sees and think of einstein. they were on to me by the third grade. they don't let me ask how you are grading these your self. >> i given a be so far. they are beating expectations, guidance, reconfirming guidance. tonight, tesla and netflix
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expect and 50% sales growth, those are pretty high targets already but it's about the future guidance how with conflicting economic conditions, growth stories all around limiting people from sharing passwords. i got flagged on this sunday, i am a little stubborn. investors going to be interested in hearing about whether people are starting to like me or show passwords or bite the bullet and pay up and an actor strike could be a tension but it's all about guidance. neil: how they lay out the landscape is the game. always a pleasure, thank you very much. it's not heavy wave when it comes to markets, susan lee is with us now. forming a bunch of developments, microsoft in and out. susan: it is lightweight, you don't want to go there.
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but oscars a lawyer -- oscar de la hoya, different titles, he is incredible. susan: i can't wait to see his left hook. i'm sure it is still incredible. he is in for fighting shape, so is microsoft. i am transitioning. record highs for microsoft 50%, pretty good, pretty incredible for $2 trillion company, microsoft put a price on artificial intelligence, chatterjee pt, is going to cost, $30 a month for the 365 package that includes excel, word and access, not cheap because it's three times the price of the package. microsoft rallied 6% adding
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another $154 billion in market, one single session. they added another disney in a few hours and it is a good test to see how much and how many for microsoft's new ai tools. analysts are pretty bullish, predicting 50%, half of microsoft business clients will sign on to this more expensive package in the next three years. the new chat gpt, the only ai announcement for microsoft yesterday. they announced partnership with meta and mark zuckerberg, a bit of a breaux fast, posting a friendly photo, you have to ask oscar de la hoya who will win that cage match. you have to ask. neil: is it going to happen? >> their handlers will protect those $200 billion millionaires. they are a little sensitive.
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neil: i wanted it to do something like that. susan: who do you think would win? neil: just canceled it. lauren: susan: it would cause severe long-term injuries. one more piece of news we have to talk about, they extended the deadline to close on the blizzard deal to october 18th. ignited animal spirits, and it has been the worst year in a decade for mn day. neil: you could possibly close. susan: maybe get some deals. thank you very much, and hillary vaughn, all these other
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stocks, senators are trying to make sure they are not dabbling in 2 the debt -- executive -- >> reporter: the idea of a stock for lawmakers. there's been a dozen bills introduced on the hill. they've not gone anywhere. this time, with visits bill from senator josh hawley and kirsten jell-o brand could be different. republicans control the house, some likely could get behind this bill to ban lawmakers and staff from owning and trading individual stocks, employees of the executive branch. they don't want to let anyone have company stocks if included in a blind trust, telling fox digital politicians and civil servants shouldn't spend their time daytrading and trying to make a profit at the expense of the american public but that is
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what so many are doing. the steep fines lawmakers and officials would face if they break the band. it could break the bank for some. lawmakers that don't follow the rules they have to pay a penalty of 10% of the value of the investment. for executive officials they pay a fine covering the value of the investment, they improperly sold or purchased or pay $10,000 fine, whatever is the steeper punishment. they want to make it easier for people to track stock trades that create a publicly searchable database that would detail all stock transactions for lawmakers, staff, and those in the executive branch bearing at all for those at home wondering what lawmakers are up to and what their portfolio looks like. adam: the part i've been waiting for, oscar de la hoya, one of the greatest athletes of
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all time, think of 11 word titles in six classes, no human being has ever done that. he is here right now. prepared to ask a lot of tough questions, the golden boys, these questions are going to be easy. i didn't know you were here, good to see you. ♪
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>> the world fell in love with my story. but it was a lie. >> the pride of east la, the golden boy. >> oscar de la hoya was the most popular fighter since mohamed ali. neil: he was more popular than that if you think of it. just the fact that you could have 11 world titles in six weight classes all the way up -- what the latest? >> one hundred 30 pounds junior lightweight, one hundred 68. neil: do that between meals.
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it's going to beyond hbo max july 24th and fifth, it is pretty raw. it is actually a counter image to you, all the pretty boy stuff we knew. >> all the glitz and glamour. i'm speaking the truth. all these years i found out i was conditioned as an athlete, as a kid that grew up in east la winning the gold medal, being labeled the golden boy, it's a lot of pressure. neil: the exit ramp. >> i was the chosen one since i could remember. family asking good for anything from me especially when i started winning money. i had to seclude myself from all my family so i wouldn't have to give my money away.
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neil: that happens to a lot of the greats. we were chatting about george foreman. he lost a lot of that money, trusted the wrong people, mike tyson, a billion dollars in career earnings. how does that happen? you avoided that. >> a lot of people take advantage of our kindness. we are fighters, supposed to be tough, but inside we are good people, we are nice people and we feel that we owe the world everything. for some strange reason. i was able like i said, i wasn't talking to family for years for that reason. just to avoid giving my money away. neil: you are like a rock star. you were sucked into that.
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>> life experiences, at 50 years old, i decided to make this documentary because it's never too late to find your self, never too late to really dig deep down inside and see who you really are. neil: they had to tell you. >> mark wahlberg is the producer. lauren: 20 someone said i have to show you warts and all. it will be all wonderful stuff. but you said okay. i don't want to give it away but here's some stuff, people might think differently of you. >> i thought at 50 years old i can finally set myself free by telling my truth because as a kid i was conditioned to be a
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golden boy. it is all glitz and glamour, can do nothing wrong and is making all this money and all these women but inside it is not the lifestyle you want to live. inside, i am confused on why i am doing this. who i'm doing it for. i had an abusive household, my mother and father, emotionally pushing me so hard and really having no connection. i told my father i love him two years ago and i couldn't tell my mother because she passed away when i was 18. imagine the pain and suffering but yet again, the fighting was my escape. neil: you are so good at it. what i remember about you, following your career closely, such a handsome guy and more
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women would be drawn to your fights than you ever saw in boxing. you will look around caesar's palace. >> it was like a concert. neil: the same with my show. how did you deal with that? no boxer had seen anything like that. mohamed ali comes to mind but there was more controversy. tell us. >> a lot of people around me. managers and agents. lauren: 20 you had to get to the point you trust nobody. and that, when i retired, 14, 15 years ago, not sure when i retired. i retired and so now what am i going to do? now you lose your identity and
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now you cannot trust anybody and what i figured out was i have to get back to my roots. i'm a fighter. what is it that is going to make me happy? what makes me happy is wheeling and dealing, business, i love promoting, i love looking for the next diamond in the rough weather from texas or australia. i love searching for the next big thing. neil: how do you decide that? fishnet and a lot of people wondered and i wondered at the time but it didn't hurt you. it drew more attention to you. what was that all about? >> when i retired i lost myself, alcohol and drugs. i literally lost myself.
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the fact that i had a relationship with my mother, i was so disconnected, she never told me she loved me. i would go to these clubs and pick up women, it wasn't necessarily because you want to be with them, you want to talk and have a voice, someone to listen to you. i remember crying and spilling everything to that stranger that i don't even know just because i want somebody to listen. we 20 the most outrageous stuff didn't get bad reaction. >> a lot of fans know who i am. neil: do you wear women's clothing? is there an adequate difference where you can't clock me right now? make it run. >> behind closed doors.
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neil: marketing gimmick at the time. >> it wasn't, those were real pictures. that was me. the ironic part, i don't remember it. neil: was it drugs and? >> it was everything. taking get care of your self. >> i am just glad and fortunate enough that i am still here. that's how tough the life was. i remember when dealing with mental health, being depressed, must have been depressed 10 times over. neil: when you would walk into an arena everything would stop and the attention and glamour, talking to george foreman, when he won the title 20 years after
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first winning it, one of the things that he had said was you can't leave that. there's always a place, nothing like it. do you miss that? >> that was my medicine. i do miss it, stepping inside the ring but i'm okay with my own skin. i'm now okay with living the life that i have now. that's keeping busy. i have my family and my work and good people around me. adam: when you get in the ring you had the best face-off staring at each other. i am sweating a lot now. you could be intimidating even with a hint of a smile. that would rattle me as your opponent. >> the smile is the confidence. i'm going to knock the lights out of you.
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neil: very curious, two billionaires having a cage match, elon musk and mark zuckerberg. would you give the edge? >> i would give the edge to the richest guy, that's musk. he does have the size. zuckerberg, has the coordination. i think musk is a little - neil: you are the mike dyson of your division. >> always punched up. it almost can be a 50/50 fight. both times training, i believe george st. pierre is training one of them. it is -- neil: what do you think, it wasn't -- it is kind of
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replaced boxing in a way, morphed into all of them. >> i think the ufc has a machine behind it and it is everywhere. think about this. when you think about this. fighters in the ufc are going over to boxing to make more money. the business of boxing get will always be -- neil: we had so many, the lineage is clean but now it -- >> too confusing. if you look at it, mayweather, made record pers. take a look at tyson furey, fighting knocko i believe his name is, fighting in the boxing ring because they are going to make a lot of money.
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stuart: you made a fortune for yourself and invested well, but i was born ten years later i could be in all the stuff. >> i would have been a billionaire by now. neil: i thought you already were. i urge everybody, you got to watch this. oscar de la hoya, the golden boy. you will be stunned. i just -- the pieces you are able to provide. you have a different view of this man. he changed the boxing world, always with a smile. you are the opponent thinking it's creeping me out, he's smiling at me. a little more after this. ♪ ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf
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the capital when you said or tweeted what trump did last week was wrong, downright important, plain and simple. i've said before. you went on to say trump's egregious behavior blinds us from seeing a winning game for china in the long run when he talked about whether they were fairly dealing with this but fairly dealing with both sides on this. just wondering what changed. >> nothing changed. i've been consistent in every step including the video i put out today that i would have made a different judgment than donald trump did january 6, 2021. neil: what he did was wrong. >> absolutely. i'm unequivocal today. there's a difference between doing something wrong as he did versus doing something that is illegal.
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neil: that is the fine line presidential candidates are walking, some more severe than vivek ramaswami. those opposed to the president's actions around january 6th which has become the subject of another special counsel probe, aishah hasnie following those developments on capitol hill. >> reporter: they have to grapple with the trump news, not something if they want to talk about but is dominating the campaign trail. last night in new hampshire right before taking the stage for his own town hall, tim scott responded to the trump news saying democrats are hunting republicans. >> it is embarrassing, as the most powerful country anywhere, to see the weaponization of our department of justice against political opponents. it is embarrassing.
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>> reporter: he talked about what he would do differently if elected president, using the news to prop himself up. ron desantis who was hoping for a campaign reset in south carolina spent the day defending trump at pretty much every interview. >> going after somebody on the other side of the political spectrum if you are stretching statutes to criminalize may be political disagreements. that is wrong. >> reporter: the same argument is that vivek ramaswami was making but not everyone is fighting for the nomination has been asked -- nikki haley, showing her frustration over the primary season being taken over by trump's lawsuits and fees, he usually sees a bump in polling after news of an investigation, all the candidates will be watching that closely in the coming days.
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neil: almost every time, looking forward to that. on capitol hill it will be interesting, not one whistleblower but two getting a lot of scrutiny. chad program on all of that. >> reporter: james comear says his investigation reached a pedicle moment, two iris was a blowers testifying they were prevented from moving against the biden family. >> when i say there were crimes committed, who determines that? it would be the irs leadership and the criminal division. that's where these guys are. they feel their investigation was obstructed and there were many crimes that had been committed. >> reporter: he calls these witnesses the a team, the
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witnesses contend the us attorney from delaware did not have the authority to bring charges against the bidens. gary shapley is one of the whistleblowers. >> we were not allowed to ask about the big guy, not allowed to include certain names and document requests and search warrants, we were precluded from following that line of question. >> we don't know the name of the second whistleblower, james comeer said he did not even know. witness x says hunter biden should have take -- face tough tax felony not of this misdemeanor. democrats missed the entire inquiry. >> republicans on the oversight committee have been on a wild goose chase and we began, trying to rehabilitate and revive the debunked and discredited charges that rudy
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giuliani began. they've not laid a glove on president biden despite the fact that that is all they have been interested in doing since this started. >> reporter: the anonymous whistleblower appeared before the ways and means committee, will suggest a special counsel to probe hunter biden and anything related to this investigation. neil: thank you for those development. a lot of people leading california, worried about the taxes, and it isn't what it was. the executive chairman, all-american real estate concern, a lot of cynical californians are leaving, does not. after this.
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adam: one of the states having a problem keeping people and staying there, from california, and texas and florida. rick caruso and executive chairman of caruso acknowledges is a problem, things can be done to turn things around. >> it's good seeing you. neil: a lot of people, california is a beautiful state, they are getting sick of it, the crime, the taxes and everything else, the fees and this other stuff and saying we don't need this. how do you stop that?
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>> california is the greatest state in the union so i'm partial to california and los angeles but we have problems. you've got crime problems, a growing homeless problem on the street. the issue in california is not as much taxes, people leave california because of taxes. the issue is people are willing to pay the taxes as long as they are in a livable safe community and the benefit of paying higher taxes, when you live in areas of california suffering from the homeless issue and businesses declining and tough to operate a business, you can argue, overregulated. some people are choosing to leave. diane: just some people, a lot of people. is california beyond repair. the images reinforce the nation
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that it is not what it was. >> the leadership, the elected officials need to make smart and at times tough decisions that may risk their political careers but make decisions that benefit the people they serve. neil: do you think governor newsom is doing that? he has been touted as a presidential candidate should president biden skipped the race altogether. >> i think governor newsom given what he's dealing with is doing a good job. the issue of homelessness and crime is at the local level and you can't pin that on the governor. you have to look at the mayors, city councils, supervisors in charge of reducing crime and homelessness. it is mercurial what happening in these cities. at the tail two cities, two areas within geographic areas of la county.
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there are areas that are clean and safe with few homeless and other parts in the city of los angeles where numbers came out, 10% on the homeless count on the streets. that can be fixed but has to be fixed at the city level. san francisco or los angeles and sacramento accountable for that. lauren: 20 when you make allowances to criminals or say you could steal $500 worth of goods and not worry about being arrested or punished but that sets in motion the crime you are dealing with now. >> of course. none of this is complicated. if you give people permission to commit a crime you set the tone that it is accepted so you've got to hold everybody accountable for breaking the law and it has to be fair but you can't turn a blind eye to a
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crime and we've got to reverse that and hire more officers and enforce laws. these are basic things. when i was of the police commissioner we turned crime around to levels not seen since 1950. we can do that again. it will take good leadership. leadership does matter. neil: thank you, good seeing you. >> i like the tie. neil: there you go. good seeing you. in the meantime the dow of 108 points, 8 days in a row, something we've not seen since march 2019. jackie deangelis is following that and more. jackie: the president's second push to forgive student loans. you won't believe the spin from
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the white house. pack your patience, the situation in the skies has never been worse. larry kudlow is talking about what evs will cost you even if you don't own one. more coast-to-coast after this. ♪ dad, we got this. we got this. we got this. we got this. we got this. yay! we got this. we got this! life is for living. we got this! let's partner for all of it. edward jones this is american infrastructure, a prime target for cyberattacks. but the same ai-powered security
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>> thank you members of congress for your support of israel throughout history and at this moment in time. neil: a rare event in this country when you see the is really president addressing a joint session of congress, widely applauded but there seem to be some rifts within some ranks whether the conservative government in power in israel with benjamin netanyahu, the prime minister is treated as openly as others have in the past, growing concerned that the relationship with president biden is fractious regardless
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of the reception for president herzog. there's point the benjamin net yahoo will be threatened in the weeks to come. the ambassador of the united states, great having you. would you describe this relationship as fractious? >> relationships going through some difficult times. it was a wonderful reception president herzog received, always an honor to address a joint session. they are our equivalent of the kennedys, herzog's father addressed a joint session of congress, his brother mike is the ambassador in washington, has my old job, the israeli diplomat for whom i have the honor of working, significant risks, president biden coming out publicly in a way i haven't seen in many years criticizing
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the democratically elected government of israel. there are some differences of opinion about the peace process, the nuclear issue but getting involved in an internal israeli political debate over the reforms of the judicial system, extremely rare. neil: they were sweeping, it is a little rough coming from the white house that would have a standoff approach to this. makes me wonder if a trip were to come and netanyahu were to arrive, how would that go? >> the latest readout between the president and the prime minister, that netanyahu would speak with the president, albeit not in the white house. in our diplomatic world, a grading of visits, you can go to the front or back, have a
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photograph and a meal, probably the lowest ranks you could get is a meeting in the sidebar of the un general assembly, that's the implication here. he really misses an opportunity to speak for the general assembly, the president is often there, bb had a meeting with president obama in the sidebar of the un. hopefully these leaders need to sit at the same table and resolve their differences, not in front of the camera. . 20 i wasn't aware of the pecking order for protocol because i'm always the guy, you come through the garage and see you out there. i always learn a lot. the dow racing ahead 111 points.
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adam: looks like american airlines flight attendants
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moving closer to her strike. united airlines is trying to avoid this by securing a deal to raise pilot pray 40%, it's not a done deal but what it could mean is we can see a lot of disruption if it comes to pass or you know the drill here, difficult, with a number of flight cancellations, and will into the fall. not disrupting the dow's advance without market averages, technology, microsoft at an all-time high, a lot of key technology players taking this and running with it. it's an impressive rally, see if it lasts. let's go to "the big money show". taylor: i'm taylor riggs. brian: i'm brian brenberg. jackie: and i'm jackie

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