tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business October 5, 2023 12:00pm-1:01pm EDT
12:00 pm
i will go with 41. stuart: number 3 for ashley. >> i we use a scientific approach, 28. stuart: you got to be right. i will go with 35 on the grounds that 41 it is. look at that. i would like to know the number of theaters operated in new york city because i'm sure a few closed, they all closed down. thanks very much indeed. don't forget to send your friday feedback, we don't get much hate mail but you can do that if you like, varneyviewers@fox.com. there is some reading, the yield on the 10 year treasury going down a little bit. thanks for joining us for the hour. coast-to-coast starts now.
12:01 pm
♪ neil: everybody does want to rule the world or at least the house of representatives. who doesn't want to be house speaker? not just the couple names you know but other names you may not know and that is the idea. put your self out there. you could get there. let's say you don't make it. who's to say the guy who does well last? everyone - no one is fixed on the issues roiling of the markets that are more important than this. we went through names. i like running music.
12:02 pm
let's not stay on this. so glad to have you. catholic cardinals decide these things behind closed doors when divining a new pope but at least they send smoke signals. so far no signals but more names and more confusion. to chad pogrom. >> reporter: good afternoon. there are three main names in the mix, steve scalise, jim jordan and kevin hearn looking at the race. scalise is next in line. >> i support steve scalise for speaker. i spoke with jim jordan last night and i have tremendous respect for jim. we need unity right now. we need someone who's a uniter. steve scalise has a proven
12:03 pm
record of bringing our conference together. >> he is a prolific fundraiser for the gop, some republicans note the divides between kevin mccarthy and scalise. that is why some gop members may tilt toward jordan as the house tries to eliminate internal tensions. >> difference those that exist in the republican party pale in comparison to the differences between us and the radical left which controls the democrat party. we had better stick together, we'd better come together to fight for the things that make our country the greatest nation ever in the things the american people elected us to do. >> reporter: it is unclear if republicans can pull out a candidate quickly or the race could take a while. there's one theory electing a speaker could consume weeks. >> reporter: the margins are too thin to assume you have something in the back. we are in a tough situation calling for tough leaders and tough conversations, tough decisions to be made.
12:04 pm
>> reporter: patrick mchenry is the speaker pro tem. some wonder if he could wind up as speaker if scalise and jordan stumble. there will be no vote until next wednesday. it is doubtful the house will wrap things up quickly. back to you. larry: one of his first moves was to throw steny hoyer and nancy pelosi out of their offices. don't know what the parliament terry strategy was, did seem a little weird. why did he do that? >> i actually have some documents from the former speaker of the house, kevin mccarthy. patrick mchenry has gotten credit such that it is for doing that but if mchenry is able to get the credit, some people view him as a dark horse in this race, maybe they can go to him. if you are sticking it to the democrats by taking office space from nancy pelosi and steny hoyer, that builds it.
12:05 pm
neil: you heard this from a lot of people. you were fantastic through this drama should chasing these guys down. i would wait for them to come to be but you were awesome. thank you. >> we were trying to get them in the hallways. dominic hasek would make these saves and changes positioning. hitting the right spot. neil: i get your point. terrific job. congressman dan crenshaw speaks his mind. happy to have him, he sits on house energy and commerce and knowing you were coming i wanted to share with you some mailings coming from matt gaetz, may be funding off of this, need your immediate attention. to contribute to this, i will
12:06 pm
not be lectured to by republicans. what do you think of that? >> i get along with gaetz. he has attacked me, i won't attack him. i will tell him to my face, absolutely disagree with his tactics and strategy, makes us weaker and i will make that argument over and over in the proof is in is in the pudding, does make us weaker, democrats are cheering because of his actions. what's scary about fundraising emails not that he's sending all those people, what is scary -- stuart: different issues, there is the sense -- i understand, it's an -- >> people might actually what i am saying is my message to voters, got to stop falling for this. this isn't real.
12:07 pm
gaetz isn't a victim either. i would tell him this to the face. we have that debate. that should be the debate in the republican conference. of the goal is winning conservative wins for you, the voter, a lot of people don't, they want to make it seem like they do and seem they are fighting for you but what they are fighting for is your attention. stuart: neil: no matter who wins besides more prominent names like steve scalise and jim jordan, upwards of half a dozen, no matter who becomes next speaker they might not be speaker for long, whoever gets it they deal with the same narrow majority more of the same.
12:08 pm
>> don't think there would be much drama around the actual speaker as opposed to conditions under which, there are a lot of members in the conference, we do not want whoever the speaker is, do not want that. a small group of people -- neil: meaning of the right to vacate so a single member can do that and get the process going. you don't want that. i understand, but those a or so, we are not keen on that, i imagine every one of them would insist on that condition. >> it is going to be lengthy and dramatic and that is where the conversation is going to
12:09 pm
be. there is going to be a vote, speaker candidate chosen. whether they get to 218 will be dependent on drama surrounding the rules debate. wherever it goes, the first step is choosing the speaker candidate and the rules. neil: others feared this could drag on for quite some time, weeks, maybe months. do you see that? >> it's possible because what i said because there's such severe disagreement not so much of the speaker but rules about how the speaker will operate because if there's a standout between two people and only one is willing to shoot the hostage that person has more leverage. the hostage, not the speaker, the hostage is the conservative agenda. that's what they are willing to shoot. that gives them leverage.
12:10 pm
there is governing conservatives who are unwilling to burn it down. that's not the dynamic people need to understand. a lot of voters are like burn it down. easy to say, when you have responsibility you can't act like that but there' s response ability implicit in the job and i wish people would take the chance. neil: the president is paying attention to what is going on. building about 20 miles along the rio grande. what do you think of this? >> they announced they will use certain powers to build under 20 miles of wall. i will not give biden a lot of credit, they are desperate for media attention that would indicate they are trying to do something about the border.
12:11 pm
the border wall especially in texas are not that effective. i want them, only effective for people trying to get away. very small fraction of the process. most are turning themselves in knowing they will get bus tickets and plane tickets, a wall won't stop that. here's the problem. the biden administration has been waving laws until they get in place, 1325 between ports of entry, they been waiting that long, ill go live legally are rolling hundreds of thousands for years now. they need to follow the laws on the book and reform laws. that's when i will start cheering progress on the border. that's what i will be fighting for the next few weeks through the appropriations process through the ukrainian process. we need to put border security
12:12 pm
in the package and that's the meaningful one. neil: are you concerned about taking out that aid for ukraine? >> a lot of people don't want to beat russia, on the border, people ask why can't we do both? it's a false choice to say one or the other but you can do both and that will be my position. neil: i know of your service in the united states navy, navy seal, wounded in action as result of an explosive device, you know something about sacrifice, many in your party are saying ukraine isn't worth it, the threat from vladimir putin isn't worth it. that part of you, that guy.
12:13 pm
>> public and clear about this, you have to stop dictators like latimer boudin from thinking it is okay to engage in wars of conquest. if you allow that war to happen urinate pre-world war ii world and your constituents will not thrive in that world. the global economy will be in chaos and a power vacuum. people need to understand the consequences of this. moving forward our priority on the southern border, we can do both. moving forward, we have to carve out oppose edition where we can get both. that needs to happen moving forward. i don't think anybody wants russia to win more than they want our border to be secure. we will see.
12:14 pm
neil: didn't mean to embarrass you but get your reflection on that. thank you for joining us, your service to this country. good seeing you. in the meantime, the stock exchange, notice the selloff as interest rates backup not as much as they were earlier today. to the congressman's point, the battle over finding a speaker or watchman, the shutdown that could look more real, they want a temporary measure to go away in 40 days. what do you think? how much impact is it? >> all those issues have an impact but the major catalyst, downward pressure on the market, interest rates and realization the market is coming to, rates are going to be 5% or higher for a longer
12:15 pm
period of time than many in the investment community expected just as briefly as six weeks ago. and for some period of time and those are not flippant comments but comments with a message from the fed, expect rates to be at this level longer than you earlier anticipated. neil: the market has a possibility, forget what the fed does or doesn't do, market rates, what the fed has no direct control will be high and stay high for a while, right? >> it certainly seems like that and that's putting pressure on stocks.
12:16 pm
the bond vigilantes are back for six weeks or so and the bond investors are not buying bonds at certain prices forcing yields to go higher, that will most likely put pressure on stocks. decades ago we talked about the market did this or that because of a big asset allocation, the funds under management have become so astronomical, they don't happen anymore. with rates being higher, it's putting pressure on all of these multitrillion dollar asset management complexes to reevaluate where they want to
12:17 pm
be in terms of stocks versus bonds. neil: parking it in 6%. does that work? where did they do that? >> it is part of the reason the market shifted lower or drifted lower, hasn't been a bloodbath, we were down 5% depending the index you look at in september. the s&p and nasdaq are up. a healthy number year to date. there is just this daily feeling in the market that stocks are for sale on any rally and if they go down first up -- for a couple days we have a bounce, the trend of most
12:18 pm
12:19 pm
♪ explore endless design possibilities. to find your personal style. endless hardie® siding colors. textures and styles. it's possible. with james hardie™. ♪ is it possible to fall in love with your home... ...before you even step inside? ♪ discover the magnolia home james hardie collection. available now in siding colors, styles and textures. curated by joanna gaines.
12:21 pm
i suffer with psoriatic arthritis and psoriasis. i was on a journey for a really long time to find some relief. cosentyx works for me. cosentyx helps real people get real relief from the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis or psoriasis. serious allergic reactions, severe skin reactions that look like eczema,
12:22 pm
and an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. i move so much better because of cosentyx. ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx. >> welcome back to cavuto coast-to-coast. i'm live outside the courthouse where sam bankman-fried, in a trial where he is accused of stealing millions from customers at ftx. one word sums up what is happening, that is messy in terms of what we are learning from this testimony on how the company was run but also how the prosecution is presenting their case. difficult to not confuse jurors in a situation like this. we are hearing from his former
12:23 pm
college roommate. the witness is describing an operation that was loosey goosey, whether it was customers depositing money and ftx that got funneled to their sister company, alameda, in a shared bank account to spf having employees using an encrypted apps signal that delete messages because it was, quote, all downside. can indications were found. that's what the witness is saying spf said at one point. remember the $35 million penthouse where all the leadership team lived? the prosecution shared text messages between the witness and spf for the former crypto king assured him residents being paid for by alalameda. to the prosecution, the nature of this business can be very complicated. the prosecution adding into the weeds on anything from how transactions were on the platform to the nitty-gritty behind the code of it all. spf was informed of the
12:24 pm
messiness early on and showed concern for what that meant. the prosecution has of not confusing the jury is a tall one and the impact of not doing that correctly is you've got 12 jurors in the liberation room confused. back to you. neil: all it takes is one. kelly o'grady in new york city. we had the initial hit on all crypto investments when everything was going down. seeing a lot of crypto related assets, down since then. evan, what do you make of the crypto fallout postbankman-fried, not like bitcoin disappeared. it was well over $28,000 a coin. what do you make of it? >> this is what i expected. last millions of dollars but
12:25 pm
never gave up faith, the fundamental reason we invest in bitcoin, has not changed it. this is what we see, markets are recovering, tremendous growth in the near future, bitcoin having it is less than a year away. so look forward to a very bullish outlet. very confident bitcoin will do well in the near future and spf, the fraud that he did, icing on the cake. i have no doubt bitcoin will not recover or analyze. neil: people make a big deal about having data, when we look at the amount that gets cut. a little under that. sliding under 26,000 a month and a half ago. it is volatile, not for the faint of heart.
12:26 pm
notwithstanding how do you advise people on this? people wanted instant money, instant gains and didn't find them. >> to get instant gains, anything that makes money quickly, not the right thing but in this case looking at the fundamentals of bitcoin. it's a better form of money than anything we know about their. most people do not understand how money works. to give you context, the us government could put more us dollars, what the us government took on in the last 48-hour so that tells you, the supply is limited to produce the same
12:27 pm
amount of bitcoin, so that is what i believe in. and for centuries, it is going to take time for what we are looking for but it is coming. more people are getting used to bitcoin, finding out about bitcoin, it's going rapidly. look at the number of people using crypto. playing up all that happened in the market, the market is going strong, they don't believe in the fundamentals. those are the people who don't. stuart: we will watch what happens. we are on the verge of it right now. that would reduce the supply,
12:28 pm
doesn't always happen. we will have more after this. l] and doug says, “you can customize and save hundreds on car insurance with liberty mutual.” he hits his mark —center stage— and is crushed by a baby grand piano. are you replacing me? with this guy? customize and save with liberty bibberty. he doesn't even have a mustache! oh, look! a bibu. [limu emu squawks.] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
12:29 pm
this is american infrastructure. megawatts of power, rails and open road, and essential services of every kind. all running on countless invisible networks, making it a prime target for cyberattacks. but the same ai-powered security that protects all of google also defends the systems running america's infrastructure. for these services. for the 336 million of us living here. ♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with low fixed rates. borrow up to $100k. and no fees required. sofi. get your money right. (sfx: stone wheel crafting) ♪
12:30 pm
the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪ she runs and plays like a puppy again. his #2s are perfect! he's a brand new dog, all in less than a year. when people switch their dog's food from kibble to the farmer's dog, they often say that it feels like magic. but there's no magic involved. (dog bark) it's simply fresh meat and vegetables, with all the nutrients dogs need— instead of dried pellets. just food made for the health of dogs. delivered in packs portioned for your dog. it's amazing what real food can do.
12:32 pm
adam: and for a doubly 20 how will banks react? technology stocks, no one thanks the small investor and small business owner and my next guest made her feelings known when meeting with the federal reserve chairman. her secret recipe and store owner, also has the game they kitchen. he will pay attention to it. jennifer, good to have you. how did that go when you lay it out where you stand in your business to the fed chairman. >> thanks for having me. the conversation went well, how
12:33 pm
my business has progressed, we talk about the benefit of having access to capital, received a small business loan and line of credit that allowed me to be impacted differently than others, that's the bigger conversation about access for capital, or small female minority business owners. neil: how is it going these days? >> we have catering and the sauce company. the catering company is on a steep rise, the sauce company is doing well, one thing i will saxons the pandemic, has been the biggest impact from the sauce standpoint, the manufacture and supply chain issues, i still have bottles. i couldn't get my bottles delivered and the increase in
12:34 pm
price, certain ingredients increased so some of those things of increased by 50%. that was a layover from the pandemic. neil: they love your sauce. how much say keep raising and i will keep buying it? >> sauce has been the same since 2017. the difference with the catering. when i went into the career of catering, a few gaps, the catering is different. as far as delivery, the catering i have been able to pass on, if people need people available to serve and incorporate the payment as well. a little to the consumer on the food end, understand that from that standpoint.
12:35 pm
neil: you get this better than the big bankers and politicians because you live in the real world but continued good success to you. >> thank you for having me on. neil: following another development of the federal reserve, jerome powell strikes, so many of them. ♪ ♪ you got to fight ♪ for your right ♪ 2-party ♪ ♪
12:36 pm
>> tech: cracked windshield on your new car? bring it to safelite. my customer was enjoying her new car, when her windshield cracked. [gasp] >> customer: my car! >> tech vo: she didn't take it to the dealer. she scheduled with safelite. we have the latest technology for the newest vehicles. and we do more replacements and recalibrations than anyone else. >> customer: thank you so much. >> tech: don't wait-- schedule now. ♪ pop music ♪ >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ (fisher investments) it's easy to think that all money managers are pretty much the same, but at fisher investments we're clearly different. (other money manager) different how? you sell high commission investment products, right? (fisher investments) nope. fisher avoids them. (other money manager) well, you must earn commissions on trades. (fisher investments) never at fisher investments.
12:37 pm
12:39 pm
12:40 pm
adam: healthcare workers on strike, it could escalate. jonathan hunt in los angeles for where things stand. >> reporter: at the moment we are in a standstill between the unions and kaiserpermanente executives, there were no further talks overnight. as we currently understand it, there were none in the works right now. hundreds of healthcare workers are outside here, and across the country, and every kaiser permanente facility. 75,000, and they have to raise the minimum wage.
12:41 pm
>> doing the best to our abilities. the only way we can catch the attention of the higher-ups is here today. ashley: you will come out again if necessary? >> absolutely. >> reporter: kaiser says patient care is its priority too. they said in a statement you should last night, kaiser permanente, our industry and employees are operating in a new cultural labor and post pandemic environment, we are working hard to understand. we are committed to finding workable solutions. how is of this, with all these workers out here now and probably tomorrow, how is it affecting patient care? kaiser says it is hospitals and emergency rooms remain open but
12:42 pm
it admits nonurgent procedures are being postponed to. 's . 's medical officers are being closed, some pharmacies remain closed. this initial strike scheduled for three days. it would end at 6 am saturday morning. if there is no deal, unions are planning a further strike, that one will be longer. at the moment there appears to be very little going on in terms of negotiation. kaiser considers that a good offer. clearly these workers behind me say it is not good enough. neil: the other big strike, united auto workers strike continues, could be expanded tomorrow. every friday we get an inkling of that, the editorial page editor appearing on what we might be in store for tomorrow. >> it will expand as you mentioned. they start hitting some large
12:43 pm
assembly plants to disrupt the product flow, sales reports come out for september yesterday. these companies had some solid sales numbers up for the month so i suspect they won't start hitting sales for the company, that means disrupting the flow of product to dealers. lauren: 20 how much disruption are we looking at? vehicles could be in short supply and prices could go up a lot. what are you hearing? >> we start seeing this show up in the dealers lives where you may not get everything, any car you want. it costs general motors $200 million averaging 10 million a day. i expect the cost to go up into next week. doesn't seem to be, where will it end?
12:44 pm
adam: what since the automakers, how much of a pay hike they can absorb, workers themselves saying the last on the scene generous, 20 one% wasn't enough. looking at 40%, middle ground might be in the low 30s. what are you hearing on that front? >> i'm surprised at the offers on the table. they are negotiating with themselves. they keep sweetening the offer. uaw doesn't come back with much. you get the sense right now the uaw is waiting to hear the words of the final offer and haven't heard that. why would they settle if they think better offers are coming? these are extraordinary offers when you compare against the history of labor, contract negotiations in detroit, they expanded profit sharing.
12:45 pm
what we don't talk about much is they were getting $9000, $15,000 a year in profit sharing bonuses, expanded the 401(k), took care of temporary workers, almost nine weeks off. i don't know how much more companies can offer and stay competitive. hourly wage costs already $10 an hour higher than their former competitors. stuart: neil: we will watch closely. in the meantime, a lot going on, the dow down 24 points. brian brenberg ready to cover all of that with his colleagues in the next hour. brian: president biden all of a sudden realized we do have a crisis on the southern border and now wants to build, you guessed it, a wall. we are on it, senator marsha blackburn will join us, has a bone to pick with tiktok over its ties to the ccp.
12:46 pm
but first, coast-to-coast after this. ♪ ♪ you can't buy great conversations or moments that matter, but you can invest in them. at t. rowe price our strategic investing approach can help you build the future you imagine. t. rowe price, invest with confidence. your best defense against erosion and cavities is strong enamel- nothing beats it. new pronamel active shield actively shields the enamel to defend against erosion and cavities. i think that this product is a gamechanger for my patients- it really works.
12:47 pm
♪ explore endless design possibilities. to find your personal style. endless hardie® siding colors. textures and styles. it's possible. with james hardie™. gold terra is drilling deep and rediscovering high grade gold. their project in northern canada has already unveiled nearly 2 million ounces of high grade gold, with a strategic plan to uncovering millions more. gold terra resources.
12:48 pm
.. loving this pay bump in our allowance. wonder where mom and dad got the extra money? maybe they won the lottery? maybe they inherited a fortune? maybe buried treasure? maybe it fell off a truck? maybe they switched to xfinity mobile on the most reliable 5g network. for a limited time, buy one line of unlimited, get one free for a year. now i can buy that electric scooter! i'm starting a private-equity fund that specializes in midcap. you do you. switch to xfinity mobile today.
12:50 pm
neil: will uphold? the botnet ministration has approved deborah lee for 125,000 student loan forgiveness for a 3-year pause in paying these loans back so the meter was running before he stopped it. the governor of georgia has a different way to incentivize those, doling out money for student loans. governor brian of georgia kind enough to join us to explain georgia match which lines up kids in the state with some good schools. explain how it works, good to have you. >> good to be back, very excited to rollout the largest college admissions program around the country. next week, 120,000 high school seniors receive a letter saying
12:51 pm
you have been accepted for college institutions in georgia or university system schools depending on their gpa, students won't have to go through the process and get accepted and have to enroll but it is a way to reach every child in the state and make sure households know about opportunities for higher education. neil: doesn't matter what the major is? could you break it down? >> a lot of great kids coming out of the university system and technical colleges every year and every quarter. it is one reason we have been named for development magazine for the 10th year in a row from a couple years ago. people came here because of the workforce. we fill those jobs in 2 or 3
12:52 pm
years, we need to get a hold of the kids who may not be getting the job training for these good paying jobs with great benefits in georgia and those that are coming, the program is designed to do that. amazing amount of work, when you think of the university system. georgia student finance, the hope scholarship basically people can go to school in georgia and make sure these kids and caregivers know about the options they have to fill workforce needs of the future. stuart: neil: it doesn't rely on addressing the bills after the fact, paying off student loans after the fact. what do you think of the latest measure challenging it but it is a different approach. it is taking people off.
12:53 pm
>> i am sure it will be legally challenged like the last program was. he continues that like a dictator instead of a president and picking winners and losers in washington dc just like they did with the inflation reduction act, helping the big three that are on strike but penalizing companies like hyundai and kia that is expanding here. working people are furious about that. neil: i am sure you are aware, locking the agenda of congress. are you worried about it? >> one thing i warned people about. people need to focus on what the american people want. i've stayed focused on what's helping georgians get through a
12:54 pm
40 year high biden inflation, bidenomics is costing people more at the grocery store, more at the gas pump, doing kitchen table things like suspending the gas tax, 30 one cents a gallon or $0.35 a gallon on diesel. relief where people are getting their tax bills, getting a $500 break from property taxes to help when they go to the grocery store. high interest rates, the bad policies of this administration and what's happening in dc instead of republicans talking about securing the border and reducing government spending in washington dc they are having a speaker fight. neil: let me address the fight, the party of donald trump, his runaway leader in the polls, not a single person has voted but that his race to lose and those who challenged on the
12:55 pm
credentials issue, ron desantis, are fading. what do you think of that? >> i wouldn't say that. people in the race are surging, there's a long way to go. i wouldn't pay much attention to national polls. what will matter is what is happening in iowa on the ground and new hampshire. on supertuesday, no one has even voted yet. my wife says all the time, they haven't called to ask me what i think. that's a lot of posturing on all the campaigns which is part of it. neil: a lot of people heard not only what you do in georgia but the fight, those trying to get rid of you. the georgia recount you had, all of that stuff. are you tempted to look at this?
12:56 pm
>> we didn't get distracted in georgia against tough primary opponent including someone with donald trump's support, the toughest democrat in the country, we stayed focused on helping georgians. that is what folks running for president need to do. we've got too many in the race, we will see what happens. neil: you don't want to add to that for the time being. >> that would be another distraction the would take away from our ability to consolidate and win and veto biden. i told him before we got to tell people what they are for, the candidate in the wind. more after this.
12:57 pm
(♪) it's inspiring to work at a place where our patients succeed. and where we as therapists do, too. with great benefits from principal, our clinic shows they truly care about us. (♪) (lighthearted music) - "best thing i've ever done." that's what freddie told me. - a person like me needed to get a reverse mortgage to change my life. it was the best thing i've ever done. - really? - yes, without doubt! - [tom selleck] joanne said just about the same thing. - it absolutely is the best thing i ever did. - jack put it a different way. to him, it was about having his grandkids over. - you want to have the kids over, you want to have the grandkids over. - yeah. - you want to have the family over. you want to say, "this is my place." - great people, different people. that's for sure. and all of them had different reasons for getting a reverse mortgage. but you know what? they all felt the same
12:58 pm
about two things. they all loved their home, and they all wanted to stay in that home. - [announcer] if you are 62 or older and own your home, find out how you could access your home's equity to give you cash now. and when you need it in the future. a reverse mortgage could put more money in your pocket by eliminating your monthly mortgage payments. it could also pay off higher interest credit cards, medical costs, and give you some extra cash to help your retirement lifestyle. - i don't have any anxiety about money anymore. - it allowed me to live in my home and not have to make payments. - a whole lot of families have gotten tax free cash from a reverse mortgage loan for a better retirement. - i don't have to worry about a mortgage payment every month. - it's a good thing. - [announcer] call right now to receive your free, no obligation info kit. the kit will show you how you may get the cash you need using your home's equity as a reverse mortgage from aag. - call the number on your screen.
12:59 pm
1:00 pm
neil: you may have heard of these weight loss drugs like ozempic, so successful they are causing a dampening of food sales, not buying as much food, walmart feeling the pinch but there's of fallout from this, what size clothing, they are feeling the pinch, food for thought. brian: hello, everyone. brian: i'm brian brenberg. jackie: i'm jackie deangelis.
116 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on