Skip to main content

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

12:00 pm
the answer is 200. they could and i pavement to cheat but they were not given the answers. we have to say goodbye to you because you've got some work to do. i have a question. do you drink your wine every day? >> nearly every day. we socialize and entertain and this is what we want to share with everybody. stuart: if anybody has any comments about charles smith and his wine, send them on friday feedback, email us your questions, comments or concerns, varneyviewers@fox.com. jay powell speaks in a few minutes, that might move the market. "varney and company" done, coast-to-coast starts right now.
12:01 pm
ashley: three breaking stories, president biden speaks from the oval office later today. lawmakers just meeting, members still looking for a speaker, jerome powell about to take the mic at the new york economic club. lots of news, any of these events could move the markets, stocks basically looking for direction treading water and they may get that direction from the fed chair but investors won't get much clarity from congress, the speaker battle could now go on until january. as for the white house address investors focused on making money but the focus will beyond spending money on war. we are digging into all of that over the course of the next hour. welcome to "cavuto coast to coast". i'm ashley webster in for neil
12:02 pm
cavuto. president biden will formally ask congress for $100 billion in support of israel and ukraine. alexandria half live at the white house with more on what we can expect from the president's address tonight. >> reporter: the president will make an appeal to american citizens and congress for support for israel, unprecedented support as he called it from tel aviv yesterday, saying later this week he would ask lawmakers to get behind a package that would supply the iron dome with ammunition needed that would protect the country from missiles but according to the new york times the request would be part of a one hundred billion dollar military aid package of that would assist israel and ukraine while arming taiwan and strengthening the us-mexico border. lawmakers are expecting that. while abroad president biden struck a deal that allows egypt
12:03 pm
to deliver supplies by truck to civilians. he said this in a rare press briefing on board air force one. >> president biden: i was blunt about the need to support getting humanitarian aid to hamas and get it to gaza. >> reporter: opening the border crossing to a convoy of trucks, $100 million in aid for palestinians in gaza, allowing it to get in as part of a preauthorized funding the also congress does not need to act on that. it comes with a condition that if hamas tries to touch aid it is gone. >> we believe those trucks will get into gaza over the next day or so. the president is being clear that if we see that aid being misappropriated, taken by hamas for its own purposes that will affect continued distribution.
12:04 pm
>> reporter: republicans have criticized the $100 million in aid fearing it will end up in the hands of hamas and embolden hamas to continue their terrorist tirade because they will know that civilians will be taken care of. ashley: here is congressman brian mask. we should mention you are leading a bipartisan push to get the department of defense to transfer two additional iron dome air defense systems to israel. is this something israel has asked for and how important is it? brian: it is important. look at the spread of these missile systems to protect from incoming rockets. the closer it is, the better capability you have to look at the trajectory of it and knock it out of the sky. they face possibly attack from not just two friends being the gaza strip and the north but
12:05 pm
could face other fronts. it is necessary to something that is needed and something we have the ability to provide because it is not being used here right now. ashley: are we doing enough in your opinion? could we be doing more? the second part of a question, what did you think of the message from president biden in israel yesterday? brian: the war starts with knowing the direction we are sending 4. in the midst of our hostages being held, in the midst of americans being killed, giving $100 million to gaza is absolutely untenable. you look at other things, let's do some simple math, those who live in the gaza strip, one% of them are hamas terrorists, that's 25,000, 10%, 250,000, this is not a small problem, it will require a huge amount of work as people talk about the
12:06 pm
urban landscape, they are going to need support from america and our capabilities especially when it comes to the hostages but giving money to gaza, aid to gaza is not the direction. ashley: are you surprised, 12 days after hamas's attack and the tanks are still on the border of gaza. are you surprised the ground war has not begun? >> not entirely. the threat of those who want to log rockets into israel and start a broader conflict, but there's the threat of americans, israelis, others, literally being held captive where the ground incursion would take place. you don't know if those individuals are in a tunnel or building or home somewhere. do they have enough around them?
12:07 pm
are they sitting on a chair that has explosives attached to a room that is rigged to blow up, and that's an example to say there are so many unknowns that have to be looked at and when our centcom commander and the israeli commander and others, the operators that go into actually rescue hostages, are satisfied with how they coordinate all that together, then you get movement, tremendous multinational coordination that needs to take place within the scope of what's going on. ashley: while we have you i want to shift gears to the house speaker mayhem, chaos. jim jordan says he will not speak -- seek an additional speaker voted after failing two times. let me begin with your reaction. the optics are terrible. >> i am in a hallway where all
12:08 pm
the republicans are having a couple conversations of the bluing part of the conversation today is okay, jim jordan says he will continue the fight to get 218 votes on the floor of the house of representatives. until that time, whether it is a day, week, month, and he, can the conference mpower the current acting speaker, patrick mchenry, there's two questions. is it constitutional to do so? that's the debate going on behind closed doors. the second debate, neither of these are quick debates, to what end do you mpower the speaker probe them -- pro tem if it is constitutional to give him more powers. those debates would be hard-fought, individuals arguing on both sides but that's the conversation and how jim jordan fits into that. ashley: hopefully we will get clarity at some point. thanks for joining us to talk
12:09 pm
about israel and the ongoing house speaker chaos. moving on, the fed's jerome powell about to speak at the economic club of new york. we have his prepared remarks. he says inflation still too high and lower economic growth is likely needed to bring it down. markets went up initially, up to 90, one hundred points, coming back a little bit. let's bring in strategic world partners investment strategist luke lloyd and capital director of strategy, francis stacy. we got to talk about this. we have some initial headlines from the chairman of the federal reserve. it seems a mixed message, a drop in inflation over the summer, great. not great enough. the economy is still hot. do we expect higher rates for
12:10 pm
longer which has been the mantra for quite some time. does that carry on? >> absolutely it does. the only reason for lower rates would be if there is a credit situation that occurs or a massive recession and because we don't see signs of that in a major way in the labor market and even though credit card delinquencies are moving up, they are not making headlines get, because there's potential accelerating inflation due to energy prices and other food prices and things that will come into cpi on a lagging affect jerome powell has no choice but to remain tight. right now he looks like a genius. they had 11 rate hikes and no major recession, no major credit concerns. he looks like a genius so he will keep going. i expect a pause at the next meeting because of the geopolitical risks you just cited. ashley: i should point out that
12:11 pm
his speech has not started at the new york economic club because of climate protesters. we are seeing more of that and it is affecting jay powell today. i want to get into the classic 60/40 investing strategy. if you went that way you lost 17% in the last year, the worst performance since 1937. our investors calling their brokers and saying dump stock, i want cash, what's going on here? >> because of the yields, look how far they went quickly, powell dropped the truth bomb everyone is itching to hear, he was more dovish 5 minutes ago than he has been in two years, 60-40 portfolio is driven by yields. when they go higher, that is what everyone is dealing with. what could have been
12:12 pm
unthinkable in the past may be a possibility now given that events of the past month, china selling us stocks and bonds, the highest rates in four years, the us government is having trouble finding buyers on the issuance of treasury's. there is oversupply of us bonds driving up yields and the ease geopolitical tensions like israel and hamas are giving increased spending which is already reckless which means more treasury to fund those obligations but what if there's more treasury influence the turn into sellers. supply and demand drives up yields. interest rates no longer going higher because of the fed. it is fair to say the federal reserve has lost control of interest rates. the free market is a place where it could be but this is why things get quickly ugly. if we continue down this path, it is possible that the fed could do something like the bank of japan did and that is
12:13 pm
yield curve control. they might get political pressure to do so. that is what we did in world war ii when debt to gdp was 120%, the same level it is now. ashley: very quickly, francis, do you agree with luke that the fed lost control? francis:i do agree there's not enough demand in the bond markets. we are looking at 1.5%, looking at inflation averaging 3. 5% keeping% keeping the 10 year at 5% and that's the equation to have real yields at that level. it is possible and interest rates are traded but they have to do about the less demand. ashley: we have to leave it there, don't go away, we will come back to you later in the show. a group of governors calling on the president to stand strong with israel.
12:14 pm
new hampshire governor chris sununu part of that group and we will ask what he thought of biden's trip to israel next. after advil. feeling better? on top of the worlddddd!!! before advil. advil targets pain at the source of inflammation. when pain comes for you, come back fast with advil liqui-gels.
12:15 pm
businesses need 5g solutions today. that's why they choose t-mobile for business. mlb partners with t-mobile to not only enhance the fan experience, but to advance how the game is played. aaa relies on t-mobile's network to stay connected nationwide, so they can help get their members back on the road. and we're helping pano ai innovate, to stop the spread of wildfires. now's the time to see what america's largest 5g network can do for your business. ♪ 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,
12:16 pm
styles and textures. curated by joanna gaines. ♪ explore endless design possibilities. to find your personal style. endless hardie® siding colors. textures and styles. it's possible. with james hardie™. nice footwork. it's possible. man, you're lucky, watching live sports never used to be this easy. now you can stream all your games like it's nothing. yes! [ cheers ] yeah! woho! running up and down that field looks tough. it's a pitch. get way more into what you're into when you stream on the xfinity 10g network.
12:17 pm
>> there is limited fighting
12:18 pm
already on the northern is really border. i wonder, what is your message to hezbollah and his backer, iran? >> president biden: don't. don't, don't, don't. and i'm not suggesting that hamas do it either. i don't know what you picked up in israel, but i got no pushback, virtually none. virtually no pushback. ashley: our next guest is one of 20 governors urging president biden to project american strength in supporting israel. chris sununu asking for the president to do just that. he joins us now, great to have you. president biden called it a win after his visit to israel. did he project the strength you would like to see him project?
12:19 pm
>> it is great that he showed support for israel. we felt short not completing the mission with jordan and egypt. they are the traditional intermediaries that israel and the united states rely on to get things done and hopefully get this resolved it but making sure israel knows we will stand with them. i'm a big believer world peaster american strength. you can never show strength enough to ensure we have that result from. it was a first step. this is by no means a win, could be a long drawn out process if we don't fulfill on the progress to stand strong. ashley: you say the administration's initial response created confusion and only emboldened the terrorists and you believe that.
12:20 pm
chris:you have to be resolved in standing with your allies. let's get to the heart of this issue. when hamas is supported by iran and they have like to believe with her dollars, the biden administration and obama administration capitulated in many ways, now they have more flexibility with oil money coming in, they have a couple billion in reserve, they have tens of billions in reserve and are funding these terrorist organizations. this am powers these and sell larry but all terrorist organizations that want the destruction of israel. israel is our foothold in the middle east, america's strongest partner not just in the middle east but around the world and we need to maintain not just friendship but the support that goes in and make sure folks know we are resolved but not going to capitulate. we need to make sure biden wasn't listening to other members of the democrat caucus
12:21 pm
in congress that if i will apologize, for hamas's actions, not see it as terrorist actions and brutal actions they are and make sure he didn't try to equivocate. that leads to capitulation. ashley: you say israel has a duty to respond with overwhelming force against hamas. israelis want to wipe hamas off the face of the earth. how realistic is that? chris:not that it is unrealistic but the logistics of it are a challenge. they have to put troops on the ground. it is a house to house type operation. you have the actual host used shields, that's how the rest of these terrorist organizations want to see, not standing with israel and israel doesn't have the resolve to do, we need to show we will stand with them
12:22 pm
and the actions they have to take. telling us to capitulate, telling us to go softer and do everything we could to maintain american strength, protect our citizens and expect nothing less of the israelis. ashley: i want to switch gears, the other big story, one of the big stories, the house won't hold 1/3 round speaker today. it is chaotic, feel like they are making it up as they go along. how disappointing is this? what does it have on implications for 2024 when republicans just can't get their act together? chris:it has long-term implications. the problem, i'm supportive of mccarthy until the idiot 8 that into the wind but that created a domino effect for the republican party in a very
12:23 pm
negative way, the caucus supported scalise, supported jordan, now it looks like they may have to settle if you will for making the temporary speaker the more long-term speaker. the average republican watching this don't understand what's going on. all they know is we are fractured, there is no reason for the fracturing, no consistency in messaging. it is unclear where everybody stands which the problem it creates is with independents. republicans running for school board, governor or president won't win unless you get those independents on your side. it is important, then we can't explain our positions, independents want nothing to do with us. what it does is puts future
12:24 pm
elections up and down the ballot at risk. the system has been designed intentionally or otherwise with the fact we don't have term limits, we need massive campaign finance reform, because of gerrymandering, getting primary more than having a general election contest. all of these constructs work against the opportunity to show a vision, a message which is important for 2024. ashley: it really is the optics are terrible. thank you so much for joining us, so much to talk about. can we expect higher interest rates for longer? jerome powell is signaling, we have that story after the break. ♪
12:25 pm
♪ ♪ be ready for any market with a liquid etf. get in and out with dia. this is american infrastructure. megawatts of power,
12:26 pm
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. ♪ meet the jennifers. jen x. jen y. and jen z. each planning their future through the chase mobile app. jen x is planning a summer in portugal with some help from j.p. morgan wealth plan. let's go whiskers. jen y is working with a banker to budget for her birthday. you only turn 30 once. and jen z? her credit's golden. hello new apartment. three jens getting ahead with chase. solutions that grow with you. one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. if your child has diabetes, you'll want the most accurate cgm, dexcom g7. it's on.
12:27 pm
and, he's off. you can see his glucose numbers right on your phone, so you can always be there for him with dexcom g7. ♪ ♪
12:28 pm
12:29 pm
ashley: fed chair jerome powell getting a late start making remarks on the economic club of new york because of climate protests but markets digesting his comments about inflation and where we were in the early morning show. cheryl, what are we hearing so far? cheryl: we had the delay because of the protesters. they came out to the stage x minutes ago or so, he's continuing on with his prepared remarks and the discussion which follows, which gets more interesting. when it comes to inflation, inflation is too high. we have a quick soundbite. than the rest of the headlines. jerome powell:a few months of good data are only the beginning of what it takes to build confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward
12:30 pm
our goal. >> reporter: he's talking about the economy is very resilient. it is growing. he says growth is moving along its longer run trend and is surprised by that and there may be ways the economy can be less affected by interest rates, to summarize this the market is thinking we will get a pause in the next meeting, the meeting after that will be the question. he talks interest sensitive spending and the impact of fed policies, retail sales, that is not inflation-adjusted. you see strong retail sale, a bad sign for the economy and policies through usual channels, doesn't think there is a fundamental shift, but it does come back for what it entails for us. he's doing the q and a right
12:31 pm
now. basically, if he tips his hand more in this discussion, that will be interesting, where the fed policy is going to go. sounds like a lot of other fed officials have but the other thing we should listen for is oil prices. the president will be addressing the nation tonight and obviously with high oil prices, jet fuel prices, that will be an economic problem for the us and american consumers and federate policy. if we get asked about the middle east, a little delay with protesters, it's never boring in new york city. ashley: thank you so much for that summation. one line could throw the markets into a tizzy. the fed just publishing a new report as of 2022, record share
12:32 pm
of household getting involved in the stock market, stating 58% of american households own stocks while higher interest rates are upending millions of americans retirement planning. let's bring back luke lloyd, francis stacy. luke, let's begin with the angle this economy is remarkably resilient. consumers remarkably resilient. we were wringing our hands over a hard or soft landing because of what the fed is doing, do we still face a recession, still got to pay the piper? luke:absolutely. we have something from all the damage done in the past three years between shutting down the economy, raising interest rates, the inflation, we are not getting out of the scott of this scot-free. investors and consumers on an
12:33 pm
emotional roller coaster right now. earlier this year, all you heard was soft landing, things are not picking up and things are confusing. the fed's number one job is to bring down inflation and the uncertainty around geopolitical events in the middle east, they want to see where things go from here. they want to be more cautious and dovish. the fed says they are data-driven, geopolitical events is new data. ashley: a recession next year, are you looking for that? >> we are francis:we are stretching away from the rate hikes. surprise the growth has been as resilient as it has been and that is because it affects the
12:34 pm
60% of consumers achieving higher levels of debt on their credit cards as rates remain higher or go up in the december meeting, the debt service will become more onerous as the fed reduces titan which reduces the supplies, even the trillion dollars servicing the federal debt. this will be the threshold. what the fed does is tighten monetary policy until they had a credit threshold and nobody knows where that is because there are millions of transactions going on. bonds will rally and here we go again. lather, rinse, repeat. ashley: market history suggests we rally into year end, but with what is going on with the bonds right now, is it too much of a stabilizing force? what do you expect in the final quarter of the year?
12:35 pm
luke:it is a debilitating or different force than we are used to. i don't think it's the same story this year. from the last rate hike, stocks perform better, then you want the fed, it has been slotted the last few months or so. 50% of consumer staples are located in alcohol, constellation brands, alcohol is the offensive or, you drink when times are bad and when times are good. you bring more when times are bad. are you looking at defensive names, not high duration growth names if the federal reserve has lost control of interest rates and they go higher from here? ashley: thank you so much. a lot to talk about and we appreciate your expertise, charles payne will be addressing all these topics today on his unbreakable investor town hall meeting on
12:36 pm
making money. tune in, fox business today at 2:00 p.m. . everybody loves charles. a divide among democrats, some progressive house members separating themselves from president biden and american intelligence over an attack on a gaza hospital, live report from capitol hill when we come back. it's easy to get lost in investment research. introducing j.p. morgan personal advisors. hey david. connect with an advisor to create your personalized plan. let's find the right investments for your goals okay, great. j.p. morgan wealth management.
12:37 pm
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. known as a passionate artist. known for loving the outdoors. known for getting everyone together. no one wants to be known for cancer, but a treatment can be. keytruda is known to treat cancer. fda-approved for 16 types of cancer, including certain early-stage cancers. one of those cancers is triple-negative breast cancer. keytruda may be used with chemotherapy medicines as treatment before surgery and then continued alone after surgery when you have early-stage breast cancer and are at high risk of it coming back. keytruda can cause your immune system to attack healthy parts of your body during or after treatment. this may be severe and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you have cough, shortness of breath, chest pain, diarrhea,
12:38 pm
severe stomach pain, severe nausea or vomiting, headache, light sensitivity, eye problems, irregular heartbeat, extreme tiredness, constipation, dizziness or fainting, changes in appetite, thirst, or urine, confusion, memory problems, muscle pain or weakness, fever, rash, itching, or flushing. there may be other side effects. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions, including immune system problems, if you've had or plan to have an organ or stem cell transplant, received chest radiation, or have a nervous system problem. keytruda is an immunotherapy and is also being studied in hundreds of clinical trials, exploring ways to treat even more types of cancer. it's tru. keytruda from merck. see all the types of cancer keytruda is known for at keytruda.com, and ask your doctor if keytruda could be right for you. there are some things that go better... together. like your workplace benefits... and retirement savings. with voya, considering all your financial choices together... can help you be better prepared for unexpected events. voya. well planned. well invested. well protected.
12:39 pm
12:40 pm
ashley: the is really military continuing to strike locations across the gaza strip claiming to have killed two leaders of the organization while hitting hezbollah positions in lebanon today. mike tobin with us with the latest on the ground.
12:41 pm
>> reporter: the latest is the israelis have upped the number of confirmed a people held in the gaza strip which is behind me, to 203. this isn't the only front where they are operating, the northern border with lebanon. they are operating in the west bank, israel says the idf and border police picked up 80 wanted men in the west bank, 63 are hamas operatives, they picked up a number of weapons. airstrikes into the gaza strip, that process is constant. is real says they had of high-value target last night. and operative with the national security council for hamas, troops are on the ground, in and out of places they are staging. they got a visit from the defense minister who told them to be ready for the start of the ground invasion.
12:42 pm
>> the fight will be long. the fight will be hard. we will be precise, there will be a price we need to pay until we complete the mission. >> reporter: the northern border with lebanon continues to see rockets fire, antitank fire and small arms fire into israel. israel has been responding to points of origin from that fire stating they had one observation post from which they took antitank fire. the location where i am is where grills are set up and soldiers are able to escape and get a decent burger. we are speaking with those soldiers, they say they have the training, they are at the ready and want to get on with the job and get home to their families. ashley: great stuff.
12:43 pm
house progressives divided over who is to blame for the gaza hospital explosion despite the president saying it is unlikely israel is responsible. more on this issue. >> reporter: rashida tlaib and ila on omar work and -- quick to condemn them but at palestinian militant group is to blame. congresswoman omar issuing a clarification late last night but her post with the misinformation saying israel is guilty is still up and so is rashida tlaib's post, at a rally with pro-palestinian protesters yesterday in the capital where she repeated that lie? >> people think it is okay to
12:44 pm
bomb a hospital with children. the people telling kids don't cry. let them cry. >> reporter: house democrats supporting a cease-fire resolution but that idea shot down on the other side of the capital by john fetterman who says now is not the time to talk about a cease-fire, it's disturbing democratic colleagues would take a terrorist's word over our key allies when it comes to who's to blame for the hospital blast. emigrant supporting the cease-fire resolution why they don't think israel has a right to fight back. >> does israel not have a right to defend itself? >> it doesn't it will. >> why did you call for a cease-fire? >> trying to save lives. >> do you think israel doesn't have a right to defend itself? >> i never said that. >> they have a right to defend themselves? >> it's important everyone defend themselves against these acts.
12:45 pm
proportionality matters. >> reporter: chuck schumer saying if hamas is left to its own devices if israel does not rain them in, they will repeat the attack that we saw again and again. ashley: thank you very much. our next guest, a us combat veteran trained with the israeli defense forces, derek anderson is here to react to all of this. in the situation like this we will hear conflicting reports, hamas is good at changing things, the hospital was blown up, they immediately blamed israel. subsequently information suggests it was not from israeli forces but a splinter group of hamas. this is typical of what goes on. depending what you believe and who is in the right is going to
12:46 pm
guide you as to what you believe comes out of this war. it doesn't accomplish anything. >> reporter: it's not the first time this is going to happen. this is one of many times, hamas uses propaganda techniques. it's important to highlight the propaganda that hamas is putting out versus what the israelis have been. if you look after -- when hamas came over and killed and murdered individuals and took them hostage, their reaction was to take videos and put it on social media with women and children in cages, women and children that have been beaten and have been marred from the attacks they did and parade them through the streets of gaza. on the other side the idf's video, precision raids going in
12:47 pm
and finding hamas killers but they are videotaping how they are doing it with proportionality and doing it discover nutley and that's the propaganda israel is putting out. it's troubling to see members of congress. there's something to be said, we in america are very much value our constitutional rights to protest but there's a difference between having the right to do something and whether it is right and that moral compass is lacking in our country. ashley: you are a combat veteran. it will be difficult for the idf forces to hunt down these hamas terrorists and trying to protect hostages. it is a very difficult mission and i would assume given the history, you believe they are up to the mission? derrick: i worked with special operations forces when i was in israel. i had the opportunity to work
12:48 pm
with their top teams and explosive teams. they are very capable, they are trained very well. when i was in the southern portion of israel, we were looking at gaza and it was fascinating to see they were in different areas where there were schools and hospitals and i asked, they had intelligence they had seen with their own eyes and some of those hospitals and schools word the beginning of the tunnel systems. israel is 100% capable of conducting the ground force. the added layer that has never been seen in this situation is the fact these tunnel system, 300 miles of tunnel systems within gaza, twice the size of washington dc. those hostages have different locations. in the past, the idf and israelis would go through,
12:49 pm
clear with weapons, small arms and/or dogs, those tunnels, in this situation, it adds an extra level of threat that they have those hostages in those tunnels. ashley: benjamin netanyahu says this will be a long war. would you agree with that? how long could we be talking? derrick: we've seen over the last week, 10 days ago, hamas came over the border, talk to the ground force is imminent. we've seen that it was delayed, before the biden administration shows a. there's something to be said that netanyahu is ready to get confirmation from the world and his allies that they are ready to have his back, the president's message needs to be that. ashley: thank you for your
12:50 pm
service and thank you for talking with us today. really appreciate it. time to check in with brian brenberg. it is brenberg, "the big money show". we want to see what's going on at the top of the hour. brian: president biden preparing to pitch $100 billion in funding for ukraine, israel, to fortify the southern border but rising concerns about american taxpayer dollars ending up in the hands of terrorists. morph coast-to-coast after this. personalized financial advice from ameriprise can do more than help you reach your goals. i can make this work. it can help you reach them with confidence. no wonder more than 9 out of 10 of our clients are likely to recommend us. ameriprise financial. advice worth talking about.
12:51 pm
this is spring semester at over 13,000 us school districts, which have become top targets for ransomware attacks. but there's never been a reported ransomware attack on a chromebook. which is why thousands of schools like the fairfield-suisun unified school district switched to google tools for education. so they can focus on teaching and 22,000 students can focus on learning, knowing that their data is secure. ( ♪ )
12:52 pm
♪ 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. ♪ explore endless design possibilities. to find your personal style. endless hardie® siding colors. textures and styles. .. with james hardie™. nice footwork. man, you're lucky, watching live sports never used to be this easy. now you can stream all your games like it's nothing. yes! [ cheers ] yeah! woho!
12:53 pm
running up and down that field looks tough. it's a pitch. get way more into what you're into when you stream on the xfinity 10g network. municipal bonds don't usually get the media coverage the stock market does. in fact, most people don't find them all that exciting. but, if you're looking for the potential for consistent income that's federally tax-free, now is an excellent time to consider municipal bonds from hennion & walsh. if you have at least 10,000 dollars to invest, call and talk with one of our bond specialists at 1-800-217-3217. we'll send you our exclusive bond guide, free. with details about how bonds can be an important part of your portfolio. hennion & walsh has specialized in fixed income and growth solutions for 30 years, and offers high-quality municipal bonds from across the country. they provide the potential for regular income... are federally tax-free... and have historically low risk.
12:54 pm
call today to request your free bond guide. 1-800-217-3217. that's 1-800-217-3217. ashley: look at netflix's stocks surging up 15.5% after strong subscriber growth. susan joins us with more. susan: huge day for the stock, one month highs, biggest day in 2 and a half years after adding more subscribers and hiking subscription prices, 8. 8 million youth sign-ups. the best quarter in three years, and 3 million more than wall street estimates. over 247 million people around the world watch netflix and the
12:55 pm
number increased, it encouraged some, not all people to purchase their own accounts. they are raising prices in the us and the uk for those add free tears by $2 to $3 because they want to drive yours to the basic plan with ads. it is cheaper. netflix makes more money from that tier. not only do they get the monthly fee but more advertising revenue from those commercials but for billion dollars less on content because of the writer and actor's strike. they struck a deal finally with the writers last month but you heard the ceo say there's a major sticking point. >> we were optimistic we were making progress but at the end of our last session, a new demand that on top of everything from the first of scriber leavy, undulating to success and this broke our momentum.
12:56 pm
>> reporter: what about live sports? listen to this soundbite quickly. >> it's a great way of extending the great drama of sport brands that we created. no change in our life/work strategy. susan: a lot of speculation as we know warner bros. is getting into it and the crown is the final season, starting in the middle of next month. ashley: looking forward to it. we have more cavuto coast-to-coast after this. mlb chooses t-mobile for business for 5g solutions... ...to not only enhance the fan experience, but to advance how the game is played. now's the time to see what america's largest 5g network can do for your business.
12:57 pm
liberty mutual customized my car insurance and i saved hundreds. with the money i saved, i started a dog walking business. oh. [dog barks] no it's just a bunny! only pay for what you need. ♪liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty.♪ i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so... ...glad we did this. [kid plays drums] life is for living. let's partner for all of it. i'm so glad we did this. edward jones
12:58 pm
12:59 pm
in a world moving toward clean energy and electric transportation. the future is in battery metals. ion energy is a driving force poised to support asia's booming battery metals supply chain.
1:00 pm
ion energy. >> high inflation but we won't have that. events, possible range of events is wider than we think it is on any given day. the tales are so wide and it is not human nature to think about things that are out of the tail but they happen in financial markets. they happen far more regularly than they should. ashley: the market hanging on, the intraday up and down and all around as investors try to figure out what the fed head is trying to say. we are down now, thank you for joining us

66 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on