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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  October 31, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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stuart: peanuts are the worst. lauren: peanut -- pennies are the worst. of the when you can't afford to be wrong the. you can't fault it. you have to be right every time. >> i know what people think before they think. how do you know it? how many grandkids do you have? you can tell when they are telling the truth. if you take that stronger and stronger, that helped my daughter as a teenager. i'm hanging out with rachel. who is that? stuart: you could have quite a life. you perform around the world? >> i do, in the us and i like to be home. but go to the mentalist on social. stuart: that was terrific, thank you very much. thanks for playing along with this. "varney and company" is done for the day. coast to coast starts now.
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neil: the last of the month, not a moment too soon for traders. whatever happens today won't change the fact that all the major market averages will be down 1/3 month in a row. spending for israel isn't helping matters but it is not the reason investors have halloween jitters and this whole month, we will be going live to the stock exchange and read what is worrying them. welcome, everybody. i'm neil cavuto. more from the big board in a second. now on this ongoing war with greg palkot. >> reporter: we are up on the border between israel and lebanon. escalating land incursion by
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israel against hamas in gaza. the next stage of operation wrapping up its fourth full day, include is really tanks and other armor moving into the edges of gaza city, hamas headquarters to the north, east, south, clashes are reported with militants including the underground embankments, that say it is inside the vast network of tunnels, a key hamas commander who is responsible for some of the october 7th terror attacks on israeli settlements and militant groups aerial weaponry including drones, paraglider's, one more hostage is 3, 19-year-old military private or a mega dish, it is believed to there is over 240 hostages held, higher figure than
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before. much of gaza is in ruins and civilians facing a huge humanitarian crisis. benjamin netanyahu confirmed there will be no cease-fire, there will only be a surrender to hamas and up here in the north we watch escalating clashes between israeli military and iran backed hezbollah militants in neighboring lebanon, many associated groups throughout the region. this uptick in activity related to the combat going on down south. neil: thanks, the latest from southern israel. not only israeli soldiers under attack and doing the attacking. the 25th time in the past couple weeks, iran targeted proxies have been going after those soldiers. the question is what to do as
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the war seems to be itching to expand. a key player in the abraham accords and a key negotiator. good to have you. this fear that it is spreading, that iran is instigating that spread between hezbollah attacks in the north from lebanon to what it is doing already for hamas, what do you think? >> completely true. that's what iran does. iran instigates. the whole issue of hamas, they will continue to be in the background instigating, instigating us forces, how we respond is important. neil: the question becomes how do we respond? a lot of criticism the administration has been getting as they target those proxies, usually syria but not iran directly. just wondering if that helps
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the process when people behind it are untouched. >> a lot of people don't know when the abraham accords were enabled by the fact that we struck iran's number 2 individual and killed him in iraq showed that we are serious. we've got two warships, we can respond directly to iran if necessary. i think it's very clear that if ran continues to instigate it is not just the instigator but iran itself. that shows strength in the region. this is not a region the response to lack of restraint budget response to strength. stuart: neil: let me get your take on how it is handled, for disproportionately responding to the attacks more than 3 weeks ago, 1400 lives, a different take on that but we
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are saying be careful, watch out for civilian passageways, you can get our can't get out. >> they do what they say they do. they have to get rid of hamas. leaving hamas in there is not going to work. we tried every solution. they need to get out of hamas, what we said the moment this happened. international effort and international support is going to wane. we have to support israel and get what done what they need to do. these aren't easy things. if they were easy they wouldn't be there in the first place. hamas has shown you cannot enable coming in the same way al qaeda needed to be eliminated. isis needed to be eliminated. these are terrorists. we need to a lemonade them and it won't be easy, we need to support israel. stuart: very few outside
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western countries are supporting israel or robustly so and even in those countries, the us included, it's a different story, not across the board. what i wonder as a negotiator trained at bringing sides together and talking, does that worry you? >> nothing wrong with talking. you see negotiations with qatar, there's never anything wrong with talking. it doesn't stop action. the reality here is a strong response, going forward will put talks in a better place. what i will say is stopping and doing nothing sounds easy, sounds nice but the right solutions are never easy so i never think talking is a bad thing. doesn't mean we should stop taking action, doesn't mean we should stop trying to remove hamas at this point. that strong negotiations. stuart: thank you.
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in the meantime, it has been the story of the month. not that stocks haven't been volatile, how little for the time being the war has to do with it. there are reverberations about where this goes. i want to go to meridian equity partners. there are other worries and i get that. a couple big ones are dictating another selling month for stocks. >> there's two major head wents we are facing. one is the continuation of the talks about interest rates and what the fed is going to do. and and long steady pace, rates were low, as we get towards
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2,020 and the goal became we brought them back in. since 2,022, we see slow and steady steps to get where we are right now. it will take a long time for them to bring them back down but with the headlines we have now, the pause that is in effect is the right move and they will use terminology when they get their playbook this week, what their thought process is and why they will keep them where they are for a longer time. i've seen the other head wind in the middle east as this continues to escalate and we see headlines of us and allied involvement. that is adding a lot of pressure and a lot of pause to the market. we see a lot of volatility back-and-forth and that is expected to. we see these headlines here. as we get to the end of the year, these headlines will continue to put pressure on markets. we've broken below 4200 in the
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s&p, vicks is trading sub 20 which is where i like to see it at this point but we will see a lot of this volatility and pressure back-and-forth as we get to the end of the year. fast-forward real quick, once 2024 calendar comes, besides headlines of interest rates and other geopolitical issues, we will start talking about the election cycle, and a lot of pause to the market. we've got a lot of 9-month runway, but not real major capitulations with that. larry: the volatility index doesn't show a lot of rampant fear or terror or concern for a widening war like we saw 15 years ago with the yom kippur war and the arab world responds and we know the rest of that. that doesn't seem to be showing up in anything right now. what do you think?
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>> if you look at longer-term chart, how we get above 20, trading 23 to 25, that's the newer headline coming out in the middle east, seems to calm down a little bit. this level where we are is a tipping point. as i said before it is where i would like to see it as we continue as it gets above 2020, that is when the real sentiment comes into the market. as we've seen some economic data and earnings reports. all the unknown interest rates, geopolitical risk. all that unknown moving forward. is going to add some help to the vicks to get it above the 20 level but you have to look above baer, 20 to 25, we should feel comfortable below 20, where we are most comfortable. adam: you refer to the fed,
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what it does or doesn't do, i am wondering about giving it some cover, market rates have backed up. that's the cover we need and not go immediately. >> the fed has said they would remain data the peasant. there are many silos associated with that, geopolitical issues. the fed has the ammunition to move rates lower. they want to use that as time for them to pause and have a right to do so. how all this plays out, they have the tools at this point where rates are. a longer pause would be best for us. at any point they could pivot
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quickly, data dependent, see how it moves or not and how the geopolitical issues play out because those are changing headlines day by day. stuart: i always learn something. good seeing you again, have a happy halloween. a genuine article on all these things. by extension ukraine, where parties dramatically differ, we are on top of that after this. >> but the reality is the jewish community is uniquely, uniquely targeted, pretty much every terrorist organization across the spectrum. look at a group that makes up 2.4% roughly of the american population it should be jarring to everyone that the same population accounts for 60% of
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[shouting] >> stop supporting genocide. >> committee will suspend. [chanting] neil: how did they get into a heavily guarded hearing? protesters crashing this hearing, the defense secretary, lloyd austin pushing their case from the senate appropriations committee to get more funding. the total package north of $106 billion. the senate armed services committee, he knows of what he speaks. always great having you on. i am wondering about the figure they are talking about. how likely is it that will be approved?
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>> not the way it is written. it will be difficult. a lot of work needs to be done. a lot of support of ukraine funding. if we have to do it separately, the way it is written, hard to justify sending money into gaza for humanitarian purposes knowing that hamas takes control of it, they control the warehouses, they are controlling distribution of it and to go back to what you said about the hearing, this was an open hearing, it was staged, if they didn't want the protesting to go on, they should have had a closed hearing an open up their television. since it was open, it was all for show, no reason to do it the way they did other than televise their protests.
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adam: without getting into the weeds of one house versus another house, now with the new speaker i'm wondering if there's reluctance to link any type of funding for israel to funding for ukraine, in other words israel may be gets a yes, ukraine less so. >> in 1994, they give up nuclear weapons, the us would be there specifically by russia. we agreed to protect ukraine. they are an ally of ours and we have to stand with them. israel is a strong ally of ours. they didn't, neither side, russia provoked this attack, went into ukraine unprovoked,
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hamas attacked israel for no other reason than their hatred towards israel, both friends, both we had to fund and protect and stand with our allies. china, russia, iran, north korea testing this, we are going to stand with them. if it has to be separate, that's what speaker johnson has to do on the house side, i support that. i also support the idea of keeping them together but make sure to vet the $106 billion. i don't support the package as written, make sure the money goes where it needs to go. neil: you come from a big energy state. i was noticing more interestingly through this war how energy prices have gone down, oil prices have gone down $10 a barrel.
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gas prices are down close to $0.30 a gallon. >> use optimistic output increased, and anytime you see increased production, you see prices go down. you saw the world increase production. they are afraid the middle east could go off-line. people are putting the reserves in. that's why we should have drilling in the united states, and allow oklahoma and texas to allow us to become energy independent, not rely on opec or russia oil. we can do it here, they won't affect our prices. the administration needs to get on board with it. energy is the backbone of the economy. without energy our economy suffers. we don't have to be reliant on any other country or activity to control our oil prices. we can produce it right here in a clean and more effective manner.
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adam: more uranian proxies, roughly the last few weeks, we generally go after the proxies. we don't go directly after iran. >> iran is sponsoring hamas, 93% of funding comes from iran. hezbollah, one hundred% of their funding comes from iran. neither side is engaging with israel are fighting this war without iran's support and financial backing. it doesn't happen. if you're going to cut the snake of the head off, you have to go after its head, not its tail. it doesn't work, and one hundred 80 degree wrong direction. stuart: thank you for taking the time. mark wayne mullen of oklahoma. we have some developments in is
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your, two israeli soldiers killed and two others in gaza representing the first such casualties in gaza since the ground incursion involving israeli troops. we will have more after this. ♪(romantic music)♪ (♪) (♪) (♪) (man) what if my type 2 diabetes takes over?
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adam: a lot we are neil: about we are following including anheuser-busch, concerns that in the third quarter earnings that were released earlier, not really benefit trying to sort of going get woke or whatever you call it. what is going on here? charles: stock is up because of the usc deal. and data transition so to speak of having a trans woman as one of their spokespeople to now embracing guys punching each other in the face.
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what you are seeing is a market reaction to that. bud is a prime player, long-held macho brand to diversify all that, they attempt to diversify it with dylan mulvaney, trans woman activist, backfired. that is where the market is going. numbers are not good, sales are down from being down. stock that has been hammered over the last year. there is brand damage here. they may not be able to unwind. one of the things covering corporate wokesm so long, doing a deep dive into it with this
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new book, there is brand damage a lot of companies are trying to unwind. a guy that i admire is larry fink of black rock. they are having a devil of a time trying to unwind the fact they are associated with esg which is very unpopular particularly in red states, public finance officials, governors and treasurers who run pension funds. black rock has been banned and it is a problem for them. they are trying to unwind that image and target it the same way, sales are off, stock is off, we had that huge lb gtq plus display, combined with adult stuff with children stuff, and suffer brand damage, and it is right in there and the stock might be up but it
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has not been pretty and they are working feverishly on this. they hired pr experts, it's not working. neil: takes time. you are the best. charlie gasparino on that. madison alworth on another development we are following, the adams administration dealing with the latest wave of migrants coming in. madison: behind me, the newest shelter for migrants, a thousand miles across the southern border. this is federal space, broadway 19, this used to be a runway for airplanes, now it is home to 500 migrant families, roughly 2000 asylum-seekers. opponents argue this is not safe, the city and the state say they've run out of options.
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looking where this is located the tent cities close to a sports center where students play and practice so many locals are concerned about the proximity but when it comes to local elected officials, they say they don't have another choice. they are getting desperate. when the mayor's office asked if it is considering handing out tents to migrants they responded by saying all options are on the table. the mayor's office offering 1-way flights to any destination of migrants choosing often paying out a one time fee rather than housing, feeding and caring for them. a move other cities and states have taken that they have been critical of. the mayor's office said, quote, no sign of a decompression strategy in the near future. we've established a ticketing center for migrants. the city will redouble efforts to purchase tickets for migrants to help them take the next steps in their journey and
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help us to triage at the roosevelt for new arrivals and some migrants are being forced out despite new york city's sanctuary status. 1,300,500 asylum-seekers received a vacate notice. that means in those 60 days they have to leave. we are hearing about a facility that will be a 60 day center. the issue is if they go back and ask for an extension they then get a 30 day vacate notice. you have to provide housing and see new establishments like the one behind me popped up. adam: q for the update. you probably heard about jewish students being targeted on college campuses. there's a reason they don't feel safe. their lives are being threatened after this.
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>> there have been multiple anti-israel rallies where i heard students chanting death to jews, death to anybody that supports the zionist state, these are horrific things to say at so-called peaceful protests, students are shouting this from rooftops. it is pure evil you see and it is concerning and i do not feel safe on my campus. >> what does it mean when administrators telling me not to a be a target, to be safe on campus i need to hide my jewish identity. i feel so unsafe every day on campus. neil: it's not a smattering of
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examples, things have gotten so bad at cornell university, they are on high alert after a series of horrendous anti-israeli messages, the potential of hate crimes and worse. griffin jenkins following this. that is growing, no denial about that. >> reporter: anti-semitism is undeniably sweeping across campuses, coast to coast across the country, especially at ivy league schools like columbia and cornell. and imagine $60,000 a year where jewish students are facing threats like this social media post, jewish people need to be killed, if you see a jewish person on campus, follow them home and slit their throat. governor kathy hochul went to the campus yesterday with the fbi and police are investigating threats.
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in the last hour, hochul address new yorkers with a 0-tolerance message. >> every new yorker has a right to feel safe and to be safe. as they go about their daily lives. we must accept nothing less. as governor i reaffirm that there is 0-tolerance for hate in our state. >> reporter: is that enough to make students feel safe. one cornell student said she appreciated hochul's efforts but still. feel threatened. >> even with police, it is still threatening. we are trying to go about our daily lives and continue to be proud and strong as our jewish selves but it is still scary. >> reporter: at yale the campus newspaper is concerning a pro-israel student by removing factually accurate sections of her text about the atrocities committed by hamas, claims of rape and beheadings were unsubstantiated. this surge in hate on campuses
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is so prevalent the white house is directly engaging, nothing short of labeling it as extremism. when we saw last week students barricaded themselves in cooper union library, you had democrat members like jerry nadler saying it may rise to the level of violating students civil rights. see where this goes. adam: thank you, great reporting. what is the political fallout? so much to get into, former biden campaign surrogate. i read an interesting article about democrats and how this presented a dilemma between pro-palestinian versus pro-israeli and now they are at loggerheads with one another. what do you make of it? >> look at the polling with the president's standing in the democratic party, you are
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seeing some arab-american, muslim american democrats stepping back from supporting the president, the fact that he's down 11 points based on what we are seeing play out in israel as is a direct result of that. the president's support of israel will bring folks home to the election next year but it's a crisis point in your interview with griff, the fears students are having is just horrifying. we need to shine a light on that. last weekend, five years since the tree of life synagogue shooting, in pittsburgh, 11 jews slaughtered in the congregation. it is horrifying and democrats and republicans need to reconcile themselves what is happening. adam: 5% or 6% of the population, but monolithic for
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democrats. better than 80% of the time for democrats. i'm wondering, if this backfires. the president clearly standing on the side of israel, that helps him with that base eventually but risks alienating him with another constituency that is smaller but just as if not more vocal. what do you do? >> excellent point. take a state like michigan which was decided by percentage should points, there's a huge arab american muslim american population, making a difference in a tight election when working at the margins in key battleground states. neil: is upside down world time, democrats and taking the tougher stance on funding
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countries like ukraine and israel, that typically would be the republican stance, not for other countries. republicans extending aid to ukraine in the middle of what is going on, less so democrats led by the president. what do you make of that and the implications? >> the president said this is not your grandfather or father's republican party, ronald reagan, george h w bush hw bush, protect and strength abroad. i saw a push by brad schneider, democrat from illinois, joe wilson from south carolina in the house, pushing for the graphic you have to link those funds, for ukraine and israel
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and to counter a rise in china on fears of an invasion in taiwan and democrats standing firmly behind each of these priorities to try to get past the finish line. we have a finish line, a lot of priorities on the horizon but strength abroad has become a real tenet of the democratic party as you seen in the last couple years. neil: we haven't seen it to this degree since john f. kennedy getting tough with the russians in the cuban missile crisis. it is a different world. always good having you on. >> good to see you. neil: what is coming up on "the big money show"? brian: the migrant crisis in the shadow of war. alejandra mayorkas asking for the funding to secure the border as communities deal with hidden cost like schools facing an influx of students. that is at one. more coast-to-coast after this.
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oh, and happy birthday... or retirement... in advance. adam: adam: free of any more court time, done today is the defense wrapped things up. kelly:we are in the home stretch, he's off the stand, the defense has rested, the prosecution decided they aren't going to call any rebuttal witnesses. the jury has been sent home for a charging conference. what we saw tomorrow morning we are going to hear closing arguments from both sides, the jury could get the case as early as tomorrow, perhaps thursday but then have to decide what version of sam bankman-fried do they believe,
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the well-intentioned entrepreneur or the fraud? a couple take aways from the cross-examination, spf appeared to have memory loss saying he couldn't remember, recall certain statements on media interviews. another gotcha moment that could play a case in the fraud investor came from the option of fraudulent sheets. bankman-fried claimed he only saw the final spreadsheet, the prosecution proved through google metadata that he had seen all those versions. finally the prosecution honed in on how close he was to alameda research, he didn't recall doing anything to ensure ftx customer funds weren't spent, nor did he fire anyone when he learned of an $8 billion hauling customer funds, the prosecution pointed out he was tweeting customer assets. they did a redirect.
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and able to answer, they are doing our conference. we are could be crossing our fingers for verdict starting thursday. larry: the you had a difficult time picking it up in the pharmacy. a lot of those in cvs and walgreens, the pharmacy staff taking a 3 day walk out from the job. not all are participating but reasons behind it. a licensed pharmacist helping coordinate this. good to have you. what is this about? >> more about patient safety than anything else. without inadequately staffed pharmacy, patron safety is at risk to the deck of a public health crisis and we are advocating more help usually when you walk in, only one
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pharmacist behind the counter and a handful of technicians. primarily comprised of technicians we have on the say pharmacies and our ability to practice, our hands are tied. neil: what if stores like cvs and walgreens, financial pressures don't budge. >> financial pressure because of the business model, they want access to pharmacies on every corner of the country. maybe just have to rethink the entire business structure. won't be in access on every corner but access on every other corner. we don't want, i'm sorry, i don't want to practice as a pharmacist, someone who went to school for 8 years to get to that position. i don't want to risk my license for the corporate bottom line. neil: people of their
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pharmacies almost as much as ups drivers that stop by their house, there's a special kinship folks have for their pharmacist. if you walk out or some of them take this 3 day walk out, where do you lose that? >> we are trying to preserve that relationship. the pharmacist had a storied history of the most accessible healthcare professional and community small and large across the country. if we don't do this, if we don't conserve the relationship we are going to -- another commodity. you know how long it takes to see her doctor. i don't wanted to be like that. i want you to go to any pharmacy and have that conversation about your health with a pharmacist. neil: are you worried so much of this is done online, sent to them and they bypass pharmacists altogether and you might be represented, no
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offense to you, might represent a rally. >> some insurance companies require pharmacists to go to mail-order and mail-order has their issues. i worked 16 years as a pharmacist and not a week goes by that i don't have someone come in that mail-order dropped the ball or the medication they need immediately. if you have an antibiotic you will not wait a few days for mail-order. sometimes it is less than that but there's a need for pharmacists. our role is expanding, we are doing vaccinations and health testing, the role of a pharmacist is never going away and it will stay that way for years to come. neil: we will see how that settles out. a 3 day walk, not everyone is involved but you certainly know it and see it as you visit your
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local cvs or walgreens or whatever. also on top of a final trading day of the month. it wraps up another down month for stocks no matter what happens today. we are getting used to this. more after this. (adventurous music) ♪ ♪ ♪ be ready for any market with a liquid etf. get in and out with dia. this is american infrastructure.
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adam: neil: something wicked this way comes, basic cable, you're not going to get super premium but that is where we stand for this month was october is a worrisome month. it has to be problematic but probably major averages, for 3 months in a row we've seen that but i will say this. doing remarkably well on the year, markets staved off direction territory for the time being and out of that for the nasdaq but it is a reflection on markets focused by other things, not panicking over everything. that's where we stand right now. ron desantis at 4 p.m. eastern time to pick around what we should do. here's brian

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