tv Varney Company FOX Business November 16, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST
10:01 am
stuart: can you imagine that. is that a kick in the head. dean martin, that the empire state building too. and:00 eastern, straight to the money, some green on the screen, not much but a little, dollars up 17, sb 7, nasdaq is up, where's the 10 year treasury yield this morning. all-important number, it is down to 4.48%. the price of oil 76, that the move down to $73 a barrel, 3.9% down. that will have an impact on gas prices i think, bitcoin, 37 and change, 367. just got the latest read on homebuilder sentiment. lauren: builder confidence fell for the fourth month in a row down 6 points to 34. is looking for homes right now,
10:02 am
so many people say it's too extensive, not worth it. when you look at the cpi number, 70% is in housing. inflation is starting to come down. they are forecasting 5% increase next year. stuart: we've got jim tillman on the show right now. thanks. now this. when foreign leaders meet an american president they summon him up try to figure out what he's made of. right now xi xinping is judging his arrival. in san francisco xi saw a president who is physically failed, walked very slowly, almost shuffled and his speaking voice was faint. xi would surely have seen a decline compared to when they met just a year ago. watch this. >> i can't trump who is cbs.
10:03 am
i'm sorry. >> mister president, a bank. lauren: i apologize was washington post. i think that's right. there you are, sorry, couldn't see you. >> any deal underway to free hostages, thank you. >> yes, no, working backwards. i have been deeply involved in moving on the hostage negotiation. i think the pause the israelis have agreed to is down to much detail. diane: sorry to see it. he seems confused. he turns 81 next monday, and shows clearly the difficulties of aging. forgive me for being blunt but does anyone believe that he can be president for another five
10:04 am
years, that strange credulity, doesn't it and xi sees this. this will affect china's judgment on invading taiwan and when you throw in vice president harris, she sees a challenged president, and incompetent vice president waiting to take over. for by the optics of the meeting were not good. second hour of "varney and company" just getting started. fortunately liz peek joins us this thursday morning, difficult question, does anyone believe this president can be president for another five years. >> apparently president biden does and maybe his wife and maybe hunter who is safe as long as he's in the white house but honestly i think voters, we see it from falling all the time, voters increasingly think he's too old to be running for president, too old to be president and you are right, the decline is so obvious, go
10:05 am
back to the election in 2020 and the debate, he did not look like this. it was an embarrassment. the entire meeting and my view was in a harassment and not just because he looks frail and also mentally frail, didn't mention that but he can't remember the lead reporter for cbs, one of the main white house reporters, can't member who that is, that's not a good look. but this whole thing started with bad looks, the fact that we went in, gavin newsom and other people went in and cleaned up the city to showcase something that is typically a wretched place propagandized by the chinese as a hellhole. that is and sing to me. america seeing that america's ceos lined up to have dinner with president xi. wise that an embarrassment? xi needs them. they don't need xi.
10:06 am
foreign direct investment into china has collapsed. exports are down, consumer sentiment is in the gutter. everything in china is on xi's plate. he's response will, he has taken economic management on himself. it is a disaster. so this meeting should have been about america looking strong. imposing on china certain demands because we are the big economy, we are the big military. we are in a position to make demands on china. you never see that vibe from this white house. it's astonishing to me. we won watch president biden call xi jinping a dictator. roll tape. >> president biden: he is. he's a dictator in the sense that he is the guy running the country -- a communist country -- stuart: there is no force their. >> he might have said yes my he has pale gray hair. as forceful as calling him a dictator.
10:07 am
you didn't show antony blinken's reaction to that which was dismay on his face because you can only script these meetings and he had walked out of this q and a and someone called him back and you can imagine his staff going please do not let him answer any questions for which he is not prepared and sure enough they got him at the end. stuart: wish i could have seen blinken's face. great stuff. president biden warned china about interfering in taiwan's upcoming elections. what did he say? >> there in january and president biden said he doesn't want china interfering in them. watch here. >> what with the consequences be if they do in fact interfere in those elections? >> president biden: i had that discussion, didn't expect any interference, any out all. when we had that discussion.
10:08 am
do i trust -- trust but verify is the old saying goes. that's where i am. >> taiwan of the most sensitive topic, biden is running for election. he cannot afford another flareup under his watch between europe and the middle east so putting china on ice in a way. at the same time reaffirm the us commitment to the one china policy. right? so he is easing up when he should be doubling down. he is go for diplomacy, saying all right things but maybe there should be more force. stuart: that's the force. no force. >> now is the time to exercise that force to europe. stuart: got to move on and get back to the markets which of turnaround a little bit. some reading down 20 but the nasdaq up 10. look who is here now. gary kaltbaum.
10:09 am
doesn't have legs for the future? >> reporter: i think we will go higher. on november 1st yields topped in a very big way and oil prices have been crashing. from july to october, the biggest bear on the street, rates were skyrocketing, oil prices were skyrocketing, that's want to punch, markets cannot take, the opposite is happening right now. as long as they stay down in the trajectory, markets can work its way higher. i will say this second we had a big move up a short period of time so maybe we do some resting but i think the overall trend is much better and the broad market, dead money, absolute dead has finally woken up talking about small mid-caps, airlines and cruise lines and things like that, hopefully it continues for a while. a one what do you make of walmart's report today?
10:10 am
not so much the stock price decline, that was the analyst expectations but what does the walmart report tell us about the consumer as we head toward the holiday season? >> walmart the greatest company in history of time, the greatest cash generating machine ever, brought down inflation itself as a company with their lower prices. i think the numbers were okay, tough to grow a business when you do $600 billion a year in sales, $600 billion in sales. stock is down because it had a good move up and i don't take anything bad out of it. they also said with inflation down, there margins tweaked a little bit to the downside but i call it a no biggie. the consumer is okay, down the road i am worried. rates are down, credit card usage is skyrocketing, the debt of this country is absolutely obscene. what biden has done is a
10:11 am
financial sin with $2 trillion deficit this year, that is my bidenomics and eventually there's going to be heck to pay but right now we are okay into the end of the year. stuart: which is 6 weeks away, thanks very much. we will see you again soon. have a great thanksgiving. i am looking at palo alto networks down 6%. i want to know why. lauren: they expect buildings in the new year to be lower than first forecast so that's customers demanding they can pay palo alto differently, more foxhole payment terms so some palo alto deals are taking longer and the timing is uncertain. ali baba going down even more. they are no longer spinning off their cloud business, down 8. 5%, blame us export restrictions of advanced technology. the breakup plan had ginned up this enthusiasm on wall street and that is no longer. blue on chinese leadership messed up ali baba when they took the founder out of the
10:12 am
business and the thing never recovered. $200 a share. lauren: they announced their first-ever dividend and stock is still down. stuart: thanks very much indeed. new york state just launched a lawsuit against pepsi. on what grounds are they suing? >> donald trump's nemesis, leticia james is suing pepsi accusing it of clogging get a river running through buffalo with cheaper bags and single-use plastic from the company's products, the states of the solar giant talked about the effectiveness of its recycling efforts and failed to warn consumers about the health, environment or risks of this packaging. the ag's office looked at 15 sites on the buffalo river and found 17% of trash collected on the river was pepsi, pepsi related products. stuart: is that strong grounds for a suit?
10:13 am
>> it is unprecedented and you could see other states follow suit especially more left-leaning states. stuart: take money out of business one way or another, whether it is right or wrong. love it. the feud between vivek ramaswamy and ron mcdaniel is heating up. the presidential candidate launched a petition to out the are in seat chair. we have the story. senator john kennedy to stump one of biden's judicial nominees. >> what collateral to stop him? >> the bright lights at the moment or whatever you call it. stuart: todd pyro is with us. is a recovering lawyer. he will tell us about that. the company behind the miss universe pageant filed for bankruptcy. transgender celebrity at the organization last year. is she to blame for the bankruptcy? we will speak to a miss universe pageant judge all about that next.
10:14 am
♪ ameritrade is now part of schwab. bringing you an elevated experience, tailor-made for trader minds. go deeper with thinkorswim: our award-wining trading platforms. unlock support from the schwab trade desk, our team of passionate traders who live and breathe trading. and sharpen your skills with an immersive online education crafted just for traders. all so you can trade brilliantly. ♪ is it possible to fall in love with your home...
10:15 am
...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. it's possible. with james hardie™.
10:16 am
♪ (upbeat music) ♪ ( ♪ ) with the push of a button, constant contact's ai tools help you know what to say, even when you don't. hi! constant contact. helping the small stand tall. sleepovers just aren't what they used to be. a house full of screens? basically no hiccups? you guys have no idea how good you've got it.
10:17 am
how old are you? like, 80? back in my day, it was scary stories and flashlights. we don't get scared. oh, really? mom can see your search history. that's what i thought. introducing the next generation 10g network. only from xfinity. hello is friendly... hello is welcoming... it's everything we want to be when helping people find a medicare plan during the annual enrollment period. so, say hello to hellomedicare... a one-stop shop for medicare plans... including a range of “all-in-one” medicare advantage plans. learn, compare, even enroll—all in one place. give us a call now. we'll guide you to a plan that fits your needs. at hellomedicare, it all starts with a few simple questions so we can get to know what's important to you. then, we'll match you with plans that fit your needs, from well-known names in medicare. compare benefits.
10:18 am
compare costs. it's easy. and when you feel good about a plan... we'll sign you up. done. and. done. the annual enrollment period is here. so, let's do this. give us a call today and speak with one of our hellomedicare licensed insurance agents. and say hello to an easier way to do medicare. stuart: a judge in north dakota just delivered a victory to parents fighting against transgender treatment for children. >> it is a felony for healthcare provider to provide gender transition surgery on a minor north dakota. that's the. now judge says he's not going to block that, denying request for temporary restraining order by claiming the plaintiffs include three families and a pediatrician who asked the court to pass the law. proponents of the law say
10:19 am
protect children from irreversible effects of treatments and surgeries. they argue the restrictions will harm transgender youth. you will see a definite divide among the states. conservative states like north dakota. stuart: i think you are right. the company behind the miss universe pageant filed for bankruptcy. the company is owned and run by a transgender woman who took over the event in 2022. emily austen was a judge in the miss universe pageant and joins me now. the prominence of the trans owner. is that what did them in? >> socially absolutely. the outrage about a trans woman coming to miss universe preaching bring the power back to woman couldn't be more of an oxymoron. a want to bankrupt, the transgender issue is one of the reasons for the bankruptcy. >> i think so. the company has its own issues socially and morally, people are starting to catch on that. stuart: our trans women allowed
10:20 am
in beauty pageants generally speaking? >> they are. the question is should they be allowed and my answers they should not. stuart: why? >> if you want to empower a woman the way to do it is not demeaning woman and belittling woman by allowing men or biological men who became a woman to come into industry likes sports like beauty pageants, beautiful men by the way and start dominating a woman's industry, that's the opposite women's empowerment. stuart: i can understand not allowing trans athletes to compete with the biological men and biological women. i can understand that but a beauty pageant is all about look. it is not all about power and speed but strength, it is the look. if the look is a woman, why would you object to that? >> yes and no. be in a judge i can attest a lot of it is the interview. the interview comes from your life story and as a woman how you evolvement want to change the world. you grew up a man and decided to become a woman i don't think
10:21 am
you have a true woman's feminine store. you don't know what period cramps you like or what it is like to walk down a stage during that time of the month and really say this is femininity. you are manhood into pfizer as a woman and that is fine but don't come into women's industry. have a line, have a boundary. stuart: moving on. last time you joined us on this program you had to have a bodyguard because you took a strong stance in support of israel. still have a bodyguard? >> i have a security squad now. blue when you've got a team. is that necessary really? >> i do a lot of public appearances, public speaking. a lot of time it is outdoor, do it with a quick google search but i have a team. stuart: are you still receiving death threats? threats of any kind? >> yes. you would think it would have settled down but as time goes on, the conflict is taking so much media persons, they are
10:22 am
still angry. we see them break into the white house. stuart: has anybody come after you literally? >> no. someone spit on me last week. but actually caught with a gun and tried to kill me, thank god, no. stuart: come back soon please. we want to hear your views on all kinds of things. appreciate it. the fifth annual fox nation patriot awards in nashville, tennessee. madison alworth, what can we expect? madison: we can expect great performances, a packed crowd in nashville, senate -- tennessee. we are the grand old opry. that is iconic when it comes to country music. this brand has been exciting the crowds for 95 years. tonight it is going to be home
10:23 am
to the fox nation patriot awards. i'm here hosting the red carpet event, 6:30 eastern. we will have all those awardees making their way to the carpet along with a special guest. riley gains is that i your program a couple times, and activist the will be joining us. we will have actor dennis quaid who has a new show on fox nation called top combat pilots. we will have john rich, the country artist. the real stars of this show will be the every day americans who've shown a dedication to the nation. they will be honored tonight. what i love about this, they did extraordinary things not expecting recognition but that is what they deserve and are going to get at the patriot awards. the red carpet is going to start at 6:30 eastern to 7:30 on fox nation and don't forget to tune into that but just a half-hour later, everything will be set and we will be at
10:24 am
the award show running from 8 to 10 p.m. pm eastern on fox nation. we've been here all week, nashville has been incredible, very exciting space to be in for the fifth annual awards, the year for the show. big experience and it is one that we won't forget. back to you. kelly: the and you will have a busy day and that is the way it is. great stuff, thanks for being with us, see you again soon. the new york post is reporting squad members receive campaign donations from a nonprofit with ties to hamas. pew research found one third of adults under 30 are getting their news from tiktok. is this a problem? brent bozell deals with it next. ♪ ♪
10:25 am
(adventurous music) ♪ ♪ ♪ be ready for any market with a liquid etf. get in and out with dia. the new dexcom g7 sends your glucose numbers to your phone and watch, so you can always see where you're heading, without fingersticks. dexcom g7 is the most accurate cgm. so, you can manage your diabetes with confidence. ♪ ♪ businesses need 5g solutions today. that's why they choose t-mobile for business. las vegas grand prix chose t-mobile to help power operations for one of the world's largest racing events.
10:26 am
10:28 am
10:29 am
lauren: intel like there third-party chip manufacturing omma they say it's getting traction and they expect new customers and new product launches the next 6 months. there price target is $50. stuart: how many times that i see on this program on live television i should have bought that thing but it was 28, 29. lauren: you might have time. stuart: what is with children's clothes. >> stock is now 26%. they say their quarterly results were impacted bore more expensive costs of distribution and expect those expensive items to continue to be expensive in the current holiday quarter. stuart: williams-sonoma. anytime you quote this company we have a producer who wouldn't go because they are $40 bachelors said he was outraged at this 15 years ago. lauren: they are quite expensive but they do work. so stock is up 4. 5%, this too is a new high for
10:30 am
williams-sonoma. it's like a mixed bag, they say revenue for the are will fall from 10 to 12%, it's terrible but margins are expected to improve, higher margins often translate into higher earnings, shares are higher up 40% this year and as noted this is a new high. stuart: congresswoman rashida tlaib is refusing to walk back or anti-semitic rhetoric including the from the river to the see chant. hillary vaughan with us. you asked her about her anti-semitic remarks. what did she tell you? >> reporter: not much. congresswoman rashida tlaib was censured for her use of the phrase from the river to the sea which is used as a rallying cry by terrorists to call for the genocide of the jewish people but even after she was censured she has continued to defend and double down on the phrase calling it an aspirational call for freedom even after the white house said that phrase can be anti-semitic.
10:31 am
>> they regret using the phrase from the river to the sea, used by terrorists a car for the genocide of of the jewish people, do you regret using it. the white house says that phrase can be anti-semitic. are you anti-semitic, congresswoman? are you anti-semitic, congresswoman? are you anti-semitic congresswoman tlaib? are you anti-semitic, coggeshall and tlaib? are you anti-semitic congress woman tlaib? >> reporter: her silence comes as the new york post reports group that gave small donations to progressive members of congress calling for cease-fire like tlaib as well as a lot omar, cory bush and ayanna presley is now under presentation by the attorney general in virginia. the educational foundation known as american muslims for palestine is being investigated for allegedly giving money to terrorist organization, the attorney general's office
10:32 am
announcing the attorney general will investigate allegations the organization may have used funds raised for impermissible purposes under state law including benefiting or providing support to terrorist organizations. we reached out to the group for comment but have not heard back. stuart: changing the subject. one third of us adults under 30 are now getting their news from tiktok. i don't see the expression on brent bozell's face. americans under the age of 30 getting news from tiktok, is that a problem? >> it is. let's find out what we are talking about. information and news are blending into one thing. you and i are having a discussion analyzing get a report that made news. that's the way we are today. when it is one third of people say they get their news from tiktok it is far more than that because they are getting their information which to them is
10:33 am
news. the numbers are the same for facebook, actually higher for twitter. this is important because tiktok is owned by the chinese government. the chinese are the number one enemy of the united states. using it while playing with their algorithms to mess with the american society, stealing all the data. it is so serious that senator josh valley has called for federal legislation to ban tiktok. numerous republicans have joined in this and this is the noteworthy thing. on the other side of the coin, president biden's campaign has announced they are going to use tiktok and use tiktok influencers to reach young people in his reelection campaign. stuart: would there not be a political price to be paid and an economic price to be paid
10:34 am
for banning tiktok? the political price is many young people use it and suddenly banned from using it they will take it out on the party which banned it. the secondly, there must be tens of millions of businesses in america run in part on tiktok. ban it and they lose that business, economically. >> the economic price is okay because they will just go somewhere else and there will be the others. will there be a political price to pay? may be and if it is, i take my hat off to the republicans. willing to pay a price to ban a various operation that is undermining the united states and owned by the greatest enemy of the united states. stuart: but tiktok is good. it is efficient. it's algorithms work. i have relatives who do business on tiktok and they do
10:35 am
business on tiktok because it is good. should we banned them when they are good at beating the competition? i go back to that. there's a price to be paid for doing that. >> the good on things that don't matter to him, we are raised in business but they are not good when they are playing with algorithms. there's 10 times as much information on tiktok that praises hamas than there is that praises israel. if that isn't algorithm manipulation, the audiences are younger people. that's the influencing business. that's how they are being influenced and i think it is a very dangerous thing. if there weren't the chinese government i would put them in the same boat as facebook and tiktok and everyone else. i would not be in favor of banning them. i would be in favor of another thing but not banning them. tiktok is different.
10:36 am
they are owned by the greatest enemy of the united states. i don't trust the chinese on anything. stuart: you made your case, thank you very much. come back soon. now there's this. nikki haley is walking back her claim that all people should be verified on social media. what is she saying about it now? ashley: she's walking that statement back at least partially. he proposed social media companies ban people from posting anonymously for national security reasons saying all social media users must be verified. it was in response to a rise in anti-semitism but it triggered backlash among conservatives who said you can't just squash free-speech in any form especially through government regulations. her presidential primary rival ron santos jumped on it calling the proposal dangerous and unconstitutional and compared
10:37 am
it to the chinese communist government. she suffered to stand but recent polls show desantis starting to slip a little with haley closing in on second place. you can expect more of this. stuart: should everyone be verified? >> it makes sense from a safety security perspective but if you are in the gop primary, the party of freedom of association, freedom of religion, freedom period, that was an unforced error on her part. it left an opening for the run desantises of the world to chip away at her that she wants to not be anonymous. so many founding fathers were anonymous in the way they proposed our democracy. she put herself in an untenable position. but don't you want to know if you are the government going to find a terrorist who posted anonymously, you want to track that. there is a delicate balance.
10:38 am
america needs to figure it out. stuart: thanks. new york police rolled out there police robots, transit stations. not all new yorkers are balding and back. senator joe manchin says he will do anything to help the country including running the president. how bad with that hurt biden or trump. that story is next. ♪
10:42 am
10:43 am
primary candidate posting on x which used to be twitter, where is the accountability for years of losing? 2018, 2020, 2022, now 2023. vivek ramaswamy is asking supporters to add their names to a list on a fire ron a website that he is paying for. ronna mcdaniel hit back at vivek ramaswamy after the third debate, said this guy needs a headline to make a low polling as argued republican on republican infighting is hurting the gop. his popularity has slipped following his debate performances. stuart: democrat senator joe manchin is not rolling out of 2024 run. >> i will do what i can tell my country. does that mean you would consider it? every american should consider it. if they are in a position to save the country. stuart: do you think he is going to run it if he does how
10:44 am
would that affect the race? >> i think he's going to run. here's how would affect the race. i don't know one republican who doesn't like donald trump who's going to say joe manchin is a great alternative. that said, there are a lot of democrats the don't like president biden and might say manchin is not bad. at least he is not trump. you may not be voting for trump if you hate president biden, a vote for manchin but giving of the rope to manchin and taking it to biden. in a swing state that could give trump the advantage. i think it will help trump. stuart: next one for you. one of president biden's judicial nominees was stumped when asked to explain different legal terms. >> what is collateral, if you don't just tell me. >> i certainly do know. the bright light at the moment are -- >> what's the difference between a stay order and an
10:45 am
injunction? >> i'm not sure i can give you the -- >> tell me about the multi-district litigation statute. >> not extreme the failure with the multidistrict litigation. stuart: you were a lawyer. how bad was that? >> that is bad. if you ask these questions are by stumbled, i haven't practiced since 2,000 date. that individual, not only has been on the bench but for a high level junction where you make decisions that impact everybody's lives, not just one case here and there. that judge, or excuse is i only did criminal law. you need to know that because when you are on the bench he will have multidistrict litigation. it happens all the time. you are dealing with attorneys general, potentially suing other states. it is very embarrassing. the overall take away, this is what happens when you hire people and select people based
10:46 am
on checking boxes. stuart: think that was identity? lauren: 110%. blue and check the market. one hour of business, not much price change the dow is down 106 points. walmart is a dow stock, way down 7% lower. and it is dead flat. don't forget to send in your friday feedback. for varneyviewers, we talked about porch pirates. stuart: without a doormat. they are stealing from the delivery trucks. we will be back.
10:49 am
you want to be able to provide your child with the tools or resources they need. with reliable internet at home, through the internet essentials program, the world opened up. fellas, fellas. that's how my son was able to find the hidden genius project. we wanted to give y'all the necessary skills to compete with the future. kevin's now part of this next generation of young people who feel they can thrive. ♪ ♪ the power goes out and we still have wifi to do our homework. and that's a good thing? great in my book! who are you? no power? no problem.
10:50 am
10:51 am
stuart: crime crisis, thousands of product at a chanel store, this is the second time it was robbed. ashley: absolutely. groups of thieves helping themselves thousands of dollars, all of the merchandise fixed security ropes. the smash and grab, took off, dropping purses along the way, from 3 to $11,000, that's why they were targeted. it appears to be effective. there wrapping packages, a thief drove off with the entire truck.
10:52 am
>> reporter: we talked about porch pirates, swiping packages, thieves are going straight to the source. on memphis, saturday, police say a group of cars blocked a fedex delivery truck, a swarm of people broken to the truck stealing $100,000 worth of other people's deliveries. when police arrive they saw multiple vehicles leaving the area and driving recklessly at multiple boxes with various items all over the road. here in dc, the incident you were referencing. a man pulled a gun on and hijacking amazon delivery driver. police say he carjacked another vehicle, he was trying to get away from the cops. he led them on an intense chase but they surrounded and
10:53 am
arrested that man. a new gallup poll shows 63% of americans say the us crime problem is extremely or very serious. they or someone in their household have been the victim of a crime. republican lawmakers blame rising crime on progressive district attorneys and many received campaign contributions from george soros's packs which an analysis of from the conservative media research center says soros's son alex will be worse than his dad. alex soros took over his father's nonprofit over the society foundations over the summer. alex soros says he's more political than his dad and his social media profiles are filled with pictures of world leaders in the united states and abroad. stuart: this seems to be new to
10:54 am
me. organized mobs rampaging through stores and taking truckloads of stuff. i've not seen this before in america until the last couple years. >> the latest escalation we've seen in america. why is it happening? back in the day three years ago we stopped prosecuting theft in stores. we are going to go to people's porches and steal things. stop prosecuting that because the people owning the homes don't want to confront the people because they could get shot. what is the neck level after that? going after the trucks which amazon, target, the owners of these trucks tell the drivers don't confront, we don't want the liability. the police officers are hamstrung by the da's office, the soros element grady trouble explained, part of continuing cycle. if we had just prosecuted petty crime in the beginning, broken windows in the 90s we wouldn't
10:55 am
be in the situation we are in today. lauren: it is organized. not just someone seeing the stray package. this is planned. they know they can get away with it. stuart: the new york police department has police robots and transit stations. how are subway riders responding. >> could be a guy or girl, patrolling the busiest subway station, and reaction in the big apple. >> whatever they can do to make us safer. it is like a conductor. >> to keep a human safe, who did not have good intentions. >> makes me feel safer. >> anything that helps the nypd has got to be a plus.
10:56 am
>> reporter: important to note there are officers, during a shift from 12:00 am to 6:00 a.m. :00 am. stuart: we are out of time but thank you very much for staying with me the entire hour. still ahead, we are down 80 points on the dow but a lot of that is made up by walmart. s&p down 7. still ahead, jason chafe its on a new fox news poll showing trump, desantis, and haley are beating biden in a matchup. jason rantz on biden's israel policy dividing democrats. joseph smith will tell us how remote work is killing businesses. the 11:00 am our is next.
10:57 am
10:59 am
11:00 am
- it allowed me to live in my home... and not have to pay payments. - [narrator] if you're 62 or older and own your home, you could access your equity to improve your lifestyle. a reverse mortgage loan eliminates your monthly mortgage payments and puts tax-free cash in your pocket. call the number on your screen. - it was the best thing i've ever done, and- - really? - yes, without a doubt! - just like these folks, aag can show you how a reverse mortgage loan uses your built-up home equity to give you tax-free cash. - it's a good thing. - why don't you get the facts? like these folks did. - [narrator] call right now to receive your free, no-obligation info kit. call the number on your screen. >> we're looking at this election and operating off the assumption we'll have a normal election
79 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on