tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business July 24, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT
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stuart: another good one from our producers. the ocean state is which state's nickname? you have the honor of being first, ashley. ashley: they are all on the ocean but i will go with number 2, rhode island. lauren: i second that, rhode island. stuart: i'm going for delaware. reveal please. the answer is rhode island. the smallest state in the union, boasts 400 miles of coastline, adopted the name in 1972 to promote tourism. the ocean state in rhode island. quick check of the markets. we've got a selloff going on. the biggest losers on the s&p, going down in percentage terms. time is up for us but coast-to-coast starts now.
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lauren: a major selloff going on because of two magnificent seven stocks, magnificence hitting the other side. to get to what this portends. maybe susan lee was first telegraph this when she talked to the honchos and maybe maybe previewing this with better than expected numbers. >> reporter: magnificence all year long. the main track after two members hinted things are okay, not necessarily great and google's parent company alphabet made more profit to start the quarter but youtube missed. cloud sales crossed $10 billion for the first time in 1/4 but they are spending a ton of money on a i. alphabet's president said they
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would spend at least $12,000,000,001/4, they continue to invest in the technological infrastructure and that will be at or above $12 billion. that's almost $50 billion across silicon valley. that is the amount big tech companies are spending to win and stay in this arms race. i had to ask about the biden exit this we can. he said we work closely with each us administration. no matter who is in office we are always looking for good opportunities. regulatory scrutiny is not new for us but we managed regulatory reviews. another big name, elon musk, was asked about politics on the earnings call. has a reported 50% drop in
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quarterly profit and musk was asked what would happen to chesler if trump wins and ends electric car subsidies. >> some impact, devastating for our competitors. long-term it will help us. >> reporter: that political uncertainty is why numerous company executives i have spoken to told me that is why they are holding back on spending, hiring plans at least for now until they see who wins the white house because that has huge implications on taxes, spending, the regulatory environment, whether they can do deals and a mandate can happen again. i feel like there is a holdback from those magnificent seven names. next week we will hear from apple and the like. they are cutting back and holding on spending.
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adam: the one thing that worries me, is it broader than pouncing on an opportunity to take some profits? it is overextended to issues and stocks and companies doing just fine. susan: those earnings were okay, not great, lackluster given you did see google do better than anticipated. the mag 7 names, and the s&p is up 15 points. if you take away seven names it wouldn't be up, now it is a bit of taking get money off the table to see who gets into the white house and if they can
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reinvest back in. neil: thank you. speaking of who's going to be the next president, edward lawrence is standing outside the white house. the present president is staying through january 2025, than the question is whether it's kamala harris or donald trump. biden will speak to the nation, edward lawrence and what you might be in for. >> we will hear from president biden, he will talk about, and still run the country. this is what we heard from the president and the first few weeks of july. >> president biden: depends what the lord almighty tells me.
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there' s no way you can win. no one is saying that. no paul says that. >> one thousand% in your word see you on the ballot. >> reporter: it changed when the president got covid and this image flashed to the world, forced him out and appointed the vice president as the nominee. the press secretary on the view danced around. >> he will address what is in his heart. he understands where people are, having done this 36 years as a senator, 8 years as vice president, he gets where we are as a country. >> reporter: the president dodged questions on his way back to washington dc.
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>> why did you drop out if you liked it? a difficult decision to make. >> we may get some clarity at 8:00 pm eastern time. you see this on fox business, no need to change the channel. neil: thank you, edward lawrence following those developments tonight. in the meantime, there's this issue of benjamin netanyahu speaking for the fourth time he has spoken to a joint session of congress, breaks the record from winston churchill. this is going on outside the capital anymore. lucas tomlinson is out there.
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>> getting noisy on the corner, constitution outside the east wing at national gallery, most of these people are not selling capitalism. we've seen major sponsors, the party of socialism and liberation, communist group, speakers on stage at this major pro-palestinian anti-israel rally, want to see our us arms sales to israel, getting vocal. and lawmakers skipping the address, running security for benjamin netanyahu's visit, at 2:00. 500 cops short, we've seen 100 cops and the nypd in new york
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spread around the scene, hundreds of cops and nypd but what we are seeing here is people angry about us policy towards israel. they are angry but so far we've not seen any violence, just speakers on the stage behind me. people of all ages, people here to show their support. there are some vocal critics, most notable would be vice president kamala harris. >> very busy, very loud capitol hill. to indianapolis, kamala harris is busy on the campaign stump, the better part of 16 years, to tip that event that will feature minority women and appealing to that base as she
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intends to do and other battleground states. and indiana is doable to win. that is in the eye of the beholder, a lot of money to get going get. scored more than half the delegates necessary to secure the democratic nomination at the convention a month from now, the water journal editorial board member, democratic pollster sean cooperman. she is off and running get, the remarks she was making in wisconsin. and convicted felon, donald trump, that is the way she's pastoring this. >> she has an advantage no one
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ran against her. it was a coronation. extraordinary to get on the presidential ticket, never got a single democratic vote, it is interesting. right now democrats saw - unified republican party, they want that. kamala harris likes to say, talk about being unburdened by the past but she's very much burdened. a month ago people were saying the only worse choice than joe biden was kamala harris because her approval ratings were so low and suddenly she's a savior. i am not sure of that. we will start hearing leaks from bidenworld, how they wouldn't have withdrawn from the race if they thought kamala harris was going to do so poorly.
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lauren: i want to pick up what you said with carly cooperman, it is uncharted territory to be and where you have someone who didn't appear on the ballot with president biden as vice president and now they dust off these books among democrats when the president is stepping down i can understand that, apparently there is a feature in the discussion of this, i joke to make the point, democrats said the same about gerald ford when he was appointed vice president, richard nixon, it is what it is, how she's starting this off, some republicans say are not, off to the races here, does she pose a more genuine threat at least to stop the fanning off of loyal democratic voters who might think twice about wandering far. what do you think?
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>> that's exactly right. i think -- neil: we had some audio issues. she's scoring well in flash polls, not all reliable but indicating a slight honeymoon period. with that honeymoon be more pronounced if republicans highly force president biden to step down for the presidency, will she really have a honeymoon period than and that would be more threatening to them? >> it might. if the operative thing with kamala harris is the past. if you want to get beyond joe biden, and she's appointed orders are.
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after the root cause to the american public, that isn't one thing that she didn't handle. when people become appointed with her issues, there's an ad now that dave mccormick running against bob casey has put up against bob casey but tying her to kamala harris and how left-wing, and and she's san francisco democrat. it is a mistake for her to boycott benjamin netanyahu. that is something a senator does, score cheap points, as a presidential candidate she can be there, so express disagreements but i'm not sure it is a good look.
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neil: i want to thank you. we are trying to patch these up literally but good having you both. there so much going on on capitol hill. the fbi director, finding out more about the trump assassin want to be and what he had on his phone and what he was looking up in google. and the assassination, the texas book depository and kennedy's car back then, he was researching that. (grandpa vo) i'm the richest guy in the world.
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at the shooter's computer, laptop belongs to the shooter. july 6th, a whole week before the shooting happened, this suspect searched a very scary and peculiar question. >> the last couple days, found that from our review to your devices, and analysis of all laptop the investigation ties to the shooter reveals that on july 6th he did a google search for how far away was oswald from kennedy, and obviously significant in terms of his state of mind. >> reporter: that's the same day that it appears the shooter
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registered for the butler rally. there was an audible gasp when director christopher wray talked about this. he said the weapon had a collapsible stop which means it could have been more compact, why it was easily observed by people on the ground but still no motive, the fbi doesn't know why the shooter did this. ray replied why they were tracking him, chairman jordan asked if they had access to communications between law enforcement christopher wray, we don't have an answer to that. an interesting moment how the shooter was preparing and planning using a drone. >> around 3:50 pm, 4:00, that window on the day of the
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shooting the shooter was flying the drone around the area, 11 minutes, the 3:50, 4:00, in the vicinity, to hunter yards away. that's important information. neil: >> reporter: the hearing has been interrupted for votes, it will be interrupted again in an hour for this. benjamin netanyahu remarks on capitol hill, this could go on into the evening. adam: scary stuff, reaction from carlos jimenez. i know you went to the butler site, a few interesting things on your own. what the fbi director uncovered, the shooter's phone,
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computer, google records and the like. this was well-planned, well researched. >> we know why he has a range found her, wanted to find out how far oswald was from kennedy or how far he would be from donald trump. this is pretty methodical. checking it out, trying to find a good sideline, finding that sideline on the roof of the building where he had a clear shot, may not understand him but looks like a pretty intelligent individual. he was planning his getaway creating a diversion actor in his mind he successfully assassinated donald trump. he planned this out and the lapses in the security helped him in his quest and allowed
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him to take those shots not only at donald trump but also to kill an individual in the crowd and wounded two others. there's a lot of lapses, even though he was highly intelligent, to do what he did. neil: we know since the secret service has recommended against outdoor rallies and the trump campaign will stop them for now, what do you think of that? >> it is difficult to account for every single thing but in this case it was evident they needed to protect the roofs of all the buildings to the right. there's a water tower they could have placed an individual to look over the entire area and had we had personnel, never would've gotten away with it because they would have been
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seen right away, it's difficult logistically on the outside and a could be as cautious as possible, good idea but it doesn't excuse the lapses that happened. i don't understand why the fbi director doesn't have the communications between all the agencies. all that is on tape and that's the rundown on who knew what, when, when was that communicate and to who was it communicated and did people fail to take action at the time these were communicated to him. 20 minutes before donald trump took the stage if that was the case and the secret service knew that why did they allow donald trump to take the stage when they knew somebody was highly suspicious, they were looking for him and pulled people away from their stations to look for this individual, why was he allowed on stage? it will be investigated with the new task force set up by
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private speaker and minority leader hakeem jeffries. neil: the secret service looking for a new director but they are under homeland security, that was born after 9/11. do you think we should start looking at that? >> don't think, everyone is under one security umbrella, we need to look at each individual agency and what they've been focusing on. there were security lapses of the should never happened under a professional security operation. why have they lost some of their mojo and how do we get that back to make sure they are the premier security service in the world not just here but in the world.
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for the task force, what happened, how could it be avoided, one of the steps we need to take to make sure the agency comes back to being what we the american people deserve. neil: good seeing you again, what went wrong and what went down, you made clear a lot of disturbing things that could have been avoided. what has happened with delta post this outage? delta disproportionately affected the and a lot of people wondering why and how it happened to this airline and how to prevent it happening again? pete buttigieg coming up. ♪
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and always good to see you but not good to see you this. >> interest rates dropped 20 to 30 basis points, and homebuyers on that. and we might see so many, in this election. it is gripping the national psyche that occurred. neil: it's a case of existing owners. some have low mortgages, they would buy something similar somewhere else and don't want to do that. >> inventory will remain very low for a long time just because people who get a 3%
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rate don't give up that loan as suggested. we know that's the state to play but even in that context affordability is a problem. 2 thirds of those things are on the market. half those listings are contemplating a price cut. might not be enough. people are struggling to get into housing because incomes have not kept up with prices. the next 5 or 10 years, we might be in a low sales volume market. may be the election will make a difference as people get to the basic ideas of commerce but i think housing is going to be low-volume for a little while now. neil: does it matter who is in the white house to foster
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better real estate environment or doesn't follow waves and interest rates and things like that? >> that's a complicated question. different people have different beliefs which president would be best for the economy. we have to get the deficit under control. part of what's driving interest rate is inflation but that has been tamed. the issue is the government is borrowing so much money. republicans want to cut spending and taxes and need to do a little bit of both. that's the biggest factor on the housing market, can we get the deficit under control. can the fed do its job and political pressure. of the free world has a hand in that and that depends on your politics.
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neil: you didn't answer directly which shows your saphenous -- savviness. thank you very much. a mine field going on for technology stocks, technology certainly taking it on the chin. this started with what we got from tesla and alphabet, two of the magnificent seven stocks hurting technology in general. is this overkill? what do you think? >> it's a good time to reassess what's going on with ai investments. and who's going to make money, a couple companies have shown,
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adobe is making money, microsoft will see if they do friday but it is not a lot of companies but everyone is rushing into this, and in exchange for data to make more money. we will see how business models play outgoing forward. neil: the pressure is on other companies to put up or shut up. alphabet did put up but investors said shut up anyway because it's not good enough and we are worried where we are going and other stocks, year to date a great run but is that a question now? what do you think? >> in the short term it is in question and you see why alphabet was trying to buy security company dealing in closes but also looking at different angles. doing stuff with ads, ai and cloud isn't necessarily enough,
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people are doubling down on their business model. the amedeo activities going on in the market is crazy at the moment. at least 100 deals people are trying to do because they are trying to find the next set of growth trackers. neil: i don't know how you play the upcoming election, investors neither red nor blue, they got a lot of it and did very well. bill clinton and barack obama did well. they did well under the last president. how does that extend to technology and the election shakeup with president biden stepping out of the race, is this an unknown variable that gives them pause? because they don't like uncertainty? >> most people say tech is my
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flight to safety. just as many people look at tech as this is the growth vehicle. when they say there's a rotation out of tech it is usually a temporary rotation because the few categories or asset classes make double-digit returns even though they are worth trillions of dollars and tech is the only one with that scale so at the end of the day i tell people if you have an opportunity to buy at a lower price or dip in that market, you won't regret it in three to five years. neil: could i raise the crown strike issue with you, the transportation secretary coming up on this. they are implementing a new check system or software that checks the software, updates for the software but the fact of the matter is i'm wondering if this is one of the factors bedeviling tech stocks, ai, high-tech security issues, when
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something goes bad, it goes very bad. >> it really reflects on the scale of where technology is, something that is a single point of failure, no redundancy, it impacts almost everybody. the same if someone took a company and held it for ransom in terms of cyber ransom or cybersecurity attack, having resilience in every organization is important. if you are depending on one update for your windows machines that you use for all your stuff for scheduling, being able to put schedules on the board for clients to see or to book things you have one point of failure and every chief security officer is looking at that trying get to make sure they don't have single points of failure. neil: we will see how this sorts out. they've done well year to date
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and double market run for technology. these developments are rattling. the transportation secretary of the united states is not so much focused on investors and what is rattling them. among those flying delta since we had the crown strike issue, had a huge global it failure. they have a long way to go. how do you see it now. your department is looking into this but what did you learn? >> we opened an investigation into delta. we are gathering data from airline and passengers. every buddy sawbuck crowd strike problem affecting everybody in the world and crossing the airline sector. every other airline got in his feet within a day or two, delta in the opposite direction is why we are paying special attention to two things. how did the breakdown happen?
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why did they get worse while other airlines got better and cancellations and delays, 6000 last time we checked. secondly, what is going on with customer service? things happen, a set of delays that need to take more calls with more pressure on customer service but we've seen reports of people waiting 8 hours to get on the phone, talk to people who waited in line more than other people served by a single agent at an airport using the chat function, not getting a response to a respectable time. so we need to understand how that happened and investigating with accountability over the breakdown as we've done in other cases. neil: it seems these airlines take turns being the focus on the moment, delta surprised a lot of people.
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there were high marks for customer service but spirit and southwest, what makes it happen where they have these rolling horror shows. >> causes differ from airline to airline. it had a lot to do with particular systems. it's a similar pattern where we have a big epic winter storm. every airline got knocked back but the rest got on their feet except for one. this points to the need for more resilience in how airlines set themselves up, the capacity to recover. in the case of delta, totally different from southwest a lot of issues had to do with their grew system. the way they move the right people in the right place. we are not going to prescribe a business strategy or a tech strategy. we hold airlines accountable for results.
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we sat on the floor, we set a standard whether it's customers being able to reach you or how you treat people for the cancellation. you need to meet this standard and do what industry does best which is figure out how, they have not successfully done that in this case which is a reason we are opening this investigative action. neil: other airlines talked about demand is strong but not as strong as they thought. i wonder if a great running travel period is a reflection of a slowdown in the economy crimping for funds. this goes outside the area. >> we are seeing extraordinary volumes breaking an all-time record. looking at that 3 million mark,
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the most the tsa ever screened, every holiday we tracked thanksgiving, pretty robust but we may see some settling. the balance of business and leisure travel has not fully found what it's feature is going to be, we may see some settling though the picture is really robust and also from an infrastructure side as we are ready to fund airports expanding, concourses growing, over the median in a long-term and seeing major increases in passengers flying, not to say there won't the ups and downs. we are mainly concerned with safety and customer protection
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is there on other parts of the dot. neil: have you talked to president biden about this? here's what we are doing with delta and what is going on, a lot of attention to the president's addressed to the nation tonight? >> haven't talked about the delta issue, but i'm sure it will be on his line. southwest airlines issue having a lot of questions. i'm looking forward to tonight's address, first time america gets a chance to see this extraordinary and difficult and selfless choice over the weekend and on the government side of things, and with thousands of career staffers on the political side. we have a job to do.
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we are proud and announcements about investments in long beach and regulatory in the delta investigation. keep up the pace, there are six more months in the term of this administration. what we will see his determination to make the most of every day of the turn. neil: did you ever pick up on cognitive decline? people saying this was in front of the american people and others. what do you think? >> i've never been somebody to say he's not 10 years older than he was ten years ago but anytime i needed something from him, decision, guidance, direction, i was able to count on that leadership. last time i was closely day today, the baltimore bridge collapse.
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it is very direct to the response. a lot of others too. neil: your colleagues on the other side of the aisle have been saying get you will not be the democratic nominee. you are not sticking around through next january. you should step down as president. what do you think of that? >> choosing not to campaign and participate in the campaign is a totally different choice. one of the things he has emphasized is part of what he's doing is leaving politics aside and concentrating on the presidency where there is more he wants to achieve, very rare but there have been times when sitting president some decided not to run again. at least in modern times, they finished up their terms.
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>> sometimes not good for the party and the election, they tend to lose but see what happens here. i don't want to go into politics but because of what the things j.d. vance is saying about you i wanted to see if you could react to that referring to childish couples in the democratic party, the powers that be, he made similar remarks about kamala harris, seemed to be referencing you. what did you think of that? >> i don't know what kind of guy goes around commenting on other people's families and family structures. when he said that we were in the middle of an adoption journey which led to us having an incredible change in our lives, raising a son and daughter and beautiful twins. when he said that it hadn't happened yet but we had been through some tough reversals and that adoption.
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i don't know why you would bring that into it. if we have a policy disagreement let's talk about policy disagreements would going after people's kids, attacking people for how their family is set up, this is a country where i would like to think, nevermind campaigns in politics, as people, and policymakers who sometimes disagree we can lay off each other's families. neil: but he didn't. when it came to the vice president, referred to her as a childless cat lady, what did you think? >> again, i think that's beneath the dignity of anybody who seeks to present themselves as a us senator or any kind of leader of this country. i will leave it at that. it speaks for itself. neil: i see where i am going with this. your name has been mentioned on the shortlist of those she might consider for vice president. try to ask this in a weird way,
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could the transportation department afford to lose you if you join kamala harris's ticket? >> i admire the creativity of the question. i can't talk about campaigns and elections. as a government matter, proud to work with the leadership of the president and vice president. neil: one curious question you wisely avoided. when you fly. you fly commercial a lot. you are recognized, recognizable face. when they see you, are they frantic? is the airline and question the pilot, the flight attendant, better not screw up, or people on the plane that there's a delay, start railing at you? >> i have great conversations with passengers, pilots, flight attendants. i ask flight attendants how
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things are going and as you might imagine passengers are naturally share their experiences, sometimes a lot of questions too. some people look at me, i know the flight will be on time and the reality is the flight is no more or less likely but part of a job like this is it is important to eat what you cook. when doing the work as an airline regulator, my experience as a passenger, whether they are next to me on a plane or passing notes people have passed me notes on everything from napkins to sick bags telling me their thoughts. i try to take that in. neil: you should see my emails, secretary. pete buttigieg, transportation secretary of the united states. the selloff continues in tech stocks and nasdaq. delta, there is that, after this.
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>> still going to donate to trump? $45 million? i'm sorry? >> at no point did i say that. neil: i didn't hear that but i think elon musk was saying he wasn't donating $45 million, committing $45 million but i didn't hear that as well. this has been an aggressive back and forth to how into donald trump he is. ashley: like a mcdonald's drive-through speaker. elon musk is a trump supporter,
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he believes, make america greater. this pack, super pac called america says he has values he supports, meritocracy and individual freedom but he's not going to donate $45 billion a month which was reported in the wall street journal, donald trump referred to that this past week, never told me about it, that is not true but musk says he will donate money but certainly not at the $45 million a month level. neil: that is ashley webster. you are talking seriously. thank you, the selloff continues on the corner of wall and broad, nothing to do with ashley webster everything to do with concerns about technology now.
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