tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business July 25, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT
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lauren: 186,282 miles per hour. stuart: okay, genius. >> anyone ever abstain? i will go with that. stuart: i know the answer and here it is. 186,282 mi. /s. thank you very much indeed. i got that right too. stuart: it clicked in from my high school years. 60 years ago. the fastest quantifiable speed in the universe. the fastest a man-made vehicle has ever gone was 165,000 vials per hour, that was the nasa gino spacecraft. that was a good question. time is up. neil is waiting to take it over. it's yours, neil. neil: it is per second or per hour?
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stuart: per second. >> galaxies that are millions of miles away from us, never guess it. be one very profound, good stuff. neil: i try where i can. great show. almost seems like the speed of the market because we've had fast market conditions up a lot, down a lot but it was all over the map, up all 3 market averages, markets trying to make a comeback after the tech pounding we got yesterday that all the market averages. do you know the magnificent seven over just the last couple of weeks of lost one.7 in market value extending to tech stocks, the market as a whole and are is a leadership change going on. whether that means they get back into technology stock holdings, anyone's guess.
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let's go to larry glaser, i've told you not to make a big deal day by day or minute by minute of markets but i recognize the importance of this day psychologically for people who own a lot of big tech issues and getting scared now. what are you telling them? >> it has been so longer since we saw market volatility we almost forgot what it feels like and market volatility is normal, part of the action but when you go over a year without a 2% pullback like we did when you get when it feels much worse than it is, the economic data isn't the problem. if you look at gdp coming in pretty good, you can blame election anxiety, you can blame the fed, you can blame cpi, you can blame overvaluation of tech. regardless corrections, more portly rotations which you talked about are healthy for the market because they create opportunities for investors. as you said, taylor two markets. the momentum trade led by
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nvidia, the equal weight or average stock in the market is up over that time and some even more so, the rule of thumb, if it didn't do well the last 12 months it is doing okay right now but we will stick with that theme for the election because there's lots of opportunities for the economy to hold together here. neil: we forget in the middle of what the lapin the last couple days the broader market has been seeing and taking advantage of this new rotation as it does broaden out. it is a bumpy broadening out i grant you but what is going on? what do you look for to see if this can sustain itself? >> remind ourselves the baseline of normal. a 10% correction happens every 12 months, 15% to 20% correction happens every 2 to 3 years. we are overdue for these pullbacks. it is not normal to have a one
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sector of the market-leading everything. it's not healthy economy our healthy market. as it broadens out it's healthier dynamic. you have to shoot the leadership of the market to broaden the rally so small-cap companies do benefit from the policies we are talking about, they do benefit from shifting sentiment in the country, they benefit from protectionism in some of these other issues but more importantly i think it is an issue of valuation and distribution. we had it easy, the lazy market. tech dragged the market up, now the average stock will do better than the market average. that's a good thing for most people because that is how they are invested. the ai revolution is real. the ai profits revolution maybe not so much. that is what we are seeing get. a lot of capital expenditures for these nvidia chips. these profits are in the future. for other companies they are doing heavy work.
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those are the ones to focus on doing better in the next 12 months. the fed is your friend. about a tailwind in the next couple months. you've got cpi, cpi came in good, things that aren't so bad, we can't invest the way we did in the last few months. neil: well put. another take i have on this, this rally and much of this recovery is what we are willing to spend and do and treat ourselves. when it comes to big vacations americans have been pouring big bucks into having a good time. a big beneficiary has been carnival cruise lines, royal caribbean and other big players. startling performance that eclipsed all the others yet with all the good news and all
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the good guidance there was a selloff in the major cruise players. no matter what if these companies are saying, investors are concerned about the consumer. the president and ceo kind enough to join us, good to have you back. this report, stronger guidance, the expenses were higher than you expected. the wind is at your proverbial cruising back. are you surprised by the market reaction? >> great job with the shipping metaphors. we are surprised by the pullback but that's not within our control. looking at the performance of the company, this quarter
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outperformed the results, not only because of q 2 but how we raise the back half of the year. long-term target financial target program we beat 18 months early and reinstated it evidence, the balance sheet is back to pre-covid levels. we think of the overall story there's a lot of strength from tailwind we are getting from a strong consumer that wants to come and have the best vacation experiences with our brand. we 've not seen a change in the momentum so far. neil: there are a lot of wealthy people out there, not that they have to be wealthy to enjoy your cruise line but the rooms and suites, your most expensive ones, is that this still the case? >> that is less of a case
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today. we do a lot to manage our inventory to maximize the revenue. whether it is the guest that made income of one hundred 50 or household of 500,000 or above across different brands but they are keenly focused on booking vacation experiences further out. they are willing to pay a premium to get that experience. neil: what do you make of the fact that american airlines is cutting its full-year forecasts, delta had separate problems. does that concern you? >> you have consumer discretionary, and it is a huge
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tailwind, healthy value gap. the value gap is propelling crews, and travel leisure industry and for us we are focused on how we grab more share, which is why we are so positioned across our brands. adam: we have the largest cruise ships known to man. if they extended it out, could it fit from new york to london. there's got to be a logistical nightmare to pull off. plans are for more of the same.
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>> we have ships that go from one hundred passengers to 7500 passengers. they are less about size and volume of guests and vacation experience those guests are looking for and larger ships are able to cater to all 5 generations and they can have the best time of their life and come back for meals or whatever they do on ships. we are also building ships that are more than that as well. adam: congratulations on the earnings report. thank you. neil: didn't explain why he was stepping out of the presidential, it does get back
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to what was behind that. people who frequently met with that, an issue with pete buttigieg, transportation secretary. did you ever pick up on that stuff. this was see credited, what do you think? >> he is not 10 years older than he was ten years ago but any time i needed something from him, a decision or his direction i was able to count on that leadership. i was engaging with him at the oval office during the baltimore bridge collapse. i can tell you all through the process he was detail oriented. our department and a lot of others too. neil: i heard from the fbi
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director, no one noticed it except the world at that debate and the president goes on national tv to say i am packing it up. our colleague said in the fullness of time, what triggered that but we don't know it now and the president didn't spell it out last night. >> we were told the remarks last night where the forum for president biden to explain what happened, he was at nato explaining why he was the only one who would be the standard bearer for democrats and had to continue as president and then this covid diagnosis, quarantine and dropout. we are told that kamala harris, the heir apparent to the democratic ticket, watched the president's address from houston. she heard with the rest of us what president biden said, he
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has to step aside to save democracy. >> nothing can come in the way of saving our democracy, that includes personal ambition. we know there's a time and a place through long years of experience in public life. there is also a time and place for new voices, fresh voices, yes, younger voices. that time and place is now. >> reporter: the president says his to do list is pretty long, he can lower costs, grow the economy, call out hate, finish the cancer moonshot and the war in gaza and reform the supreme court. there were family members who watched the beginning of a longer farewell but white house officials have not explained why there was a sudden change of heart. >> ordered white house officials to cover up a declining president? >> that a narrative that you
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love to -- hold on. >> did a press conference with nato and all these things to finish and ten days later i'm dropping out. >> you are asking me two multiple questions. there's been no cover-up. >> reporter: the business of being president continues. is going to have benjamin netanyahu an hour from now and this is such a crazy weird time in american politics, security around the white house campus is as ramped up as i have seen it, since january 6th with a bunch of natural - national guard in town. neil: your too young to remember the peter faulk colombo character saying wait a minute, weren't you just saying a few days prior that you are in this race for the long haul and the back-and-forth of this doesn't add up.
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i don't where you stand politically none of this adds up. >> karine jean-pierre was saying we kept telling you he was going to stay in and drop out, that's the best guidance we were given. this was a closely held decision but it is so different they want us to think he had a sudden change of heart, walk up in the morning and said this thing i have been fighting for my entire life, i am going to give it up. they want us to believe that he could continue as president for another four years but is choosing not to, which is inconsistent with everything he has told us for the last 50 years. neil: are you are missing is the colombo -- i am sure you have something like that. there we go. thank you. great job.
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former pennsylvania congressman, talk about pedigree, chris wilson, wpa intelligence ceo. as a democrat, someone who respects and likes the president, a lot of things just don't add up. why couldn't he just say i felt i could continue in this job, it was going to be an uphill fight convincing others and that is why i am here tonight? >> i think that is what he said in so many words. the reality is june 27th, in that month, he lost his fastball, didn't say that exactly last night but he did say things like i can't let my personal ambition stand in the way of our democracy. his line about kings and dictators do not rule in
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america, we the people do, was really eloquent. it is about the future. he will run through the tape the next six months and hopefully a new generation of leaders leading our country. neil: i get what he is saying about kings and queens, but it doesn't add up to me because you placed your self as someone who wasn't a king or queen or royalty and you felt fit as a duly represented leader, elected that way and nominated by the party that way to carry on the good fight and we are told a few people showing disturbing calls and he's out of it. that is the reason. >> anyone can see biden has been slipping for some time, trying to shake hands with people twice, shake hands with eric, the real question the white house has to answer -- neil: that is a good day for me.
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can't tell you how many times i shake hands with the air but this was a pile on. >> does the air shake back. peter doocy's question to pete buttigieg, when is the last time each member of the cabinet interacted. pete buttigieg admitted it was large around the baltimore bridge collapse, what about last members of the cabinet, who has been directing the cabinet since then and acting, interacting with congress. the first question should be when is the last time they interacted with the president of the united states? democrats have been talking about saving democracy for four years while the elected president is unable to do his job for months if not years. there needs to be an investigation into what unelected personal group of people have taken over the government. kings and queens are unelected. who else's unelected is the democratic nominee for president, kamala harris. she didn't get a single vote in
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the primary, didn't get any vote in 2020 when she ran but they are putting up their version of a king or queen. his line -- neil: she is the backup. the fact of the matter she was elected, you can quibble with that but i question the point chris was raising in the first place, what changed now and whether he was forced into this and what it says about loyalty, one bad debate you are out of there. risk boomeranging on democrats. >> i will say i was on fox and friends two weekends ago, he was speaking on air force one, senator casey and senator fetterman. i say that because this whole thing, he is the president of the united states, no one told him what to do, no one tells the president to do anything.
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is trying to do what is best for the interests of the people of the united states. that is why i think. neil: enough people tell you that it is over. >> on the political side of things, and the numbers for the american people have been dramatic. we talked about the stock market, 40,000, the highest of all time, talked about unemployment, the lowest in five decades, there's a lot of work we have to do, no doubt about it but cannot deny the fact, gas prices are down. hope it will continue to go down, inflation. neil: he shouldn't have left. he shouldn't have left. >> i think it was very
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selfless, putting the country over himself which is hard to do. you know that. neil: i respect what you are saying. a lot of stuff to the colombo point. doesn't add up. >> i know colombo in the rain jacket. neil: you are both younger than i am. thank you. apologize for the brief time here. i want to remind you the markets are all over the map is days but the fact is maybe this whole thing with kamala harris, someone who stopped the support among democratic groups, doesn't know what to make of the election and the outcome. charlie gasparino will dig into it with us here.
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"soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title.
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apart what wall street is doing and what the candidates are doing. charles: not this time. when i talk to people who work on trading desks the deal with people in trading desks what i am hearing now is there is massive amounts of trades trying to figure out which basket of stocks will benefit from a biden presidency first, trump presidency second and now because of the polls, a kamala harris presidency. it is fascinating if you look at wall street research which i do and comes out all the time, they have this thing as a dead heat. everybody, even researchers there are not really republican or conservative saying this thing is a dead heat. they've taken off the table at least for now, things could change, make one false move and polls could shift but as of now it is off the table the republicans will have a clean sweep of congress.
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that was the case before president biden decided not to run. when what everyone is saying is kamala harris is a much better candidate. she can speak on her feet, she has negatives with donald trump has negatives too. this thing is a dead heat and anything could happen. that is why we see wild swings in the markets. markets, retail is involved in the markets more since the lockdowns. trade on your robin hood account. they are very involved in trying to pick apart different trades, the higher volume we've had lately accounts for wild springs because kamala harris just through a monkeywrench into prevailing wisdom of a trump trade which is trump wins, republicans take over the house. that is where we are.
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polls shift, you never know. we are talking dead heat, volatility in the markets -- you got it. neil: thank you. charlie gasparino, one of the best of the best. so much i want to discuss with the chief economist. if you will indulge me on this political question. the markets are beginning to pay more attention to what could be a jump ball election. i wonder what that means for the real estate industry when you hear these reports that folks are holding off looking good for home until the selection is resolved. a good many are talking about
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that. what do you make of it? >> you think the election tends to be more talk than action, we have seen sales slow but i don't think that's the election, that's the macroeconomic condition. mortgage rates remain high and are expected to to decline. a lot of people are moving, waiting for better conditions this fall when the fed cuts interest rates which translate, we don't see that in the data. generally home sales are independent of political and certainty but macroeconomic uncertainty. neil: i spoke to glenn kelman who was talking about this, describing what's going on in housing. i want you to respond to this. >> housing is in a funk even
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though interest rates dropped 20 to 30 basis points, homebuyers on the sidelines. home prices keep rising, as the housing market, we talked to so many homebuyers, what's happening in this election. neil: you might have been more about that, interest rates going one way or the other. he's looking at the psychological impact of homeowners not willing to put their homes up for sale, they have low mortgages and they know it will be a more expensive. if prices slip, where are we on this? real quickly. >> it is more the psychology of
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low mortgage rates, sellers are looking at the numbers, prices are higher but they would need a loan, the phenomena and is keeping some on the sidelines. we are seeing time will improve that. as we get further into the cycle. more homeowners pay down the mortgage balance and more sellers jumping across the market and a number of sellers tick up very slowly. that will help fuel the housing market and alleviate price pressure that we have seen. neil: thank you very much, a sobering read. 10 year note or bonds pay good for a lot of mortgages still staying at 4%. they are as low as they were last week, that is the excuse. more after this. (woman 1 vo) i have inherited the best traditions.
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>> welcome back to cavuto coast-to-coast, house republicans passed a resolution condemning vice president harris for failing to secure the border, 6 democrats voted for us. now the battle is raging whether she was ever put in the position of being border czar. obtaining talking points handed out to democrat lawmakers among them these, vice president harris was never appointed border czar, was not asked to
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lead on the immigration or border policies, she was tasked to lead diplomatic root causes strategies in central america, not policy. democrats are using this language today. >> the vice president was never in charge of the border, she was never in charge of immigration policy. what vice president harris was in charge of, addressing root causes of migration, diplomatic effort in other countries, in the northern triangle. >> reporter: sounds similar. we are watching how the media covers it and if there is a rebranding underway. here's how they reported three years ago, biden taps vp harris to lead response to border challenges, political, biden makes harris the point person on immigration issues amid border surge. axioms's website wrote this line, harris appointed by biden
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as border czar. she becomes a presumptive nominee, ask io's, trump campaign, with the border czar title which never had time, kamala harris was never biden's border czar. here is what she did. we will see if the white house has anything to say about that. harris never met or spoke to the current or previous border patrol chiefs. neil: great reporting on all that. donald trump is ready to take the fight to kamala harris, but two weeks ago in butler, pennsylvania, changed the dynamics of this race. madison owen is in butler county with how important that is now.
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>> all eyes have been here since that tragic event two weeks ago. eyes will be on butler because this could determine the election this november. butler is exactly what you would expect of western pennsylvania. and economy with an emphasis on energy, exploration, agriculture and manufacturing. it is a surprisingly complex place. it has gone twice for donald trump buyer 2 to one margin. >> there's great enthusiasm for trump because he emulates the values of the people who live here. >> reporter: despite that, both parties lead the state and national election could be decided here. >> it is largely because of this steel mill. this plant has been in operation for 100 years. jamie is the third-generation of his family to work at the mill.
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and the department of energy issued a ruling last year that would have rendered its steel unusable because of environmental standards and forced the plant to close. nearly 1500 jobs gone. >> for that to close would be devastating. >> reporter: the biden administration changed the rules in april after receiving blowback, jennifer granholm was sent to celebrate. >> do you think that will help the biden/harris administration to close that gap? >> it will sway some people. >> reporter: trump supporter kim guyer says she's not full. >> they created this crisis during an election year and come in and become the saviors. >> reporter: she questions whether the plant would have been saved at all had it not been an election year. >> i don't think there would be pushback, that i don't know. that is not who we are. we take pride in making things. that's what we do here.
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>> reporter: the question is if that support will transfer to kamala harris with her being the likely democrat nominee. she has spoken out aggressively against fracking and that's another key industry in butler. neil: madison alworth. we talked about the bulls are back and this could be a good sign. we like to get the other view. not buying any of that after this. ♪
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that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title. neil: this is the market in the last 18 hours. coming back after a big beating get, the freefall yesterday, the comeback today, the stock market cycle, editor and publisher not buying the mobile market. >> so happy i could talk with you to revitalize what must
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have been a painfully quiet morning. adam: are part from this, the technicals, what do the technicals tell you? >> the technicals are getting more bearish. you know that 99 and 44, the one fundamental thing i like to look at, at extremes is valuation. valuation is useless usually. when you get to real extremes on the low side or the high side my favorite metric, on july 22nd, on tuesday,
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july 16th, his valuation reached the most, the greatest extreme overvalued in history going back before 1929. he mentioned july 16th and we come down from there. the next 40 or 50%, when it is on current levels. we have a 50% to 70% chance, neil: the price stocks, not in sync with earnings that support
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them. that can't be sustained. a lot of folks, earnings will catch up. and a scar multiple. you don't buy that? >> do me a favor sometime, bring in a mathematician, have them figure out the capitalization of nvidia, microsoft and apple. if you soldier nvidia and apple, you can buy the complete economies of great britain, germany, and italy. everything listed on the stock exchange. with three stocks that is ridiculous. the valuation especially in
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terms of technology, they will provide a lot of help for a lot of companies. you think you can buy the complete economy or large european country, you are smoking a lot of stuff. neil: why don't you get the take. and another 20%. what is -- >> if you go that far, the only thing that saves this time zone we are in, let's wait to see what happens going into the elections that might hold the
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market up. i can't be confident about that but everything i look at is telling the this market is an accident and a really big accident waiting to happen. neil: how do you safely play? >> if you want to be real conservative you purchase pills, they are giving you some kind of a return. think of time between 2000, and just three or four years ago or a year or two ago, 1%, getting over 5% with them now. is the market going to compete with that? they say, interested in 5%, looking for 100% and they've got it and are so happy they think it will continue. it's not going to happen. it never has before and it
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won't this time around. one stock can do that, large european country, that the only thing -- neil: maybe it is worth it, you just don't know. >> they have chip stocks of their own so it's not like you are buying. neil: always good seeing you. i could talk to you for hours but a great read on things. you can decide at the top of the show or the bottom of the show. that's what we mean. never have a ball on without a bear. that's what we do. more after this. clem's not a morning person. or a night person. or a...people person. but he is an "i can solve this in 4 different ways" person.
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prime minister of israel meet in a few minutes, the white house, the protesters are outside the capital. ashley webster, a lot at stake. adam: really years. benjamin netanyahu saying i have known president biden for 40 years but the question is what security commitment is there? what about the threat from tehran's proxies, hezbollah, hamas and so on? don't forget benjamin netanyahu will be meeting with kamala harris and he wants to see if there is a difference in tone and approach. neil: i am wondering as well. is this notion of how kamala
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harris would be, that it would be a little more hostile to president biden. what do you make of that? >> there is not going to be a lot of daylight between the two but it is clear kamala harris is pushing more to the left and appeasing the progressive side of her party, the anti-benjamin netanyahu and that is going to play out and be interesting how we know kamala harris snubbed benjamin netanyahu, didn't turn up to greet him when he landed in the us, so far it's looking cooler than it is from biden. neil: i would never snub you but you would easily snub me but we will see. great job. sorry for my confusion. jackieea
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