Skip to main content

tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  August 16, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

12:00 pm
neil: we asked which state has the shortest commute time, iowa, nebraska, montana. what do you have? ashley: no idea but i will go with montana. i live there, no one goes a long way because they live in the cities. lauren: that is the answer but i will be different. iowa. stuart: south dakota it is, mount rushmore, they traveled 18 minutes to get to their jobs. south dakota, 18 minutes. the democrat national convention kicks off in chicago, we will be there live monday through thursday. they are live at 6 p.m. pm eastern. neil, it's yours. neil: avoid the protests.
12:01 pm
they will be everywhere. have a deep dish pizza. we are looking at the corner of wall and broad wrapping up an eventful week with the nasdaq tacking on 5% as things stand right now. the s&p 4%, 3% uptake in the dow. think of where we were a week ago when everything was swooning and concerns not only that we were in the middle of a meltdown but the fed will come to the fed will come to the rescue with a premeeting rate cut, that was then, no talk of that kind of thing. we are looking at a couple variables and wildcards, develop into the middle east, even hurricane off the coast of bermuda. let's go to ted weisberg. how are you holding up over there, how's this looking? >> it's looking all right. we are the bull's-eye for this hurricane but they downgraded
12:02 pm
the wind speed, estimating 75 kn. and have to continue on the prep. neil: good for you. and there was a storm on wall street. last monday we were in the middle of freefall. and bringing home respectable earnings. and that trend continued, call our minds prevailed, what did we learn and what we've learned, and 20/20 hindsight,
12:03 pm
and nothing really changed, the market has an upward move, the trend was positive. and those reversals are sharp, steep, quick and painful, it when they're banging everything, not a company specific event but a technical event. and and you can't get lower rates without weakening economy and all of a sudden a weakening economy trumped everything else last week and triggered this more technical than anything else reversal. it's behind us and we recovered
12:04 pm
most of those losses in five trading days which is pretty miraculous. neil: we are north of where we were august 2nd or before the selloff the following monday. let me get your take on this notion of good news being good news. if you get a good report, more consumer activity, that is greeted as it should be greeted. that is good news. the flipside of that, it doesn't necessarily mean the federal reserve has to go gung ho. how do you deal with it? >> when is good news good news and when is good news bad news? it is a little confusing and quite understandable that a lot of people are scratching their heads. bottom line anything that reinforces the fed's ability, is still a positive.
12:05 pm
a disaster in the economy and lower interest rates, not sure the current interest rate isn't just fine. gives something to everybody. for those folks -- it gives them an opportunity to get decent returns on savings without taking any risks. the economy continues to do well. from my perspective which is purely selfish if the fed did nothing i would be perfectly happy. the flipside is when the fed does lower rates, one has to wonder if that's not already priced into the market. you see the fed lower interest rates 1/4 of one% or period of time another quarter of a point and in the grand scheme of things it won't make a lot of difference to the economy but could be priced into the markets.
12:06 pm
don't be surprised if you don't see the market selloff when that happens. neil: they selloff on the pack. batten down the mansion, it covers the entire metropolis but i am sure you will be safe. be good, ted weisberg. following political developments, the economy and all of that, detailing what will be a fairly aggressive economic agenda that calls for government intervention. jackie has more. >> reporter: this will be the vice president's first major policy speech happening in a state that president biden lost but democrats hope to flip this cycle by targeting corporate greed and price gouging to assuage voters top concerns. inflation and the economy. >> she will be talking about
12:07 pm
ways prescription drug prices are coming down. incentives offered for first-time homebuyers, there will be an effort to combat price gouging at grocery stores, there's a series of specific and concrete middle-class tax benefits and federal actions that would address the everyday economic concerns of 100 million working-class americans. >> reporter: harris's most controversial plan is expanding the authority of the ftc to grocery prices and crackdown on price gouging. the washington post a companion columnist right at would lead to shortages, black markets and hoarding among other distortions, countries tried to limit price growth by fiat. at worst, it might accidentally raise prices. critics say this is a bad solution to a problem harris helped to cause. >> she was also acting as the economic arsonist in chief and
12:08 pm
trying to show up in a firefighter uniform much like she is trying to do in north carolina to extinguish the flames of inflation that she set ablaze along with accomplice president biden because of their unbridled spending and failed economic policies. >> reporter: donald trump says tax cuts will bring down costs for americans, the executive director of the american association of meat processors are used price gouging is not happening but, quote, there's a direct correlation between the energy and regular tory policies of the current administration it increased cost of goods to consumers. when costs become too greater company unfortunately has to pass them along to consumers to survive and meet consumer demands. we expect harris is going to highlight this contrast in approach before herself and the former president how to attack this problem. she will likely claim it much differently.
12:09 pm
neil: well explained. north carolina. i want to go to stew leonard, a well-known series of upper end grocery stores in the new york new jersey connecticut environment. they are destination locales. very good to see you. i want to get your reaction to the administration blaming guys like you for the food inflation we've seen. how did you feel about that? >> that guy was really smart. i had fun listening to him earlier. i've been in the family business, 1/4 of a million customers come for rule and we got a good handle on what's going on. i don't know anybody that likes gouging.
12:10 pm
i don't know how the government is going to control that. there's a freight train running behind us with price increases. insurance costs going up, farmers struggling with energy costs, a lot of government regulations as far as farm workers over time but they work 60 hours, most are happy to have jobs. we are at stew leonard's. i've not past on as much cost as we should have. we are not seeing profits or anything soar out of control. most viewers, people watching are feeling the same pinch right now.
12:11 pm
neil: i know you don't like the politics but this idea guys like you and the guys who provide stuff on the beautiful store shelves are to blame for something that started in washington. that's like me blaming a thyroid for the fact that i may be 4 or 5 pounds overweight because ie a lot. that's the problem. that level alone. >> we are trying to help the customer coming in, which have gone through the roof, customers shop for kids and families, grocery prices have gone up dramatically. they are feeling in the middle of august, i want to create
12:12 pm
value, passing as many savings as i can. the thing i've learned in 50 years of retailing, guess what happens, if you raise prices guess what happens to sale, it goes down. let the market determined that like it has in the past, don't need to tell them how to place products in our stores. neil: let me get your sense where we stand now, the pace of price increases has been coming down, not that reversing themselves, the weight of increase month after month stabilizing somewhat at the retail level, are you seeing that as well? >> looks like meat prices are easing up a little bit right now. we are not back to pre-pandemic
12:13 pm
levels but ukraine or happening over there has affected a lot of grain prices in the us. look what happened to labor costs, look at california, $20 an hour. our rate has gone 17 up to $22 over the last three years. those are built in costs not coming down in the future or up as much as they have in the past but they are going to definitely seeing some easing in the inflation and the economic numbers are what we are experiencing, retail sales are up a little bit but what i love is our customer account is strong, customers putting less in their basket, the extra bag of chips for the kids or the guacamole they wanted to hold off on a little bit, but
12:14 pm
average sale is something we want to increase a little bit. stuart: that is the hope. a wonderful weekend, you are a rock star to a lot of your customers. >>, but a little safety passage? we lost our son who drowned, this is prime time for water safety right now. we opened a swim school, teaching 1000 kids, giving 30,000 free lessons and i want to put a little plug, i had tears in my eyes, allie truitt had her foot bit off by a shark a little over a year ago. instead i saw her a little over a year ago, had her head down, she jumped in a pool and started training for the olympics.
12:15 pm
going to paris for the paralympics, please route for allie truitt, go usa. neil: we will do that. >> waiting for you. it's waiting for you at the store. neil: that is a work, you do a lot of good things for good people. we have a lot more after this. >> have a nice day.
12:16 pm
(♪) when you get your tools from harbor freight something about the job feels different - your wallet. whatever you do, do it for less, at harbor freight. save even more at our parking lot sale going on now protect against rsv with arexvy. arexvy is a vaccine used to prevent lower respiratory disease from rsv in people 60 years and older. arexvy does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients. those with weakened immune systems
12:17 pm
may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects are injection site pain, fatigue, muscle pain, headache, and joint pain. arexvy is number one in rsv vaccine shots. rsv? make it arexvy.
12:18 pm
investment opportunities are everywhere you turn. but at t. rowe price, we're letting curiosity light the way. asking smart questions about opportunities like advances in healthcare. and how these innovations will create a healthier world tomorrow. better questions. better outcomes. i was only 23 when i was first diagnosed
12:19 pm
with non-melanoma skin cancer. 40 years later, i've had almost 20 mohs surgeries. i had just accepted that the pain and the scars were going to be part of my life. but when i was diagnosed with two basal cells on my face, i became determined to find an alternative to surgery. if you, like millions of others, are affected by skin cancer... it's important to know that surgery isn't the only option. there's another choice. gentlecure. it sounded like everything i had been looking for. gentlecure uses low energy x-rays to kill skin cancer cells with a 99% cure rate.
12:20 pm
plus, there's no cutting, no surgical scarring and no downtime. i'm so glad i did it. it was successful in every way. to learn more, call today or go to gentlecure.com ashley: neil: kamala harris a couple hours from detailing a plan in north carolina that will expand the child care tax credit to $6000, up to $25,000, the type of stuff she's sows will prove an active government working on behalf of the american people. the boston globe political reporter, it is delicate threading of the needle.
12:21 pm
a little incentive to get things going. not much but a lot of critics of hers saying way too much. what do you make of it? >> there's a lot in this plan. the child tax credit, housing and also a lot of talk about price gouging but they are not defining that. i love this outline. if your opponent is calling your communist you shouldn't start by talking about price controls. there's not a lot of teeth behind this. we don't know what excessive pricing is or how to create supply on the housing market even though they want to increase housing starts by 3 million houses and we do know on the demand side, create demand for first-time homebuyers.
12:22 pm
people piece of apart, in the campaign season we have a lot of campaign promises, the reason we have inflation is the biden administration says look at corporate greed, not us, it's of them. the simplest game in politics. neil: do people by that? for a lot of people who respectfully argue this out saying we can picture some of these net farias corporate guys doing that. not as if grocery store owners are loyal ceos. i wonder if it falls on deaf years and they say you guys are in charge and it is happening under your watch.
12:23 pm
>> on one level we had the white house press secretary save this week there's been no daylight between kamala harris and president biden and it comes to economic policy. she is part of this administration. at the same time the prices people are paying are feeling that. you see that on the air and you ce economists saying it's a complicated picture that's not just government spending or corporate greed. it is supply-chain issues. it was the stimulus checks, it was about the war in ukraine which propped up gas prices in particular. it's a complicated picture that neither candidate will fully address in terms of the plans they are talking about right now. neil: if you are the administration you are breathing a sigh of relief from
12:24 pm
where we've come since the meltdown monday or whatever you want to call it, people were saying quick, federal reserve, cut rates big time soon. we are over that. we are getting more consumer sentiment surveys that show people at least thinking the worst of it. how is that going to reverberate for the democratic ticket? >> we care about these metrics but this has been a campaign that has not been about the metrics the way they were in romney versus obama following the unemployment rate. if you are the democrats thinking trump will end democracy, who cares about attend point detailed plan on price gouging. if you are republicans and think kamala harris is going to lead us down the road to socialism who will care about detailed point plans. that is where we are is a country, that's how a lot of people will be voting.
12:25 pm
neil: think you are right about that. i love following year stuff and your musings. i like to copy them and say they were my ideas but it is great seeing you. thank you very much. you can do the same in reverse if you ever feel like that. jonathan bush, the independent moving the needle found are steeped in bush family law who knows what he speaks as well. compels me to ask you whether donald trump meant what he said, that he would be open to having nikki haley on the stump with him pushing his electoral chances. what do you think? >> regardless what people mean they better start saying particularly in the trump campaign something different or they are going the way of the
12:26 pm
dodo bird, people with longer attention spans into the fold and a little more of a moral compass into the fold the more votes you get to assuage the concerns who want to support the basic republican platform or made nervous by the men. neil: you are steeped into one of the most iconic names in family history, your family seems out of this election. are we reading that correctly? >> i don't know. you represent to me the icon of people i respect who think we work like the borg and i don't think we do. they are doing their own thing. we share the name and a lot of
12:27 pm
affection, i saw george w in maine, such a treat, a great guy, it is highlighted in these times. everyone does their own thing. neil: i won't be labor that point but let me get a sense where you see this race going. the big selloff we had, every one feeling we would go into recession or worse and all of a sudden the whole democratic ticket seemed doomed, then a great comeback continues today, all the major averages are back well north of where they were before the selloff began and the trump folks breathing a sigh of relief. do you think stuff like this matters? markets coming back, perceptions of economic doom, what do you think?
12:28 pm
>> this kind of action matters in the day today zeitgeist more than systemic drivers of this election. your previous guest was right to say this election more than any other in my publicly awake lifetime is about bigger problems than even the macro economy, more about the kind of people in power so you feel terribly concerned about the narcissism problem or you feel terribly concerned about the fanatical progressivism problem or the majority of us feel concerned about both. it sort of trumps the economic -- the fed is ready to cut rates when there's enough urgency. everyone seems to have gotten that message.
12:29 pm
people like jerome, those things don't feel, lose control of the program scary as some of these more political party particular people problems right now. neil: that is well put. you are referring to jerome powell, chairman of the federal reserve. let me get your big take on donald trump himself who has had a double overtime repositioning for a new opponent, continues to make personal attacks, made a lot of them in these remarks. the press conference part of it didn't start until an hour into the remarks. he meandered a lot, he says these things, so i am just wondering. i know what you are saying, the republican or the conservative view wins out for you, that
12:30 pm
philosophy rather than the one opposed by kamala harris. i talked to many of your ilk if you will who said he's a tough pill to swallow because he keeps doing this. >> here in maine is a huge trump following. the strongest of them, not on the spotlight say what a pill to swallow. on the flipside, i think his narcissism gave him the ability to say things a lot of people were saying about political correctness, a different handout to each group based on their ability to take umbrage to something that happened in history. not that any of those experiences of suffering were wrong but the idea that there is a committee that hands out goodies based on umbrage is not an american concept. everyone didn't want to be the one insulting the injured
12:31 pm
group. here is a guy who said i call baloney and it was a great relief. we do a debt of gratitude, whether he meant it as a generous gesture or desire to get more clicks, he gave us something but today, the pill swallow, dry pill, big dry horse bill, it gets bigger and drier by the viewing of the man. i hope the campaign gets together and does something to shift that off. neil: bigger and drier horse pill is an analogy, the political landscape, thank you for joining us. in the meantime keeping track of the new starbucks ceo, a rock star at chipotle but begin to look into the deal that
12:32 pm
wooed him over to starbucks. can you say a lot of frappe at chinos after this? ♪ oh in a valley, where the mountains glow ♪ ♪ are the hardest-working folks ♪ ♪ that you ever could know ♪ ♪ now the farmers work the land ♪ ♪ and the land is the home ♪ ♪ the home is the families ♪ ♪ and the families need care ♪ ♪ when care is close ♪ ♪ we all can grow... ♪ ♪ oh... ♪ jpmorganchase invests in healthcare to help create healthier communities. ♪ make the green grass grow all around all around ♪ ♪ make the green grass grow all around ♪ ♪
12:33 pm
maya knows how quality care can bring out a smile. but it's been a few dog years since she was able to enjoy a smile of her own. good thing aspen dental offers affordable, complete care all in one place. with flexible hours and weekend appointments. plus 20% off treatment plans for everyone. loving our patients unconditionally. it's one more way aspen dental is in your corner. [introspective music] recipes. recipes that are more than their ingredients. ♪ [smoke alarm] recipes written by hand and lost to time... can now be analyzed and restored using the power of dell ai. preserving memories and helping to write new ones. ♪
12:34 pm
you know, when i take the bike out like this, all my stresses just melt away. i hear that. this bad boy can fix anything. yep, tough day at work, nice cruise will sort you right out. when i'm riding, i'm not even thinking about my painful cavity. well, you shouldn't ignore that. and every time i get stressed about having to pay my bills, i just hop on the bike, man. oh, come on, man, you got to pay your bills. you don't have to worry about anything when you're protected by america's number-one motorcycle insurer. well, you definitely do. those things aren't related, so... ah, yee! oh, that is a vibrating pain. what tractor supply customers experience is personalized service. made possible by t-mobile for business. with t-mobile's reliable 5g business internet. employees get the information they need instantly. this is how business goes further with t-mobile for business.
12:35 pm
olukai sandals capture the feeling of stepping barefoot into wet sand. the perfect balance of instant comfort and lasting support. say aloha to olukai. anywhere comfort. anywhere aloha. (♪)
12:36 pm
♪(voya)♪ there are some things that work better together. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. voya helps you choose the right amounts without over or under investing. across all your benefits and savings options. so you can feel confident in your financial choices. they really know how to put two and two together. voya, well planned, well invested, well protected. >> the new starbucks ceo makes
12:37 pm
quite a few nickels which comes in handy since his name is nikolai and he really was the brains behind chipotle and did a lot of marvelous things but the minimum salary with an opportunity to score $23 million in bonuses was over a year and a bonus separately vote could be 3.6 to $4 million each every year works out to a total pay package at a minimum in excess of $113 million. a lot of you sniff at this and say tech guys get that all the time, you are right, but that is very rare in this particular industry. what to make of that with ashley webster, chump change numbers for young ashley. it is a good year worth of trading. gary, first to you, starbucks
12:38 pm
wanted and needed a big turnaround, our response to the fact that he was recruited and got the job. what did you make of it? >> if i'm the ceo i am doing like this the market of starbucks, $20 billion since the announcement, $20 billion, whatever's going on in the market, the market believes he will do a great job. my biggest worry is i don't know what changes he can make. the thing that i've spoken is price, charge for cappuccino, if you fix it lower for the profits. a big job to do, he gets the chance now.
12:39 pm
neil: what do you make of it all? ashley: gary paid for himself based on $20 billion on market. he will be the fourth boss in three years, a horrible sales slump. maybe pricing is the issue but he is someone who believes he can do it. a big part of that is in share options based on performance. if he can turn it around to he is absolutely, no problem with it at all. neil: it was a good point to raise here is that he has got to deliver the goods or the money doesn't materialize, stock incentives only incentivize when they go up. if they don't they don't. the bigger question is a lot of average americans looking at these type of pay deal say i
12:40 pm
want in on something like that. very few companies have profit-sharing plans. i thought that would be a good idea to get more people into the game. what do you think? >> corporate america pays for performance, stock price performance, the growth of the company's, earnings and sales not shutting like that. plenty of companies out there pay a, we've seen it, ridiculous amounts, welcome to corporate america, welcome to markets, welcome to boards that are close friends with people getting hired and that is the way the cookie crumbles. all said and done it is about performance if you do the job right, you get lauded like jpmorgan ceo. do a bad job like wells fargo, you head the other way.
12:41 pm
neil: i am telling you, watch the puppy double, triple. great seeing you again. in the meantime we are not losing sight of ernesto churning off the coast of bermuda in and out of the category 2 storm. what does this look like now? >> reporter: the latest advisory from the national hurricane center came out 11:00 eastern, still a category 2. it is a unique storm in that it lashed puerto rico, in last puerto rico, the us and british virgin islands but as a track farther north it actually is expected to weaken some but that is little cause for comfort in bermuda, and islands which has weathered several hurricanes but 970 millibars is the pressure, category 2 hurricane and as it drifts to the north it will be getting closer and closer to bermuda.
12:42 pm
landfall isn't expected until later tomorrow morning. hurricane force winds extend 75 miles from the center, tropical storm force winds extend 275 miles. it is a big storm. it matters when you talk the details of this storm, north of the are wall's of the wall is where we have the most intense storms with ernesto. it appears if bermuda, bermuda could well deal with another land falling hurricane. if they do it would be the worst part of the storm early on. on the south side conditions improve. looking live at bermuda, they are getting ready, the outer rain bands move in yesterday afternoon. another round moving through as we speak, sail drones dispatched in the storm and as a sale drone in the northeastern quadrant picking up a sustained wind of 45 miles an hour.
12:43 pm
it will make landfall as a category 2 hurricane. neil: fox weather meteorologist extraordinaire. you probably heard that kamala harris wants to stamp out inflation by putting government control price controls in effect, the government forcing prices to stay as they are. can you do that? richard nixon tried, didn't go well. i wonder what john tapper, bar rescue host, has to say about that. we will ask. (♪) you know, you only get one body. it might be the perfect size to do this. your body may take up a lot of space. or have to speak with its hands.
12:44 pm
but no matter what body you're born with, you only get one. let's fight like hell for it. (♪) business. it's not a nine-to-five proposition. it's all day and into the night. it's all the things that keep this world turning. it's the go-tos that keep us going. the places we cheer. trust. hang out. and check in. they all choose the advanced network solutions and round the clock partnership from comcast business. powering more businesses than anyone. powering possibilities. (♪) is bad debt holding you back? ♪ the only limit is the sky ♪ ♪ it's our time ♪ ♪ you don't want to miss it (just a little bit louder) ♪ ♪ it's our time ♪
12:45 pm
♪ you don't want to miss it ♪ ♪ it's your moment in the spotlight ♪ all your ambitions. all in one app. low fixed rates. borrow up to $100k. no fees required. sofi. get your money right®.
12:46 pm
you founded your kayak company because you love the ocean- not spreadsheets. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire with so much entertainment out there wouldn't it be great... ...if you could find what you want, all in one place? show me paris.
12:47 pm
xfinity internet customers can enjoy the ultimate entertainment experience and save on some of the biggest names in streaming, all for just $15 a month. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. i was only 23 when i was first diagnosed with non-melanoma skin cancer. 40 years later, i've had almost 20 mohs surgeries. i had just accepted that the pain and the scars were going to be part of my life. but when i was diagnosed with two basal cells on my face, i became determined to find an alternative to surgery. if you, like millions of others, are affected by skin cancer... it's important to know that surgery isn't the only option. there's another choice. gentlecure. it sounded like everything i had been looking for. gentlecure uses low energy x-rays to kill skin cancer cells with a 99% cure rate. plus, there's no cutting, no surgical scarring and no downtime.
12:48 pm
i'm so glad i did it. it was successful in every way. to learn more, call today or go to gentlecure.com >> the time has come for decisive action that will break the vicious circle of spiraling prices and costs. i am today ordering a freeze on all prices and wages throughout the united states for period of 90 days. neil: it didn't work. a conservative president trying to get inflation under control. it wasn't the problem it is now. the government can't control what basic human nature allows for good or ill, prices move of their own accord and can't have the government force the issue. you can't for little while but
12:49 pm
that was a failing effort and now it is being brought up again. kamala harris keen on doing that. john tapper on whether that will work. >> i've been thinking a lot about it. think of a ship. the fishermen needs to keep his cost of the same. his maintenance can't go up. the processing plant, than the distributors price can't go up. the company that retails at can't go up. then when the restaurant get that his prices can't go up. if anything loses control along the way, the guys on the back end of the chain lose money and this is what we've seen last time. we saw landlords not rent apartments because they would lose money on it. unless you freeze every single cost of every business in the country, you cannot some of them. if some of them. if you do that, our free market economy is gone. that is socialism.
12:50 pm
entrepreneurship disappears, my ability to innovate and add value to my customers so i can increase price, make my service better so i can increase prices, create better work environments, attract better employees, i can't do any of those things anymore once this is put into place. it freezes us where we are and i believe stops any growth we could ever have. look at the last year, red lobster filed written bankruptcy. rubio's filed bankruptcy. a company called miracle restaurant group for 25 arby's file bankruptcy. another company filed bankruptcy. tijuana flats file bankruptcy. quiznos had 4700 restaurants. these are the economic conditions we are living in now. rather than capping it, how about stimulating it.
12:51 pm
creating an environment where entrepreneurs can be entrepreneurs and innovative marketing programs and promotional programs and product developer and can take place that will pull us out of where we are. the policies proposed are the opposite of that and if i could say one more point, walgreens projected closing 2700 stores in the next couple years. what happens when they lose restaurants or jobs, it is about the families, the people that are impacted by loss of jobs and loss of growth. it is a scary premise. neil: one of the most brilliant responses, i can't add to it. thank you very much. it is terrific. in future shows he summed up
12:52 pm
nicely the risks, not the rewards, of trying to control something that can't be controlled unless you try to force it at every level of production. a brilliant rundown of all that. there are those impervious to what happening on the inflation front. this is a great environment looking at buying collector cars that are not exactly inexpensive. monterey, california. >> i don't know what to do, the concorde elegance, you have all sorts of industry events. and there are the car options at gooding and company. and all the beautiful people they have on offer hitting the auction block.
12:53 pm
and $95 million, they are likely going to surpass that. and hitting the auction block, and the birdcage, the frame, unique vehicle right here valued from 5 to $6 million. maybe you can't afford a 5 to $6 million car. we talked to other car owners, and take a listen. >> porsche, far ari, and have a great time with it. for 12 grand, and better to have something you can afford but do nothing. >> the whale tail, absolutely gorgeous.
12:54 pm
do we put a bid in, i like to think we should. >> to obtain vehicle like that. >> it is all expensive but labor of love. neil: see what you are gunning for. and kamala harris and her economic plan in a little over an hour. and to follow up on the 10 popular drugs that certain prices, $35 and, expanding child tax credit to $10,000. and offering what they call a first-time homebuyer tax credit.
12:55 pm
no indications as to who would be eligible for that, it is priced at a minimum of $1 trillion. who is to say? after this. introducing new advil targeted relief. the only topical pain reliever with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact to target tough pain at the source. for up to 8 hours of powerful relief. new advil targeted relief.
12:56 pm
we really don't want people to think of feeding food like ours is spoiling their dogs. good, real food is simple. it looks like food, it smells like food, .. ♪ (♪) when you get your tools from harbor freight something about the job feels different - your wallet.
12:57 pm
whatever you do, do it for less, at harbor freight. save even more at our parking lot sale going on now meet the jennifers. jen x. jen y. and jen z. each planning their future through the chase mobile app. jen x is planning a summer in portugal with some help from j.p. morgan wealth plan. let's go whiskers. jen y is working with a banker to budget for her birthday. you only turn 30 once. and jen z? her credit's golden. hello new apartment. three jens getting ahead with chase. solutions that grow with you. one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours.
12:58 pm
12:59 pm
(grandpa vo) i'm the richest guy in the world. hi baby! (woman 1 vo) i have inherited the best traditions. (woman 2 vo) i have a great boss... it's me. (man 1 vo) i have people, people i can count on. (man 2 vo) i have time to give (grandma vo) and a million stories to share.
1:00 pm
(grandpa vo) if that's not rich, i don't know what is. (vo) the key to being rich is knowing what counts. neil: the fact is the market for all the major averages, big rebound for the dow, close to 5.5%, across-the-board some big gains. consumer sentiment shows a lot of is feeling better where way are. new-home construction worse than thought so that is the tug-of-war going on between buyers and sellers. buyers are by and large winning of this week. taylor riggs, "the big money show," now

34 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on