tv Varney Company FOX Business September 20, 2024 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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stuart: 6 avenue on friday morning, 10:00 eastern time. i would call it virtually deserted. these offices in central manhattan are not back to full scale, that's a very quiet sixth avenue. it is 10:00 eastern time and it is friday, september 20th. after a huge rally yesterday modest selling, doubt 90, s&p down 20, the nasdaq down 64 points, the 10 year treasury yield rising to 3.75%. not great news for tech stocks, oil is $71.38, bitcoin, a rally going up to 62-8, it was 63,000. that's the markets. now this. plenty of emotion, occasional tears and the inevitable rambling and confused response
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to questions otherwise known as word salads, that was kamala harris's live streaming event with oprah winfrey. at the end of what we know a lot about how she feels, no clue what she would do if elected president. oprah constantly jumped into bail her out. young man asked what would be the specific steps to strengthen the border. but harris launched into her history as attorney general of a border stated how she prosecuted transnational gang because. that was 10 years ago. what has she been doing for the last 3.5 years while millions of illegals are pouring in, no answer. oprah jumped in and got her to blame trump. the border is important to voters. inflation is also important to voters and terrorists was asked how she plan to lower cost, she said in terms of having the right to have aspirations and dreams the american dream is for this generation and so many recently far more elusive.
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it's bringing down the cost of everyday necessities. what does that mean? that is word salad stuff. eventually she got down to policy which is punishing bad companies for price gouging, less than 30 seconds on that and not a word on how price control actually works. the show was heavily geared towards smiling celebrities saying how wonderful the vice president is, victims of abortion policy, no victims of migrant criminals, the harris campaign can claim a win because this morning millions of people receive brief clips on their morning news feed showing harris in the most positive light, very short clips. that's how so many people get their news these days and that is what her handlers want, they calculated that a friendly oprah winfrey multiple favorable soundbites. they also calculated that what kamala harris would do as president should be kept quiet.
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it wasn't brought up because i don't think she really knows. she has to wait for bernie sanders to write your script, the new basement strategy and it seems to be working. second hour of varney just getting started. look who is here, bill mcgurn, the man himself, the wall street journal, we still don't know what harris would do if elected. i'm afraid a lot of voters don't care. >> the current wisdom is she can't forever avoid the press and press conferences, not so sure. why wouldn't she? it's working get for her and i think when she gives specific answers like price gouging in her speech on the economy, i would do exactly what she's doing. stuart: she has no reason to change. and that is a bad thing, bad
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enough she won't give answers, the press is not demanding them. it is unbelievable. stuart: next one, politico says there are three states that will decide the election, pennsylvania, north carolina, and georgia. they say harris must win georgia or north carolina or she has no other path to the white house. does it really come down to those three states? >> there are 7 battleground states where they are close but he makes a good point. the day after the election if it is really close, you could say it came down to one state depending how it turned out so we don't know, but those are certainly keys. especially with pennsylvania, whoever wins that, the other person has a path that highly unlikely. it really is a blocking mechanism. stuart: the electoral college. >> whoever gets pennsylvania
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has an upper hand. it's possible to win without pennsylvania, really improbable. of the one so many in pennsylvania say it's impossible to watch television because the political ads go on and on. stuart: next one, president biden will summon his full cabinet for the first time in 11 months, to get his work on his agenda and finish the job he started. how, who has been running the country? >> the short answer is nothing is going to happen. when people know you are a lame-duck you start losing your powers to influence and stuff. he might do things at the margin. we saw it is clear there is not going to be a cease-fire before he leaves office, it's pretty obvious if you watch all the way through but it is conceded that's not going to happen.
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stuart: lauren brought up one thing he can do today in the cabinet meeting is pushing the money out the door when he has the time. he will spend that. >> a lot of things to do, but i'm not sure how interested he is. it is his legacy, like doing your homework, you can to do it a few minutes before the test. hasn't been doing it all wrong. stuart: he's leaving the scene. i'm not sure he has the energy. >> i think he has a legacy. all the spending and so forth, i think we will be living with it for a while. you are all right, thanks. come back in here please. how is taylor swift's get out
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the vote effort? lauren: after she endorsed harrison said please register to vote, 400,000 plus clicked on vote.gov. success? sure. a majority of voters polled say they support or get out the vote effort, 53%. that's down 15 points from february when she was in the news for that conspiracy theory that she would support biden's reelection. that's down a little bit. just 20% of republicans support her voting efforts. oprah winfrey, ben stiller, jennifer lopez all rallying in support of her. they are so the breeze, we like them. i like all these people but i'm nothing like them and i think a lot of potential voters are saying she's telling me to vote, but i don't identify with her. we went wait to later in the show, harry and meghan indirectly supported kamala harris. does that move the needle? i don't think so. >> people see through it now.
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it is friday. let's get back to the markets please, very important day, the day after the big rally. kyle, powell is trying to stick a soft landing, he may be successful. what does that mean for the market? >> it's quite important. we saw the markets rally strong yesterday especially the nasdaq, not more than 3% intraday. the trajectory he's talking about is important, they cut rates another one. 5% over the next 6 to 12 months so what does that do? the regular person or auto loan comes down, credit card bills come down, mortgage rate has come down quite a bit but it will come down a little more which may mean more pain purchases but for big tech, big tech if the rates come down money becomes cheaper you will see more mandate and you will
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also see some more investments in large companies like apple and nvidia and ai companies. stuart: you say keep an eye on artificial intelligence. we are doing that but which stocks should we keep an eye on for ai? >> there are three parts to it. nvidia, supramicro has been beaten up and will rally back, you have to look at the rt, that company is the leader in electrification and data centers. what are the data centers doing? they need energy. if you look at the energy invested by bill gates and sam altman, it's going to nuclear facilities. my favorite stocks are constellation energy and those stocks are performing well. stuart: this data center story is huge. i have a couple friends in the business telling me that have data centers that are three or
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four football fields in size with utility to provide electricity. i don't think we've come to terms with the size of what's going on at the implications for the stocks. you with me? >> i'm completely with you. the stock is performing very well. you are seeing it go up. also these nuclear stocks. talking about small reactors that you are talking about, there's a lot of money being made here. stuart: good stuff, thanks very much, see you again soon. i hope so. thanks very much. look at the louvers please. here we go. lauren: okay. stock is down 5.5%. viking therapeutics up 4. 5%, the obesity pill, they are both working on one. they finished a successful phase 2 trial, they now go to phase 3.
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they skipped phase 2 and go straight to phase 3. the stream is saying one of these might be better than the other according to early data. stuart: down 5%, my goodness. a shock to the system. the buy now pay later people. >> they see the share going up 16% from here because rate cuts boost consumer spending. stuart: i know what they are and what they are. furniture. lauren: do you know the key piece of furniture that they may? the teams office chair from herman miller. $5,000, like a status symbol. anyway, look at this, they are down 15% because this is the housing market. it is struggling. a los in the past quarter and they said a disappointing profit target for this quarter, 15% is ugly. stuart: it sure is. coming up donald trump became the first us president to pay
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with bitcoin, he bought burgers for a crowd and the crypto bar in new york city, we talk to the owner of that bar coming up shortly. treasury secretary yellen says deporting illegal migrants could have major ramifications for the economy. >> it would raise inflation. the influx of workers into the labor market is something that has helped to bring down inflation and create a lot of jobs. stuart: the other side of that coin is surely that the influx of these workers to the workforce, migrants to the workforce kept wages down, right? anyway, we will get into it. right now, israel launching major strikes in lebanon when the leader of hezbollah called the exploding pager attack a declaration of war. mike tobin has a report from tel aviv next.
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stuart: a little bit of red, not that much, doubt up hundred, nasdaq down 81. huge gains yesterday. the price of gold surged to a record high, renewed tension in the middle east and gold at $2,600 an ounce an ounce, up $22 today, new record high. is real launching a barrage of strikes on key terrorist infrastructure in lebanon. mike tobin with us until of you. how is has blow responding to this? >> they are responding with rockets north of israel, the sirens sounding as we speak of people scrambling to get into shelters as the rocket fire is coming in. this has been happening all day, the latest barrage of rockets is in response to
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israel striking deep into lebanon. a beirut suburb, struck an apartment building, the target is said to be a top hezbollah commander. he's been with has bless along his connected to the bombing of the us marine barracks in beirut. the lebanese health ministry says three were killed, 17 wounded from that particular airstrike engine light of this airstrike lebanese prime minister said his relapse actions show they give no weight to any humanitarian, moral or legal considerations. israel has stepped up the strikes in lebanon, striking at one hundred targets, they say they have been hitting at hezbollah infrastructure and launches that were preparing to fire into israel, hezbollah promised retaliation firing on 140 rockets into israel earlier today. the iron dome interceptors appear to get those rockets. fires were started when the record from the rockets fell to the ground. the promise retaliation came
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from the sabotage of thousands of has blood pagers and radios, the electronics blue up killing 37 people, wounding 3400. has bless's secretary general spoke in lebanon, israeli jets buzzed beirut, dropped flares. they promised more warfare. >> translator: the only path forward is to stop the aggression and war on the people of gaza and the gaza strip, consequently on the west bank. that's the only path. apart from that there is nothing. this is a new phase of the war. it bears opportunities but also significant risks. hezbollah feels it is being persecuted, a sequence of military action will continue. >> reporter: israeli communities in the north been getting messages not to attend any gatherings, not to travel if they don't need to and in the last few minutes they've
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been getting the message to scramble for shelter. of cease-fire agreement out gaza presumably would stop all of the rocket fire. the us is still pushing for that cease-fire agreement but antony blinken left the region saying they reached agreement on 15 of 18 paragraphs in that cease-fire agreement. stuart: thank you very much indeed. let's turn now to the war in ukraine. president zelenskyy is going to meet with biden and terrace next week. he wants the us to loosen restrictions on long-range weapons. christian whiten joins me. these long-range weapons would allow ukraine to strike deep inside russia. do you think biden and terrace will okay that? >> as they have done through the war they will give zelenskyy something but not as much as you wants. ukraine blue up in arms depot in russia that created so much damage it was a local
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earthquake of 2.8 magnitude but there is a risk that you provoke the russians the deeper you go into russian territory, they know it's us technology and information guiding this. stuart: why is the administration so reluctant to be proactive in these foreign wars? always playing defense, always. why? >> if you go back to the example of israel, we are trying to get israel to de-escalate or not to escalate further. hezbollah is saying this is a declaration of war against it, it started a war against israel by acting first as a proxy of iran, throughout ukraine, this hesitancy and eventual capitulation starting with the f-16 and all sorts of weapons systems. it's a strategy where they
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believe they can manage these. 15 of 18 paragraphs where that's not actually an agreement, we tried negotiating behind something, we are almost there, 15 of 18, it is just sort of a joke. they think just attending things and being underfoot will advance us interests. we see the results across the road. >> reporter: the wall street journal report it is unlikely that a cease-fire dealing gaza will get done before the end of biden's term. the white house says nobody has given up hope of a deal. i would have to agree with the wall street journal. it looks highly unlikely that hamas will release the hostages, i can't see that happening. >> reporter: as mcgurn said earlier, you have a president who doesn't have a lot of power, all sides around the world, good guys bad guys looking to see who gets elected in november and what that
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person's policies are and trying to reveal what biden is trying to push on the israelis is really something that will turn gaza into lebanon which we are seeing the results of now, essentially leave hamas in place, that's what the cease-fire is about, there's never been a strategy to say get rid of this. stuart: always the same situation, always the same. thanks for joining us, have a great weekend. this weekend president biden will talk to leaders of australia, india and japan, the meeting will take place at biden's home in wilmington, delaware. why the meeting in delaware at the beach or beach house or close to the beach? the lake house. and not the white house? >> personal touch. president biden thinks personal relationships are important to foreign policy and he has spent years developing his relationships with of the leaders of australia, india, and japan. the so-called quad have met six times in recent years to forge
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an alliance to deter china. stuart: that's a foreign policy success. don't hear much about it but i think it is a success. is rallied people, good stuff. so you see. i'm quite capable. lauren: he's taking them to his hil in daware. where there's going to be a dinner and some events so they get to see his home, they get to see his high school. very friendly. stuart: i will say nothing else. thank you. it's a column in the la times. fossil fuels -- fossil fuel ads are rampant in american sports, that's not good. they are being fed bit oil propaganda. we will sort it out for you. cnn reporter lectures a trump supporter about the economy. >> you are not hurting so bad because about cost a lot of money and a lot of upkeep.
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>> nobody gave me -- iron everything i've got. stuart: well said. that's not all he had to say, don't want to miss the full explanation. it's coming up for you. ♪ ♪ ♪ investment opportunities are everywhere you turn. do you charge forward? freeze in your tracks? or, let curiosity light the way. at t. rowe price, we ask smart questions about opportunities
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stuart: one hours worth of business, just a little bit of reading, dow f7, nasdaq off 60. check big tech please, there were huge winners yesterday. some going up some more. apple up another dollar, $2.29, alphabet up $0.53. amazon, microsoft and nvidia all down, not by much. lauren is looking at the other movers. please tell me what's going on with ups and fedex. lauren: ups is down 3% because fedex reported lower profits, lower sales, lower guidance as customers shipped fewer packages and ship the ones they do ship the cheapest way possible, stock is down 50%, morgan stanley cuts fedex to sell.
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stuart: tell me about lennar. lauren: they are down on their margin forecast so despite strong earnings and commentary about demand being strong investors worry they are selling at lower prices and their margins will be under pressure. that's why it's down 5%. stuart: tyson foods. we do they produce 20% of all the meat sold in the us, down 3% they were sued for the practice of a green washing saying you are going to reach these net 0 emissions by 2050 without any clear plans to do so. that those it's what the sutures because environmental groups thing customers purchase products because of emissions in their private goals. stuart: any way to get them into court. always when in court. that's winning. thank you very much indeed. a new report finds job losses spiked to a 5-month high in the month of august. edward lawrence at the white house.
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what is powell saying about the jobs market. >> reporter: the federal reserve chairman says a deeper cut interest rates as market watchers wonder about that, kept rates the same saying they want a slow path down to avoid reigniting inflation. the united states needs a recalibration of their interest rates to keep a strong labor market and so many people streamed across the southern border during the biden/harris administration that it will affect the unemployment rate. >> if you're having millions of people coming into the labor force you are creating 100,000 jobs, you see unemployment go up so it depends on the trend underlying the volatility of people coming into the country. we understand there's been an influx across the borders and one of the things that has allowed the employment rate to rise. >> reporter: for the white house the message is nothing to
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see here, please move along. biden/harris economic advisors play mission accomplished to stop an extreme rise in prices and loss of jobs. >> are cost cutting agenda in particular is as urgent today as it was before the fed acted but that fact should not preventing one from recognizing the progress we've made, the expectation define ongoing expansion and the work productivity and grit of the american people to get us where we are today. >> prices are not going down. in fact they are 20% higher than when president biden and vice president harris came into office. stuart: treasury secretary janet yellen claims trump's mass deportation plan would hike inflation. watch this. >> it would raise inflation. contributed to america's delivery to produce more goods
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including agricultural goods and this influx we've seen since the pandemic, and only through immigration but also seeing the highest labor force participation on record for adult women. the influx of workers into the labor market has helped to bring down inflation and create a lot of jobs. we won mike lee is with us, he normally sticks very much with market observations but i want you to address this today. if we mass deport migrants, does that make inflation worse? >> absolutely not. we have a massive housing crisis in this country. imagine of 30 million people got up and left what that would do to that housing prices. that is a key driver. it you look at hard numbers the amount of money state, local
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government spends estimated to be $650 billion on an annualized basis between you and the remittances that go to latin america that we know about, it is north of $160 billion. what are the high productivity jobs, illegal aliens are occupying that are generating a multiplier for the economy? 0. it is so transparently political what she is saying, the reason why you have all these people that can work for such low-wage jobs is like in new york city, 30% to 40% of hotel rooms are taken up by illegal aliens, paid for by your tax dollar. all of a sudden there was a shortage, uber eats delivery, bicycle riders or door -- are hotel rooms next week which
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would normally be one hundred 50 or one hundred $60 going for 1100, which do you think would have a better cost driver on inflation? it's laughable and it would be laughable if it wasn't so ridiculous. we one political -- i would suspect. you are a super bull on big tech. big tech came roaring back. where is it headed from here? >> regardless of the economy, regardless of inflation and the election it is going much much higher. last week, we heard from judson wang, ceo of nvidia saying for every dollar somebody spends they can turn around and rent it for 5. that is an unbelievable return on investments for ai that's going on right now. if you think about it like this, how much would you pay for somebody that can help you with your job all day long and
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work 24/seven, 40,000, $50,000 a year? microsoft is only getting $1000 a person right now for that so there's 40 to 50 x upside from what they are charging for ai and that's just the one element of it. there's such a long way in front of us and you have apple that's going to experience the mother of all upgrade cycles. things are going to be very very good. i think google is the cheapest right now for those worried about paying for stocks but i see a long runway for all these big tech stocks. stuart: yes you do. you repeat it often on this program. i like it too. you are all right, see you again soon. one cnn reporter lectured a trump supporter for complaining about the economy, better take us through what happened. lauren: they are in panama city, amaga vote parade and the siena reporter wants to know why a trump supporter cares about the economy if he owns a
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boat. >> if you can afford a boat, you are not hurting so bad because boats cost a lot of money, a lot of upkeep. >> nobody gave me [bleep] >> ironed everything that i've got. i'm retired military, i am successful and retired, with boats, jet skis because i did it right and everybody has that chance. >> interesting that people who are a little bit more comfortable are so concerned about the economy. >> i want my money to go further. i went interest rates to go down. >> which he didn't have his sunglasses on. i would love to have seen his eyes. he is retired and he wants his money to go further. isn't that what most people want to? i don't see any yachts in the background, he owns a regular size boat. the second point is her line of questioning, it really was.
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stuart: how come you are concerned about the economy when you have so much money on a boat on about. stuart: boats are expensive it is a money pit. you can throw money and burn it up. he deserves that. he retired. stuart: still had, la dodgers star just made homerun history. joining the 50/fifty club. he may have played the greatest baseball game ever, that strong stuff. a group of lawmakers changed the way we bet on sports, they say gambling has become a public health issue, the full story after this.
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so, what are you thinking? i'm thinking... (speaking to self) about our honeymoon. what about africa? safari? hot air balloon ride? swim with elephants? wait, can we afford a safari? great question. like everything, it takes a little planning. or, put the money towards a down-payment... ...on a ranch ...in montana ...with horses let's take a look at those scenarios. j.p. morgan wealth management has advisors in chase branches and tools, like wealth plan to keep you on track. when you're planning for it all... the answer is j.p. morgan wealth management. stuart: the day after the big
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rally not much selling, the out of 30 can nasdaq up 60. we want to take a look at nike. the ceo is retiring, bringing in someone to replace him who is an established guy, nike is up 6%. next case, democrat lawmakers want to change sports betting in america. do they want to ban sports betting outright? >> online sports gaming unless the justice department grants permission to individual states. people will place a staggering $35 billion in legal bets this season, that's why lawmakers are pushing for restrictions on sports betting. >> prompting you with an endless cascade of flashy promotions. this relationship between the
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gambling industry and sports has reached dangerous levels and is past time for congress to step up to make a difference. stuart: sporting events in the airways are saturated with betting advertisements. that would ban between 8 am and 10:00 pm local time and no bets during games, recovering gambling addict says leads are in cahoots with gambling websites. >> real-time data statistics in the industry for billions of dollars, turning the statistics into constant action micro bets, same game parlays and much more. these are the most addictive types of gambling because there are no guard rails and no stats. >> reporter: they believe the league bears responsibly for growth in gambling, the gaming
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industry says legal gambling is tracked, it worries about additional regulation. >> we previously had federal regulation in this country and is led to massive growth of the predatory illegal market. introducing new forms of prohibition will be a boon. >> reporter: maloney says pushing it offshore or into unregulated booking operations could cost government tax dollars. he said legalized gambling generated $1.3 billion in local tax revenue during the first half of the year. stuart: chad pergram on capitol hill, thanks. los angeles dodgers superstar made made her look -- major league baseball history. what did he do? >> reporter: the first player in history with 50 home runs to steal 50 bases in one single-season. watch here.
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>> sends one in the air the other way, back it goes. go. gone. one of a kinder player. one of a kind season. lauren: he did it on career night. he went 6 for 6 with three home runs, 10 rbis, two stolen bases, 51 home runs, 51 stolen bases meaning he broke his own record. dodgers getting their money's worth, $700 million contract, the final score dodgers 20, miami marlins 4. they destroyed them but that was fun. if you were watching that, that was something. stuart: the los angeles times raging against fossil fuel ads sponsoring sports.
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what's so bad about it? lauren: the climate columnist samuel roth from the la times slammed california's 6 professional sports teams for accepting big oil sponsorship money when the state attorney general is suing them for damaging the climate. he says it makes big bad oil companies look like community heroes when they are not and he wants to put the onus on private sports teams to shun the money and make the oil companies social outcasts. finally, if california does this, get rid of the oil companies, you've got a celebrity hollywood power everybody else is going to follow what you do. stuart: coming up, the prince and princess of woe, harry and meghan want people to register to vote but they are not coming right out with it and endorsing kamala harris.
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i have a theory as to why, you will hear it in "my take" at the top of the hour. constellation energy wants to restart the 3 mile island nuclear plant, microsoft needs the juice for its ai goals. constellation calls this the most powerful symbol of the rebirth of nuclear energy. we will get into that. ♪ 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. and that person... is impossible to replace. you need clem. clem needs benefits. work with principal so we can help you help clem with a retirement and benefits plan that's right for him. let our expertise round out yours.
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get xfinity streamsaver with netflix, apple tv+, and peacock included, for only $15 a month. stuart: the dow down 31 points, nasdaq down 85, not much of a loss after yesterday's huge gains. constellation energy, they plan to reopen the 3 mile island nuclear power plant in pennsylvania. microsoft needs the juice to fuel their ai goals. julianne edwards is chair of the us women in nuclear organization. 's nuclear power going to provide the energy these data centers need? that's quite a breakthrough. >> pleasure to be here. nuclear power is a clean and reliable energy source and
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national security topic that should be on the minds of every american. we are glad to see leadership by constellation in forming this partnership. excited to be here. stuart: when you mention the words 3 mile island everybody immediately becomes concerned about a partial meltdown 50 or 60 years ago. 's nuclear power safe? what's your answer to that? >> nuclear power is safe. 3 mile island has two dormant reactors on that piece of land. one is the when they are talking about restarting a nuclear power is the safest form of energy we have. i am so excited to see this heroic effort and have been in the industry for 18 years and i can tell you firsthand it is safe, operationally efficient and led by an amazing leadership team. stuart: there's a new type,
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small nuclear reactor that's going to come to us soon and is going to be used for individual data centers. when is this going to arrive? a small, different nuclear reactor. >> just like our phones there is an evolution, generational upgrade with every technology. currently the small modular reactors you hear about on the news are the next wave, next generation but on a smaller scale and we are seeing technology providers going through the design certification process because they see a need not only a small modular reactor type need but get the scale need for these data centers because they require enormous amounts of reliable energy. stuart: is bill gates behind this? >> a couple dates pending. you look at what's going on now with our technology providers that currently have design certifications, technologies that can be deployed today.
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the restart of 3 mile island is a huge market signal, we have reactors that can be restarted, we also have plans to go build large nuclear with those proven technologies but we are seeing signs of going through the design certification process but it will take time to put a shovel in the ground. stuart: thank you very much for being with us. appreciate it. steve hilton on californians waking up wanting to get tough on crime. the latest exotic stock pick, investing in south africa and your friday feedback, 11:00 hour is next. ♪ ♪
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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. (♪) >> our prices are up over 20% sings this man took office. it's outrageous he'd say anything about inflation and with victory in regard to these speeches. >> a lot of people felt good and the price felt like it w
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