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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  September 20, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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with an afternoon soup, 3:12:00 pm. stuart: sounds okay. lauren: i second that. stuart: i am going with 6:twenty two p.m. pm eastern time. the answer is -- the buzzer. sunday is the autumnal equinox. equinox is defined to buy equal hours of sunlight in the northern and southern hemispheres. it only happens twice a year, the autumnal equinox and i believe the vernal equinox if i am not mistaken is everybody okay with this? lauren: we got the vernal equinox question wrong. stuart: we get all these things wrong. time is up for us for this week but we had a wonderful time, thanks for being with us. time to introduce david, it's yours. david: it's me again. thank you very much.
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happening now on coast-to-coast stocks are down but if markets are worrying about the economy they are not showing it based on where we are the entire week with the dow and s&p hitting records this week. our economic gurus are here to examine every corner of the breaking market story. apple's new iphone hitting the shelves but without advertised ai software. will apple be able to convince consumers to buy the phone without its big new feature. new york's flagship store this morning, so is our reported, you don't want to miss that report, new life for nuclear. the side of the us's worst nuclear disaster in history is going to be back up and running. constellation energy will restart the nuclear plant on 3 mile island and cell the power to microsoft. live coverage coming up. i am david asman, you are watching cavuto coast-to-coast.
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first, let's go to kelly o'grady for the latest on where the markets are moving. >> reporter: the markets are pulling back. the the fed rate cut euphoria seems to be fading but we are still looking to close the week on a positive note. we have fresh highs from the dow and s&p 500, the dow is adding 500 points, the major indexes are above 1%. september is historically a bad month. that election uncertainty, the markets are holding up a lot due in part to the major rate cut and the broader timeline horizon since october 2023 we added close to $13 trillion in market, way more than the average annual return. a lot of folks think some sectors are overbought but you
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can't deny the monster growth we are seeing right now. one of the drivers is big tech. we are mixed across the board, apple is up 1% but we are mostly positive and a few of these are seeing outsized returns, meta-hitting an all-time high, up 7% for the week and we talked about this yesterday, your growth stocks, it tracks you are seeing bigger gains than the broader indices with the rate cut news. the 10 year treasury has often worked as a proxy for the economy, the yield goes up, investors are demanding higher returns to keep their money tied up in these longer-term safer assets. we are flat right now. i want you to keep your eyes on this as it tends to influence mortgage rates. we see 30 year fixed mortgage
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come down as well. i want to finish with nike, this stock is getting a nice boost up 6%. elliott hill will return as the new leader in mid-october, he retired from the company in 2020. this change is about righting the ship at nike, they faced declining sales. look at the stock chart, fully investors know today that they are excited about this decision and the market seems to be saying they have confidence he will just do it. david: i noticed he had a t-shirt to make him look younger but because he's an old leader, he was there before but they are bringing him back hoping to bring back the nike magic. let's bring in optimal capital director of strategy francis newton stacy and portfolio manager david waggoner. david wagoner. great to see you both. the markets rc*misterchiang between the sugar high from the
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big rate cut and concerns about the economy. could it be rather than putting his fingers on the scales, what jay powell is doing was actually preventing thinking he may be preventing a recession. our treasury secretary janet yellen just this morning said that actually we could improve inflation with more immigrants coming in, words to that effect. >> reporter: i looked at what she said, mass deportation was going to cause an uptick in inflation. talking about wages but it's easy to single out one of these factors. the problem is the immigrants are costing the system determined is amount of energy, housing shortage, obviously giving benefits to immigrants in some places that were not giving benefits to america which is costing local and state government money so it doesn't work that way to hone
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in on that one factor but it's political. david: the point is the administration is blaming everything but big government expansion and spending for inflation, blaming the corporations for price gouging, now they are blaming republicans for talking about deportation of immigrants that that would cause inflation. it's all about government spending. >> it is all about government spending. one thing no one is talking about is jerome powell, washington dc and janet yellen a lifeline because it cut rates by 50 basis points and that will affect what washington dc can do from fiscal spending policies in the future. we all know the us debt comes due next three years with average interest rate of almost 4%, two times greater than it
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was 21/2 years ago so by decreasing federal funds rate, that will make the amount of debt the government has to reach you in the future much cheaper, helping out the deficit and giving a lot more powder to go spend into social programs or economic. david: investors have to deal with what is happening. we had a very big rate cuts. does it favor one sector over the other. do we reposition our portfolio based on that big cut? >> you can. right now it is important to be defensive because markets are at an all-time high, the market is deteriorating. powell has a choice related to something that breaks to preempt disaster. i thought he would go 25.
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and in worse shape, and he had to go 50 and felt that way. david: for political reasons or the economy is doing worse. >> i will give him the benefit of the doubt or break on that. david: it means we deal with upcoming much bigger drops in employment. >> it is disproportionate between small businesses. small business are the backbone of america. larger companies, the balanced fleets are flush. dropping by 50 basis points we have entered a recession because of fiscal spending that is extremely high, refinancing loans and because people are betting a record amount on credit cards. any of those shoes drops they will probably pass the baton to the next administration, maybe the next fed chair and maybe
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things will break at that point. david: talking sectors i want to talk the chips sector, they seem to be trying to come back after a lousy end of summer drop particularly with nvidia and intel. what do you think of the chips sector in general as we are placing 1/2 point cut in rates? >> i'm bullish on the chips sector. i disagree here. i'm not getting defensive. i'm going more risk on with my out locations in this environment and it is going to be the semiconductor chips. it will be financials, that work in the interim in my opinion given the amount of liquidity driven into the market and follow the tape, follow what the market is telling you because they are
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the final arbitrator at the end of the day. if you look at the performance yesterday everyone was prognosticating, real estate will work as rates were coming down but yesterday those were the three sectors that were negative on the day and if you follow what the market is telling you, we could have a risk rally with semiconductors. david: great to see you both. thank you for being here. new fox polling on what is motivating americans to vote. the top answer, high prices. edward lawrence has more from the white house. >> reporter: pulling showed vice president kamala harris won the debate but she didn't move the needle. 66% of people see grocery prices as a major concern and that number is increasing, 60% say housing costs are major issue. 40% say gas prices.
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food at the grocery store up 20 one% since kamala harris and president biden came into office and we keep hearing the frustration. the building behind me, the president thinks americans should feel better about the biden/harris economy. >> in particular is urgent today as it was before the pandemic but that should not prevent anyone from recognizing the progress we have made, the expectation deifying ongoing expansion and work productivity and grit of the american people to get us where we are today. >> reporter: the major issues favor donald trump, 39% of registered voters see high prices as a motivating factor in voting, 32% say immigration. donald trump has attend point advantage in handling the immigration issue, 5 point advantage in handling the economy. americans have record credit card debt, alluding to an
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average 28% interest on the debt. the former president unveiled a new idea. >> to help americans buried in credit card debt under the kamala harris economy we will have a temporary 10% on credit card interest rates because they are paying 20, 25%, getting decimated. >> reporter: donald trump found those hot button issues for main st. americans and millions of americans dealing with that crushing credit card debt. david: here now is elections editor at the new york post kelly jane torrents and democrat strategist and pollster doug shoen. you know the issue. you saw edward outline what's happening in the economy, the number one issue. folks still don't like where the economy is but the question, by the way, that is
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improving a little bit only in quotation marks 70% of the people think the economy is fair or poor but it's a big problem for a vp harris, how does she separate herself from the white house because that issue, we have one paul we can put up, the administration's policies and your family, 47% feel donald trump helped them but only 25% of the people now think biden has helped them and the numbers are reversed, 30% think trump hurt the economy, 49% say biden is hurting their family right now. how does she separate herself from her association with biden? >> she has labeled her economic program a new way forward, she
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doesn't talk about the biden/harris economy or economic policies, and she has outlined a series of populist initiatives on price caps as a means of saying i am different and you can trust me. so far donald trump has yet to outline his own comprehensive program, i'm not going to tax tips, i'm not going to allow interest over 10% on credit cards but we don't have an agenda going forward for the former president so she has managed to get away from being held accountable for the biden/harris policies and outcomes. david: another thing she seems to be getting away with if you want to use that expression is the fact that the condition of the economy is poor, but trusted to do a better job
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helping the middle class, beating trump on helping the middle class, 53% of people think she's helping a middle-class, only 44% think donald trump is helping the middle class even though you can credibly say the middle class did better in terms of household income and increase in household wealth and increase in income during trump, why is she leading that on the middle-class? on the middle class? >> it is incredible. in june, apa paul found 60% of americans disapproved of the way president biden was handling the economy but she's got this mantra, let's move forward, let's turn the page, turn the page on what? this administration you are part of.
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she's not saying those words and surprisingly starting the work not entirely will, trump is more trusted on the economy but she narrowed the gap that existed with trump and biden. david: one part of the middle class that's not convinced are union members, class of people biden himself said he was the best president for the unions in history. you have this non-endorsement by the teamsters which is a kind of backhanded endorsement of donald trump and in fact that paul that came out that 60% of the members are going to be voting for trump, the uaw the same situation, the head of the uaw endorsed harris but he admitted most members would be voting for trump. how much does that hurt the harris campaign? the fact that the unions, so many union members are going for donald trump?
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>> hurts the harris campaign, if they make the point as clearly and cogently as you just did but so far they haven't made that case. because trump has yet to articulate a plan for the middle class, he is perceived as not being as committed as somebody who has talked about the middle class, vice president harris, this is crying out for the trump agenda going forward which so far has been mia. david: the polls are a snapshot in time and the bottom line, it is a relatively recent paul, doesn't account for what's happening in the past few days. we've seen donald trump speak more specifically on the economy, to the class.
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is he getting the message of turning his message around not only about himself and being more casual etc. but being the better steward of the economy? >> i think he is. he starting to listen to some advice to quit focusing on the election process from 2022 and focus again on touting his accomplishments, but you have to say what do you do next? you can't just say rollback something so he starting to do that and the other republicans just this morning, gop candidate in ohio said he is going to, he wants to taxes on law enforcement. no tax on tips has been very popular, so popular, kamala harris copied it for the congressional black caucus.
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david: she may also copy no tax for over a time. you are wondering who's paying taxes after all this is over. thank you very much. always a pleasure, thanks for being here. tim cook is unveiling the new iphone 16. stay with us. ♪ (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. (grandpa vo) if that's not rich, i don't know what is.
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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. >> apple iphone 16 hitting store shelves today but lower than expected demand is overshadowing the release. live from seattle on fifth avenue the latest, they don't often have a problem with lower-than-expected demand, do they. lauren: you saw the crowds, diehard fans lined up early to get their hands on the iphone. we saw apple ceo tim cook outside this iconic fifth avenue cuba to greet their first customers, eager fans that didn't mind the wait until next month when most of those
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features will roll out, when the software hits. >> i have been waiting a couple months. i get the chance to use it. i love the use of ai. >> tim cook out the door and i was escorted inside by one of the apple executives and they brought me to a table where tim cook witnessed to me open the first phone. >> he was starstruck first in line for the preorders, waiting since 5 am for the non-preorders, 7:00 pm last night. despite the crowds you are seeing outside this fifth avenue store some analysts say of the iphone 16 may not be selling as well as last year's 15 and lower preorders and shorter wait times which indicate less demand, and the main reason.
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lsa because of the delay in the software you have a longer iphone 16 sales cycle but one selling point that continues is generous telecom from at&t, verizon and team mobile, free iphone for trade ins up to $1000 back, at&t, t-mobile from what they are seeing, they are doing as well as last year. the base price at $799, when 9, when the first iphone launch in 2007, the price was $489. if you inflation-adjusted that it seems pretty pricey, 2.5 billion iphones sold since then and $3 trillion in market value but the stock price has a lot of ai hypo built into it and it is time. david: you can't see it from your location but i'm holding
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up my iphone. i won't tell you what number it is but they he can single digit trade in. i wonder. >> there's a cap on how old you can bring your iphones but i think it's, iphone 9 it up, those are very dangerous subsidies, first time getting $1000 back which some say is helping the cycle. david: thank you so much. good to see you. i want to bring in ray wang and the great gary kaltbaum. apple has had a great week. seems to be doing great but does it concern you there isn't as strong demand for the iphone 16. a lot has to do with people afraid of the ai had addition
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coming on. >> i'm not as worried as a lot of folks are. people are seeing different things but the bottom line is a lot have carried errors on subscription, they get a steady state of upgrades and if you look, there's 1.38 billion active iphones out there in a 4 year cycle, they will hit all of them. probably 95% of them get the right so that's not the issue. the question is can you win more users out there so how is china doing, how is india doing? those markets grow. customers will be fine with is that over time but that is the big piece here. david: sticking with you for a second. what about while way and their competition to the iphone? china is a great market for apple but are they concerned about the competition? >> they are concerned about the
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competition in china but the while way phone is not seen as a luxury brand the way apple is. huawei is a commodity brand with extra phones but not the same way you treat apple. david: let's talk about the economy, the dow is positive by 10 points but we will take a green market any day of the week. the question is what happened with that 50.50 basis point rate cut, what happening with the economy, in august we spent twice as much money as came in in tax revenue. that's disgraceful, no business in the world could survive a day with a record like that. where will it end with the economy?
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>> less sending also and something to watch closely, this administration driving to the hoop into the election. we sent them the $308 billion in august and they spent $688 billion. a record by far. that goes into the economy. it goes into the system so we have are fed that's paying cash up, the government is spending an unimaginable amount of keeping things afloat. i'm worried about what happens afterwards. the consumer, we only know about government debt, just keep our fingers crossed things grow. one thing government does have is us. i say it every time i'm on to but, this 150 million of us the
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go to work every day and have great companies like apple, technological advancement and medical companies with medical advancements making great productivity gains and that spurs on the economy and the market. david: got to remember apple came into existence in one of the most terrible times of our economy, the late 1970s with hyperinflation and no growth mentality by our leaders and ronald reagan turned that around and apple started at the worst point of my entire life. things might look bad. take a look at big movers. trump media stock is down 5. 5% % to $13.90 a share. dj t lockup restrictions are about to expire, the end of the
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markup was expected for large sales of the company, stock, many wondering if donald trump would sell his big share. so far that hasn't happened. we will be right back. ♪
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increase in aliens with significant ties to terrorism. at the time i was told i could not release any information on his increase or mention any of the arrests. the administration was trying to convince the public there's no threat on the border. david: of that was the retired border patrol chief accusing the administration of hiding information about the spike in border crossings with migrants suspected of ties to terrorism. senior research official at the heritage foundation is here to react to this. a simple question. there a cover-up now by this administration, specifically by the department of homeland security by how many terrorist actors have sneaked in without any venting into our country? >> this is information american citizens should have access to this information. it should not be suppressed. david: you think it has been suppressed. >> very clearly.
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i'm not surprised by the whistleblower. many folks in dc have known about the election of the current administration, not limited to what we are seeing from dhs. david: how big a threat to national security is it? should we i hate to say, should we expect something bad to happen? some terrorist activity set off by one of these migrants that sneaked across the border without proper vetting? >> it's a matter of when, not if. so many unvented unknown, and not the type of controls our capacity to go after the folks that we do have a tip and look what the secret service is having problems doing protecting the candidate, donald trump. there's a lot of questions. david: under the purview of the department of homeland security, where secret service lives now and they are in charge of the border and secret service on both fronts seem to have failed or at least are slipping. noticeable.
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>> lost sight of who their responsibilities are to, the american taxpayer and citizens and what we are seeing now, trying to move away attention from inconvenient truths, they need to be held accountable and be responsible to the taxpayers. david: and other national security crisis that came from the border, the increase in crime, international organizations, spreading out in towns all over america from the west coast, middle of america to the east coast, big cities, smaller towns. >> to arrest individuals that have been prosecuted rather than cash bail. the fbi started the width of a
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response, created america in the 1930s. do we need that on the federal role level. >> better job, with national guard, nothing else can happen. with possible without that. >> the middle east situation, number one ally, they attacked their number one enemy hezbollah/iran with pager bombs, don't have absolute confirmation of that, the administration is being silent if not complaining quietly about that. should they be or should we be glad that it happened? >> the current administration has no grounds to be
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dissatisfied or upset on national interest and survival but for the white house, the fact is in the next few days. in southern lebanon to apply adequate pressure on the hamas, has blanda ran access, to give something a more humane solution. a test of arms and we will find out the next couple days. in the context of the un general assembly, adds added emphasis to this. very historic attack. david: thank you for your service. appreciate it. nuclear accident made three mile island infamous all over the world. microsoft's ai may revive it. they need a lot of energy. three mile island is going to put it out, jeff flock has a preview of the story.
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>> reporter: one of the darkest days in history of nuclear energy 45 years ago but today may be one of the brighter days. all the details on that live right here from 3 mile island, pennsylvania. everybody wants super straight, super white teeth. they want that hollywood white smile. new sensodyne clinical white
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david: this is good news a deal between constellation energy will restart 3 mile island. this is the site of the worst nuclear accident. jeff flock has the latest. >> reporter: you and i are old enough 3 mile island. there was 3 mile island and that meltdown was a nuclear meltdown. you see those cooling towers, a problem with the cooling system and the meltdown caused thousands of evacuations, people still disputing what happened and what the health impacts where. on the other side of the screen
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you see the cooling towers for reactor one. that one was restarted but shut down by constellation energy in 2019 because it was not profitable. in comes microsoft with a deal to buy power, in 2028. they seek to enable a d carbonized grid for the customers and the world. this will bring a significant supply carbon free electricity to the power grid. there's a plant in michigan, the palisades station, that is coming back to help power the grid, thanks to enlarger measure this voracious appetite
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to power ai. in the case of this deal has not taken it off the grid. for a long time now, they restart this plant. nuclear energy is carbon free. if you're a fan of the environment it doesn't blow up on us. david: that a big caveat, we appreciate it. reaction from daniel turner. a wonderful idea, we know ai creates needs for a lot more energy. nuclear power can provided but cannot do so safely? are there enough safeguards in this plan for microsoft to prevent what happened in the late 1970s with 3 mile island?
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>> in france 90% of their electricity is powered by nuclear. tens of thousands of young men and women, nuclear reactors in submarines, on aircraft carriers, no one is concerned about their safety. the fear of nuclear is overblown, but something interesting about this microsoft deal, they want reliable energy. why aren't they building wind farms? why aren't they building solar farms? they are building nuclear plants because they want reliable energy. bill gates is demonstrating wind and solar do not work. they don't trust wind and solar. they want the american people stuck with wind and solar but not microsoft's profit line. that tells you about the lives of the green movement and renewable energy. david: something that does work
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although it does fuel carbon is fossil fuels and kamala harris continues to say where she would laminate fracking, she changed her her views on that. the administration which she' still a part of doesn't stop there lng pause which is turning into a been. >> is a candidate speaking out of both sides of her mouth. the biden/harris administration has given the fewest amount of oil and gas leases since world war ii, they have banned oil and gas in parts of alaska across the gulf of mexico, and goes to a state like pennsylvania and talks about oil and gas production numbers. if president harris wants to support the oil and gas industry she would have done it
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from day one. david: the increased production, in december of 2019. is that progress? only 10 seconds. >> it is progress but oil leases, these are 5 years in the making. oil does not come online in the course of one administration. takes a long time. if she loved oil and gas numbers allow us to drill more and stop punishing the industry. david: great to see you, thank you, appreciate it. stocks are wavering after a big day driven by the jumbo rate card. the other 2 indices are down. more coast-to-coast right after this. nt story. with the chase ink card, we got up and running in no time. earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase with the chase ink business unlimited card from chase for business. what tractor supply customers experience is personalized service. made possible by t-mobile for business.
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and having someone who can help you get there. the key to being rich is knowing what counts. a perfect day for a family outing! shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. only shingrix is proven over 90% effective. shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. it's odd how in an instant things can transform.
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slipping out of balance into freefall. (the stock market is now down 23%). this is happening people. where there are so few certainties... (laughing) look around you. you deserve to know. as we navigate a future unknown. i'm glad i found stability amidst it all. gold. standing the test of time.
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>> sends one in the air the other way, it goes gone.
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one of our kind player, 1-of-a-kind season, 50/50 club. david: baseball history, nothing like it. la dodgers star player becoming the first ever member of the 50/50 club, 50 stolen bases in one season. doug eldridge talks about this. how unusual, from babe ruth to mickey mantle, roger mirus, but it is unusual to have a great runner as a great hitter. tied up in one package? >> he is the 50/fifty club. the president, vice president
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and the janitor. it was both the style and substance, talk about the greatest season of all time but last season he put on this best single game of all time. two stolen bases, three home runs, four runs and ten rbis. 1920 was the first year they started recording rbis as a statistic. it may be the best game in known baseball history. that saying about. david: a full package there. i remember old films of babe ruth sauntering base to base slowly because he was overweight, smoked cigars, there's a picture of him. i love the babe but he wasn't a runner. is this the new generation or is he the first of many members of the 50/50 club? >> don't want to get far on
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that. the first time in history, don't know if it's the new paradigm others will follow, nobody has been close, maybe last year but not at this level. only a season ago, he was still in the pitching rotation, this is the swiss army knife of athletes. i don't say that with a sense of hyperbole. the most literal sense. it is incredible we are witnessing history. david: i've got to mention aaron judge, 53 home runs, 8 games left in the season for the yankees. can he make it to 60 one? >> anything is possible. if we see games like that don't discount the judge, anything is possible. great time for baseball fans. david: thank you so much. jackie deangelis and "the big money show," not waiting in the wings anymore. they are here to take you

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