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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  September 24, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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stuart: what is the capital -- what is your call? >> i will go fast which i'm sure i know this. stuart: you know that because the floor manager suggested that. >> and easy answer. i will go with something different. stuart: a tossup for me but i'm going to go with tashkent. the answer is bakhoum. i got one wrong. i can't read this blurb. i'm out of time. i'm embarrassed, neil is coming up next and will take me on about this. neil: no, but i'm glad you addressed it and feel so
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horrible about it but i'm not going to add insult to injury. thank you very much. do any of you remember this famous remark? >> read my lips. no new taxes. neil: today's candidates are taking the no taxes promise to a whole new expensive level. we will bring the latest on that in a moment which i will speak to david rubenstein this hour and get his take on it. the giveaway is on. you will level or you are worried about it. alexandria half following changes to the tax code in savanna. to you, my friend. >> great to be with you. today, donald trump is speaking
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to corporations overseas, and he wants to see more business than in the us, it is a lot of that action, it is buzzing get, the sierra paul puts donald trump four points ahead of vice president harris in georgia. the focus was abortion. president biden won the state by the smallest of margins, 12,000 votes. he arrives in savanna from another biden won state, pennsylvania where he spoke of his plan, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime or social security benefits. he says he's doing what harris is not. >> one of two reasons, she's not very smart. the other reason is she doesn't know how to talk about inflation.
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inflation at a number nobody can believe. >> reporter: donald trump says his tax plan will be put in place on foreign goods imported into the us. in pennsylvania he threatened tariffs to john deere if they move manufacturing to mexico. neil: with donald trump, the cofounder of bad trading partners. wall street loves tax cuts but you have to pay for these candidates, to offer the stand most diverse. and they build on these. how does wall street have news like that.
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>> the tariffs donald trump suggested on certain countries like china, and negotiating point out to start. reasonable tariffs affect steel prices for a long stretch of time, there's a 6 month bump, import and domestic and to normal levels and there was money going into the treasury. we overstate what's going to happen. same with kamala harris where she talks about raising the corporate tax rate, and the unemployment rate seems to be happy -- where the economy is versus just the out right affects.
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neil: tax cuts having nothing to do with that or more to do with soft landing, and the soft landing has been achieved. >> the comparison is to landing softly. they reload and take off again. into dynamic economy. inflation is stable and growth is stable. we never had one. i don't believe this is in the long run either.
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and and it is likely to trigger a boost in inflation, that's what the fed wants in that time. neil: at the federal reserve, triggering more inflation by not moving aggressively, and paul volcker came in, let me get your sense of what the market is telling us, those worries are out there. there's a lot of worry, and you never bet against a doll market -- >> most everything is a 3-headed monster, nada 2-headed monster, we have lower rates and then economy the to
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trajectory for gdp, if you take an economist from mars and drop him or her into this economy, 2.9% growth, 2.8% inflation. and might say you should take rates a little bit or curb the quantitative easing that is going on in small points. that rate cut would drive inflation, and that's what i'm looking at. home prices go up, stock prices go up, it is tapering off if the fed is fighting them, and supporting it.
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neil: the next move over did it with 1/2 point or cut. a split between 1/4 and 1/2 point. what are you anticipating? >> they will go 25 per year and another 50 toward the end of the year or early next year. i misspoke a moment ago. and and this goes back to when jerome powell talked about adjusted average above 2%. they are willing to let inflation run, for a period of time the once you use price
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stability, and and no inflation they need to let it run hot a little bit. neil: nothing, you agree with that. up to the election. at the december meeting get. >> 75 more for this year. i think it is wrong. neil: that would get us in the overnight bank lending rate level. i want to go to richardson in new york city, president biden popped up at the united nations, his final remarks at the un as president of the united states. what can you tell us? >> reporter: he said the world is at an inflection point. he has four months to deal with that as president.
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20 minute remarks at the united nations general assembly. he said many look at the world and see difficulties and react with despair. and biden urged the world not to flinch from their horrors of bacteria -- october 7th have this billions and gaza didn't ask for this war either. he says the us will not let up support for ukraine, he recognized that withdrawal from afghanistan. >> i came to office as president and vietnam, america's longest war. i was determined to end it. it was a hard decision. a decision accompanied by tragedy. 13 brave americans lost their lives in a suicide bomb. i think those lost lives. >> biden leaves office with
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plenty of unfinished business, hostages and gaza, with no signs of ending. and to take my nation forward. let us never forget. it is your people, it is your people. >> world leaders looking forward to november 5th, seeing who the united states will election next president. kamala harris, what her specifics on foreign policy for donald trump, to end the number of wars. neil: richardson at the united nations, former us army
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veteran, let me just say this, don't want to miss with that. and made the world a safer place. do you think he has done. >> i want to know what place he's talking about. shortly thereafter, in afghanistan followed by a predictable invasion of ukraine and russia and inflame the middle east, other conflicts are tied to this. no strategy, opened the door to many nations who want to use war and conflict for political ends.
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neil: one of the things you hear from this administration, the pool out from afghanistan, controversial as it was, it ended our longest war, longer than vietnam. he did concede the loss of american lives with a haphazard withdrawal. he conceded little else. could that be handled better? other quagmires the developed could have been avoided. >> they could have been. what they saw in afghanistan is the desire to get rid of more strategic position towards ka kabul, we did everything one hundred% wrong and showed weakness on world stage. the message that we are not going to stop ukraine from joining nato, we have that
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opportunity with a feckless administration in washington dc within ability to maintain any plan or strategy to prevent it. they continued funding iran by removing sanctions and cash into to ron to fund terror organizations surrounding israel on all sides. the result is predictable, based on affordable foreign policy decisions at many were tried in the past and failed in the past. we are re-creating the same insanity from past administrations. neil: good catching up with you. we are following right now but take a look at the trading, there's consensusbuilding for another half point cut. the day after the federal
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reserve cut rates again but the bedding is is for 1/2 point cut. that's unlikely as it seems too many but we should point out, 75 basis points by the end of the year will bring federal funds to a range of 4% to 4. 4% from roughly 4.75 to 5% right now. doesn't mean anything but i quote there fed fund futures contract, people bet money on that. doesn't mean they can't be just as wrong whether they put money on it or not but the 10 year yield that is a market rate kneeled, fed actions can influence it, barely budging on the notion that the slowdown is on but soft landing is on as well. we are following that and also
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our intrepid producer in washington, security and exchange commission and accounting and answering to do. it got pretty interesting. ♪
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it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title. >> do you plan to stay on if donald trump is elected? kamala harris's donors, step down if she wins? what do you make of that? if donald trump wins reelection? if you don't plan to stay on what is your next plan? neil: that is a persevering producer that sounds like charlie gasparino going after chairman of the securities and exchange commission still going on now. he is getting a bipartisan bashing. what do you make of this? charles: tell charlie gasparino.
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julie: we had to be careful. charles: we pay our people to do that. wise gansler -- when republicans are going after them, what's the problem? charles: democrats are on wall street and think they think he has been not liberal but so progressive that it is a detriment to the economy. i had dinner two months ago, they expressed the opinion of many in the tv world. usually votes democrat. call to may communist. in terms of the heaping of
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regulation, climate disclosures. the stopping of deals is so far left that it is bad for the economy. this is bipartisan. i wrote in my column that he has a secret plan to stay no matter who gets elected because kamala harris if is a lectured, a little close to the center. if kamala harris gets in there, goes to elizabeth warren who is his rabbi. they go to bat for them. that is a battle you don't want to fight. if trump gets in there, he will force trump to try to fire him. even if trump fires him but
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apparently his term ends in 2025 or 26, you can't really fire him. you can throw him out of the building, revoke his computer access, you can't fire the guy, you can designate another chairman but he will still be on the commission if you wants to stay. his plan is to stay. bipartisan. a lot of people think he is annoying. he doesn't like fox business. it will be interesting if trump gets in and becomes president and doesn't want to leave. he has -- to walk him out of the building. which i hear they are talking about. neil: you and i experienced trying the door thousand times but let me -- kudos to you on the whole woke investment
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thing, reading about these companies that are abandoning these policies, a lot of lamenting in the mainstream press, we will rue the day we are taking away this woke stuff. what do you make of that? charles: who is saying that? lauren: it was in the la times. charles: these newspapers going out of business for woke, there we go, attacks on diversity programs show the need to keep them going and improve. here's the thing, by the way, it's modestly being rolled back, not a 100% rollback but it is an evolution. reporting like mine will lead to that. when you start exposing it for its idiocy, budweiser doing what it did with dylan mulvaney, disney inflicting for no reason same sex kissing scenes, it doesn't sell to the
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american public and one thing with these enforced diversity rules, dei, it is illegal. hate to say it. the supreme court says it is illegal. businesses will have to rollback these policies. jamie dimon who i wrote about who's a big devotee of dei talking about how he has to comport with the law. i think woke is over, no matter how many journalists have failing newspapers suggested is not. back to you. i am in your studio. i am in your studio without you and you played hooky. i want you to know i should be sitting in the anchor seat. they prevented to me. neil: they were ready to go but they said where -- charlie wears a tie. neil: i tried to order a pumpkin spice latte and they didn't bring it. neil: you are a despicable human being.
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i like talking to you and i'm happy when we talk. great author, great mind, funny guy. now sabotaging my studio. one of my favorite guests, david rubenstein has a great new book out that picks the brains of the best historians and biographers, presidents including a number of presidents as well, there read on leadership and all this stuff. interesting, intriguing developments from that, david is next. after careful review of medical guidance and research on pain relief,
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>> when you make that decision, ask your self are you better off than you were four years ago? is it easier for you to buy things in stores than it was four years ago? neil: we remember that, the only debate with jimmy carter the crystallize the decision for the american people when they tried to sign up, whether the american people were better off after they came to power. there was no split reading 1980.
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we were not better off and they kicked jimmy carter off. that the reality of president shall politics. david rubenstein knows something about that, the highest calling conversations on the american presidency. 2 dozen presidential stewards, a number of living former presidents as well. a great book. neil: something that came across is the notion of the highest calling that sometimes intriguing insights, george w. bush referring to this populist wave in the country that might to him, the financial institutions that bothered him. i've been to his library and
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that's part of his library, the opening of his administration. they rescued institutions that brought this on themselves but he did it. that's one of the stark reminders that led to this. >> his father grew up in connecticut as a texan, george w. bush though he did go to harvard business school got more comfortable being part of west texas. he felt the bailout proposed by been burning can hank paulson was something in midland texas, the largest investment banks, he felt he had to do it to keep the economy alive but when you are president of the united states you do things you never
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thought you would do. why would somebody want to be president? i try to give people a sense why the presidency is important? since woodrow wilson went to paris to negotiate the agreement about world war i the president has been the most import in person in the world. we have 7 billion people in the world but the president is the most important person, he or she may be in the future can make decisions that will affect everybody. when people run for president, think of what happened to lyndon johnson, gerald ford couldn't get reelected, ronald reagan, george herbert walker bush couldn't get reelected and so forth. a great job but a lot of challenges to it. a lot of people don't vote. 160 million people in the president election, 160 million.
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of people who were eligible didn't vote. we encourage people to learn the presence. and try to vote. we've lost millions of men in combat to protect the right to vote and many people don't exercise the right to vote. neil: the instances you will you to, might argue created donald trump and his possible return to the white house. did his predecessors make that happen? >> his predecessors did a number of things that helped lead to the calamity we had on the bailout but no one person deserves the blame and numbers of congress involved as well but we have a similar situation
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now, $35 trillion indebtedness. its foreign and domestic. we are paying more on interest on that debt with the defense budget. the country's currency goes down in value. the reserve currency is the most valued currency. neil: is not resonating with voters, it's not even on top ten issue. that's like a grenade. >> it is not until it is. at some point, some people in congress keep the debt and we have more interest in it. people are more interested in other things, inflation and jobs but the debt is something that historically when you pay more interest on the debt and
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your defense budget the country is in trouble. neil: we are chasing these tax cuts, and kamala harris, we've seen in the courts the last four weeks a proposal to know taxes on tips, no social security benefits, no tax on overtime, full salt deduction return. the lower tax cuts, none of these paid for. all of these adding to the debt. depending his math you believe, kamala harris's debt goes up less than donald trump's but still goes up. >> they haven't proposed know taxes on broadcasters income. there is no doubt, there's a rush to cut taxes and so forth but on the ways and means
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committee they get around to dealing with this next year, you have to pay for some of these things. we are running a $2 trillion annual deficit. hard to keep doing that and thinking at some point something isn't going to go wrong. if something can't keep going on forever it won't. and interest people in learning more about the presidency, interested in what the candidate have and go out and vote. representative democracy, jefferson said, and the electoral colleges the founding fathers didn't think they were informed at the time, we still have the electoral college, our citizens are more informed but not as informed as i hope they will be. neil: i get the sense presidents bedevil themselves when they can be interpreted for what broke them down, jimmy
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carter, was just as instrumental as the you but, he was seen as a deeply decent human being, a little arrogant and sanctimonious. how to presidents balance these issues that are unique to them. >> i have gone there myself. jimmy carter had challenges, the hostage situation. he tried to work on too many issues, one or 2 major bills through, president biden got the chips bill theroux. many bills work through but twice as many.
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the post presidency gave him a better reputation than we had before. we are a few days from his 100th birthday which is something of president has achieved before. >> you are mentioning one term presidents, we could looking at a string of them, wouldn't be so unusual anymore. if kamala harris were to lose it is one term for the democrats just as prior to that it was a one term for donald trump f he returns but why is that? is it that our attention span is short lived? how do you see it? >> broadcast media is available to so many people and people don't like everything presidents do and one ways is not voting for the person. someone fresh will be new or better. when you are selling something in advertising there are two words that always work, free
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and new. marta those were? people like new. people like fresh. if you don't like the tired old person in the office you try someone new. it's a common phenomenon and obviously permeates the presidency. having a 2-term president is getting to be rare. of the 20 could i get your sense what we might expect, a second shot at a trump presidency. how different would he be? they fear for a return to the white house, not meaning to disparage him, but might be more of what we saw with drama and how do you see it if it were to come to pass? >> i did an interview with president biden and donald trump for this book and grateful to both of them for giving me an interview. donald trump's interview pointed out he would be more
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experienced, never been in government before. the only person in our country's -- people were generals who served in the military but no one had no government experience which if you want to be president or i want to be president, nobody, if we want to be president we have some experience in government. he had no experience. i think he feels he knows how to pick people more than the first time around, there are many people who said they don't want to serve with him again. some people who have served with him before in senior positions who would go back. i don't want to count them all now but many people are well respected who would go up. kamala harris has good people too, know that will keep some people from the biden administration, shouldn't speaker on that but a lot of fresh people who are attracted
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to her organization or operation. until it is done, we only have a few months to decide to get these jobs, the transition period is short. we are elected in november. julie: we do it that day. >> in our case think about lincoln. he was elected in november, he can't do anything about it. he was -- assassination threat so took a while to get to washington dc undercover a bit. same with fdr. he didn't get to be there until march. he had to wait to do anything.
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neil: real quickly, looking at the clock, you're very generous, history is important to you, you like to preserve a lot of documents, you don't just put them in a frame of your house, you just gave $10 million to the washington zoo and i wondered how that fit in with your historical motif. >> it's owned by the smithsonian and i was chair for a number of years and i learned we don't get them for free. the first pandas given to richard nixon were for free but since then the chinese rented these pandas out of you pay $2 million a year for the chinese so they need somebody to support that and i did it in part because the national zoo attracts anonymous a lot of viewers but they are in large part because of the pandas. it's a good sign of the us china relationship but having
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the pandas here is a real thing. i like to make people happy. neil: as a yankee fan, your ownership of the orioles doesn't make me happy but good luck with that but we will see how the goes. very good seeing you. >> your team did pretty well this year but not over until it is over. we will see what happens. neil: they are both going to the playoffs. great seeing you. the highest calling conversations on american presidency. a lot more coming up with the dow as well. all the averages up after this. (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.
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why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title. neil: home prices increasing get, what has a lot of people hoping for a home is the rate of increase is slowing a little bit. what do you think? >> the new home market is dominated by new construction and what we've seen is year over year decrease, increase in
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pricing on resale market and as they meet the buyer demand with resale, and more homebuilders building supply, prices flatten out here as interest rates come down. neil: they are down with the latest fed cut. we can see them cut a little more. that doesn't correlate into a lower fixed entry rates like the 10 year note on banda over which the fed has no direct control but where are mortgage rates going? under 6%? how would you describe it? >> we see them trending lower. homebuying demands are will pick up. mortgage rates are coming low enough to the resale inventory that is pent-up due to this locking affect. as long as they trend lower we will see the below 6, demand
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picks up. more sales occur, prices remain steady as homebuilders deliver more supply to meet that demand. neil: the toll on all these others have been building in communities with no guaranteed buyers but building the same. that interesting. neil: decrease in the months of supply inventory. >> we are down 7.5 months of supply. if we look at months of supply 20% of that is standing inventory. a finish lot or home under construction. we see 1.5, one. 6 months of supply in standing inventory, we think those homes that are under construction are more what likely to meet the demand.
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neil: stocks are on a tear. where do you see the homebuilders going? >> record margins for the past, and mortgage rates start to continue downward. the buydown we've seen them use. it's easy to get into the margin as the rates come down and we start to see prices flatten and strong margins on homebuilders. neil: great catching up with you on all of that. going a little lower but not a lot lower. more after this. [coughs] when caroline has a cough, she takes robitussin. so, she can have those one on ones again.
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ashley: we are keeping an eye on what is now tropical storm helene brewing in the western caribbean and expected to move
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into the gulf of mexico tomorrow where it will continue to strengthen and become a hurricane. forecasters believe the storm will eventually make landfall somewhere along the florida panhandle, probably the big bend area with winds up to one hundred 15 miles an hour. that would make it a category 3, before moving quickly inland over tallahassee into southern georgia where we will see strong winds, heavy rain, perhaps the biggest issue could be the storm surge, the worst point, we could see a storm surge of 10 to 15 feet in the cedar key area north of tampa, depends which way the storm could wobble. keep an eye on storm surge, 10 to 15 feet, authorities say that's not survivable, time to get out. neil: could be a doozy. ashley webster following that. let's go to brian brenberg and "the big money show"

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