tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business October 11, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT
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ashley: i came up with ten. couldn't get beyond ten. stuart: lahren. lauren: number 2. 10. stuart: i cheated. i listened to our floor manager who sang the song with the state names in and she said ten and she is right. lauren: have we ever all been right? stuart: never. new hampshire, new jersey, new york, new mexico, north carolina, south carolina, north dakota, south dakota, west virginia. you have that song you saying. you have to do that on the air sooner or later. time is up. it has been a great show. see you next week. time is up for me. neil will miraculously appear on your screens. ashley: we are focusing on the rebuilding effort going on
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right now in florida. this is a live shot of bradenton beach, this got a heavy blow. if you think about it, this is the exact reverse of what we saw in the, the winds doing the damage, and in florida right now. costs are higher and higher. >> rivers are overtopping their banks. and active water rescues, and a number of pets as well.
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at this late date, still actively rescuing people from this storm. we've seen up and down on the road screens going through neighborhoods lifting debris, at the front of every house behind me. some of this is from a storm two weeks ago, some of it from milton, some a mix of two storms, this area was hit by a 1-2 punch, so much that some floridians say they could be ready to throw in the towel. >> i want to rebuild, get it finished and i think we are probably going to say goodbye to florida because we are getting too old to keep doing this. >> cleanup for many is underway, also without electric power, without running water, without air conditioning, no easy feat. back to you. stuart: thank you, for all your effort and your crew's effort by following this, you've done an a plus job.
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we've got archie collins of tampa electric, good to have you. 2. 5 million don't have power, what is the latest? >> good afternoon. thanks for having me on. the latest from west central florida is we currently have in the neighborhood of 525,000 customers without power. before i go further i want to harken back, whose lives have been lost because of milton, clearly our thoughts are with all of them. we were here on the ground as milton rolled farouk, we can attest to the ferocity of the winds, surge and excessive rain that accompanied the hurricane. as we sit here today our city is reeling a bit, but this is a
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resilient area. this is an area that is used to receiving hurricanes. this is our third one over the last six weeks or so between debbie, helena and this one. this one was the most significant, but we will recover. i assure you we will recover in fairly short order. neil: to quantify what you said, 2. 5 million without power across the state but in your neck of the woods it is half a million. how quickly is that coming back on? it gets very hot and humid there. what is the latest? >> catching a little bit of a break with the weather this week. beautiful weather. temperatures have been in the low 80s. if ever there is a time for line workers to be out doing what they do and for our customers to be a little less uncomfortable it is weather
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like this. how long will it take? we are just closing in. we are concluding what we would call damage assessment, triageing phase giving a sense of what is out there. we have 6000 line workers we have assembled across the united states and canada, assisting with this restoration, the biggest deployment of resources made over the course of its history. there is real value in the state of florida on business continuity. we give assurance to our community, to accelerate the restoration of power, and we expect in the next 5 to 7 days, the bulk of customers will recover. neil: how many of your
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powerlines are underground, it didn't matter whether they were underground, mother nature finds a way to get to them. i am wondering what the breakdown is. >> florida again, another attribute of florida is the value it places on resiliency. i am talking about electric grid resiliency when i say that. 52% of our electric system is underground and i daresay that relative to the industry that a large percentage located underground. hurricanes come with multiple ingredients, high winds have a affect of damaging overhead
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infrastructure, storm surge we experienced during helene, a little less so here in the tampa bay area with milton. we are grateful for that. that does have the ability to negatively impact underground infrastructure. rain is the third element, in milton we received in an 18 hour period, 40% of annual rainfall in the 18 hour period that resulted in localized flooding. neil: as they get the power back on, as bad as it is to your point it could have been a lot worse. we've got chad pergram following this drama whether fema is up to the job or has enough money for the job and you are getting a lot of confusing signals. what's the latest?
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>> reporter: if you are keeping score this could be one for the record books, fema has obligated $9 billion, spent a fraction of that. some lawmakers are disappointed in the federal response. >> we need to highlight what is truly happening whether or not we are getting responses, the federal government is continuing to fail us which is why i stepped up. >> reporter: house speaker mike johnson will not recall lawmakers to approve more money for the disasters but others disagree. and paulina luna wants congress back, she spoke to president biden yesterday, she's pleased with the response congress faces a massive price tag to cope with the storm. luna demands offsets. >> we've continuously been funding foreign wars in ukraine. redirecting that funding to foreign countries, countries that we shouldn't be involved
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in, that might offset the spending. >> this requires long-term commitments from congress to make everything whole. the small business administration could cover disaster loans. neil: the spa is at the edge. they have to be back after the elections. this will be a long haul, it takes $7 billion. >> $12 billion annually responding to natural disasters, it's possible the dollar figure for this year could exceed that. it may surpass what congress spent for here hurricane katrina. neil: we still have a ways to go this hurricane season. >> reporter: this is where alejandra mayorkas indicates he needs the disaster relief fund
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on capitol hill reloaded before the end of the season. that runs through november 30th. stuart: neil: if you don't get that money, fema can't help. seems incredible. >> that's the problem. you might remember after hurricane katrina in 2005, they were completely out of money. this is where congress came back at the end of the august recess to reload the fund because they don't have the dollars and we don't think that will happen in this scenario but we have a lot of time until congress comes back. they are due back on 12 november. neil: thank you for updating us on that. have you seen the new robot whatever you want to call it, this is out of a science fiction movie here but this is real and kind of scary too. >> what is the hardest thing about being a robot?
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get started today at golo.com thats g-o-l-o dot com neil: the movie previewed scary coming attractions the plate out yesterday. lahren seminary had a chance to see for herself. with optimists bought. another creation by a certain billionaire. >> three big announcement start with the cyber cab promised nine years ago.
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we saw it, it will cost less than $30,000, two years away. >> it is a wild experience to be in a car, no controls. how will this affect the city's we live in. there are parking lots anywhere, what you have in an autonomous world is you can turn them into parks. neil: lauren: this is a huge leap to go from the current self deriving to unsupervised deriving. he never mentioned a regular tour path to get there. in the apps at the center of this ecosystem that lets the owner of the cyber rent the car out when they weren't using them. eventually this plan moves to that, looks like art deco airport shuttle.
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20 people can take that. together these vehicles mark a major milestone for elon musk even though investors are not convinced the stock is down 8%. jeffries and truest both call this a win for over. flip the screen, uber number one on the s&p 500 today. whatever your thoughts on the driverless car, the driverless system where elon musk is, elon musk is predicting that this humanoid robot, he says that will be the greatest product ever. no timeline. he set all 8 billion people that live on planet earth will once one of those. to do all sorts of things. neil: the video of storm troopers from disney. those were actual robots. lauren: if you years ago, people pretended they were robots. he has come a long way. neil: all those were robots.
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lauren: i think they are all robots. neil: i am sorry. what do these robots do? lauren: everything. that is how it starts. neil: do you want a robot to look like you and next -- next un for you it with you for your friend or do you want to do a machine that works in the background where you don't notice it. if i don't notice a machine i won't -- neil: robots do a lot of things that absolve us of the day-to-day grind, things we don't like to do. neil: lauren: then we won't be in driverless cars. neil: if you want to buy one of these robots. lauren: this is a long way off. a lot of folks say the robo taxi, he says you will see one
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in production by 2027 but even further off than you are predicting now. look at the competition. doing 100,000 lines a week dealing with over to explain china. neil: would you get in one of them? if i had a choice between that and my wife driving i think i would go, the robot. they really perfected this technology? lauren: elon musk is doing this the cheap way, using camera vision. how this data from self driving, they are using all this data to predict how the driverless car should operate on the roads. others use multilayered approaches, the radars, this and that. elon musk is making a bet that
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his way will be better in the end because of the data. lauren: absolutely, but could go wrong? they would like to say it's going to be safer than a human driver who could make a mistake but people tend to trust the human more. there was no real window. neil: you punch in a destination. it only seats two people for now. a robo van seats 20 which is more popular. neil: robocop the movie before you were born, scary. neil: scary to a lot of people, the dishwasher. they say when you talk to experts who understand this stuff, push people to the edge, make them so uncomfortable with
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the disruptive technology you are unveiling and they come on board. neil: the early days, the horse and buggy, something better. lauren: i still right checks. if you ever need one they are in the green room. i take notes. and write it down. i fully believe in that. great job. have a wonderful -- she's doing this since midnight last night, three hours of that guy. kidding, kidding, kidding. great to have gary kaltbaum here this week. orlando, how are things going
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now. the major theme parks are back in operation. >> we are up and going, we dodged a big one. we lost a lot of power. mostly everybody getting back up. one thing i have been thinking about is 200 miles off the coast, this hurricane was a cat 5 with gusts over 200 mph. luckily, luckily there was a cold front and some sheer because if that bad boy hit, our cat 5, i can't imagine where we would be right now which is a lot of work to be done it will take a long period of time and a lot of money and a lot of people going forward. neil: they always say in this storm's case it wasn't so much the water but the wind, the opposite of what was for helenthe. this storm brought both, but in your neck of the woods the wind was a problem.
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>> these hurricanes have no bias, you never know how they are going to hit. in this case the real damage and death came from the tornadoes which you can't prepare for. you can prepare for the hurricanes but definitely wind damage. i went out for three hours driving around to see. we dodged one but there's still plenty that has to be, the amount of electric vehicle companies out there, massive, they prepared very well and people are getting back up quickly, good to see. neil: with all the scary stuff with the storms, with the threat of war and all that, what do you think it is? >> i have this line, it's just a bull market and sometimes anything you think is bad news they still go higher, the
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financial stocks are popping left and right. pedestrian type numbers. when you see financials acting well, some good action and software and other areas, go along with it and when you see the s&p, new highs, they feed on themselves and it draws more money back to the market and let me state there's a ton of money on the sidelines that can potentially come off and lift us higher. neil: glad you and every one is doing well. i want to bring your attention to the attention back-and-forth we are getting with all these tax cuts and tax savings out of donald trump, the latest is is effort, to allow you to write off interests on car loans. that was announced in detroit. that, last time i checked is the auto capital of the world. we will explore all that after this.
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"cavuto coast to coast" 20 donald trump, no tax on tics, no tax on social security, could go on and on but the latest that caught my attention the former president was advocating may be no tax on the interest you pay for auto loans. you can write that off. put an intriguing possibility. madison alworth, another betting. >> we got even more yesterday both for drivers and carmakers at the detroit economic club
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where he made these promises. first, starting with the manufacturers, he made the pledge for companies that manufacture in america to 15% and he expanded even further proposing us-based automakers and manufacturers that build a new plant domestically will be able to write off 100% of the heavy machinery that they purchased. take a listen. >> we will make interest on car loans will be deductible. that is going to revolutionize your industry, stimulate domestic auto production and make car ownership dramatically more affordable for millions of working american families. this is a phenomenal thing. >> not only the car industry benefiting, but those owning those cars are able to write
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off potentially 100% of the interest. trump went after his own agreement. that was a trade deal but he brokered in the white house, he admitted it needs to be fixed because china was scenting parts and materials to mexico and they are sold into the us hurting the us auto industry. trump vowed to reopen that, something steel industry workers told me is a huge priority. we got some policy initiatives talking about 100% right after machinery for new car manufacturing sites and a write off for car owners who have car loans but the question is even if he does retake the white house congress needs to approve all this. we have to wait and see. neil: great job. madison alworth on that. mark penn on the implications of this.
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the devil is in the details, we could easily say the same about kamala harris. a lot of that geared toward making the rich pay their fair share. don't know how to pay for this but when this election year, doesn't matter. what do you think? >> wasn't long ago consumer interest -- neil: i remember those days. >> interesting proposal to do it just for car loans. donald trump has targeted autoworkers in michigan, targeted the energy workers in pennsylvania has two critical working-class groups that he believes the through his policy proposals he can swing and this election it will make the
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difference in those two states where polls are running 50/fifty. that's the clear strategy behind this. neil: does seem to move the needle lately. you follow these polls more closely than i do and they vary by the day or the week or who is putting out the polls. polls are still tight, but seems to show a slight edge, david axelrod is worried. the harris people are getting nervous. should they be? >> never know whether this nervousness is nervousness to generate turnout. i do think a fair proposal is she has peaked and he may be edging forward a little bit. her soft interview toward didn't seem to help to raise a lot of questions.
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these polls are coming back well within the margin of error, that means these last-minute moves, ground games, all those things that we say never make a difference could make a difference when you see polls this close which i don't recall any presidential race where we have seen these polls this close. neil: i am old enough to remember the race in 1980 that was a blow a blowout for ronald reagan but a couple weeks prior, fairly tight. you always wonder could history repeat itself? what looks like a tight race turn out to be a blowout? what would contribute to that? people cited the reagan debate, the one and only one that year with jimmy carter, so close to the election and that changed some minds, i don't know if that really was the case but what do you think of that possibility that these polls blow one way or the other?
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>> the underlying dynamic is stronger for trump than he is polling. i say what kind of job did trump do, 52% say he did a good job. if i say what kind of job did harris do, 38% say before she was the candidate she did a good job, 47% today say she did a good job but that's a 5 point edge. when i ask people is the economy doing well, 2 thirds say no. 48% say their personal economy is going down. there is a big difference between black voters who say the economy is doing well and latino voters who say it is not doing well which is a real indicator why trump may do somewhat better with the latino vote. underlying these polls are things that are more favorable to trump including how he does on the economic immigration and crime issues. what holding her up is the campaign she is running on
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personality, change, and not trump. neil: we have been watching the markets soaring this week, the dow and s&p in record territory, markets have done remarkably well under this administration. i wonder if there is any spillover effect from that, not only helpful to the party in power but rather it going up than down and they don't seem to be benefiting. what do you think? >> i've not found stock market valuations to be related to changes in votes. i've seen unemployment rates, inflation rates, and the primary thing on people's minds is they are paying more for stuff and their wages haven't picked up in the last few years and their experiencing in the stores and particularly the grocery stores.
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there's a lot for people's 401(k)s. haven't found yet that makes a big difference compared to these other economic indicators. neil: always good talking to you. he's a genius on this stuff and much much more. back to florida particularly to tampa, hard-hit by this, a lot of rebuilding going on, restaurants, people have yet to get to their homes and for that matter addressed how bad this hit them. we will talk to a restaurant owner in the middle of that after this.
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neil: a quick peek at these markets, the dow and the s&p on pace for record closes. across-the-board gains, the fifth week in a row we've seen the s&p 500 continue to advance, we are in the earliest stages of earnings season and a lot of third-quarter earnings coming out, banks usually lead the way, wells fargo and others have impressed enough to get people excited that they are doing well and everyone else will do well.
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the wealth manager. you are looking at this and saying. >> today was the official day. there's a lot of stress in the economy. and wells fargo, i would say it's a positive report. jpmorgan, the perfect trifecta, they beat on top line, bottom line and raised guidance higher meaning -- lauren: 1 why is it important banks do well for the markets? they like that because what? >> great question. the reason we want banks to do well as they are the backbone of the economy, backbone of america. if you go to a bank as a business owner to take out a loan, everything is like the center organism. and that will do well for the
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rest of america and investors, normal mom and pop, bank earnings, the state of the economy, how healthy the consumer is and the results between jpmorgan which did fantastic, trading at all-time highs and i on that company. i owned it for years. i love jamie dimon. jamie dimon. i think he's a great ceo. his diplomatic. neil: can i get your gauge, a lot of people say this rally, and with all that it's a rich market. it's very rich. >> historically the stock market trades at 18 p, price to earnings ratio.
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that's the barometer of something is expensive or cheap, we are at frothy are levels, the biggest -- not like the dot.com, we are not building contact lenss for chickens in south africa. one hundred multiple is the next best thing. the biggest thing why the market is moving the way it is isn't because of jpmorgan's earnings or because it is rainbows and butterflies but because there's a new sheriff in town and that's jerome powell. when he cut rates a few weeks ago -- i was one of the front runners saying that in may and june. i didn't think he would do 50 basis points. you can't have the greatest economy, greatest jobs numbers and all of a sudden say we will cut 50 basis points which historically speaking when you cut basis points, you are signaling to investors in the
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markets there's an underlying problem. normally what would have been a more appropriate approach, and you see this flood into the market. . 20 are they getting ahead of themselves? what if he doesn't cut it all? >> that would be a problem. i would think of he doesn't cut at the next meeting, there's 85% probability that he will cut in november. but if he doesn't cut, expectations are high. rob: cut other half point. than none at all. >> the reason because of that, that's great point, the jobs number that came out on friday. this is what jerome powell, inflation number one, the cpi report came out yesterday. not the end of the world. cpi came in at 2. 4 versus to-3, that won't dislodge the narrative. what will dislodge the narrative, if inflation went exponentially higher, closer to
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the three level, he's not cutting it. we are not near that. another thing i think is the state of the consumer. of the economy starts to weaken, he did it at the end of q 4 in 2018. neil: so good at this. thank you. talking about where the markets have climbed this wall of worry with back to back hurricanes the last couple of weeks. brandy campbell on the fallout in fort myers, florida. how does it look? >> reporter: we are still seeing the aftermath of the storm. before milton made landfall we saw tornado damage. you see that behind me, this home right here had part of its roof ripped off, displacing people impacting this area. the national weather server saying there was 126 tornado
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warnings wednesday across the state of florida. the most issued in one day in history for this state. right now it is also impacting power issues, 2. 2 million customers in the state of florida without power. we've been speaking to people living in this neighborhood who actually saw this tornado happen. listen to one lady's account, in the vehicle. >> in the passenger seat, down 41, 11 in the morning. it was literally white out conditions. having to stop to make sure cars are honking, so people know we couldn't see anything. and debris flying. thank god we made it home safely. we came down this way and the neighbor was pregnant, screaming and crying.
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the tornado came for room. the neighbors behind us and in front of us. thank god everyone is alive. >> reporter: so glad they are okay. we see rain for the first time since the storm hit. hoping it doesn't stick around, might be something reminiscent to the storm. this is what they are left with, looking to fema to see when they can apply to get some assistance from this. neil: a lot of people were told to evacuate ahead of this with milton hitting and a lot of them did. we know what percentage did. >> reporter: we don't know the percentage. we saba traffic on the interstate, we heard accounts from people who said i stayed for helenecon made sure to get out of town for this one. from our conversations we can tell it was a lot more people who took this seriously this time around.
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neil: your reporting has been excellent. florida is such an alluring locale for so many, millions have moved their the past couple years. all of a sudden the real estate which was a draw has gone up in value and all of a sudden you pay higher taxes on that. homeowners insurance is impossible, those prices have quadrupled over the last year or so. are people having second thoughts about florida? about the allure of florida? >> very good question. one thing people pointed out to us, it's getting harder because you have the issue of insurance the costs higher or harder to obtain. i don't know. florida is very attractive. it depends what you want to balance out, the cost or what you prefer, the weather you want to experience. i am sure it plays a factor in that decision. neil: in february it is wonderful, right now it can be
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dicey. thank you so much. is our restaurant owner ready? we are watching ron desantis in bradenton, florida, crisscrossing the state, keeping up with that. the american the social owner from tampa, restaurant on the water there. it is hard to reopen now? what can you tell us? >> reporter: we have reopened, we reopened today. at 11:30 we are one of the few restaurants that are open, so any thousands without power, so many business owners, people displaced, it was nice for us, staff and the community to get open and have a semblance of return to normalcy. stuart: the a lot of them hit by the same storm, are you fully staffed? >> we are not fully staffed,
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the staff that is here for the most part they don't have power, some don't have water, coming to this culture, to start feeding the community and provide normalcy has been so valuable not just for us as a company, for us for the community. it has been massive. neil: must have a great location. the guy is right on the water. thank you for taking the time, best of luck today. we are following what a lot of people are doing and keeping up with what's going on in north carolina as rescue efforts, costly rescue efforts if you think of what is happening in florida, the ratings agencies pondered the possibility of combined cost of $100 billion. more after this.
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neil: elon musk at cyber cab and not getting rave reviews, the disappointment is showing up in total a stock, down 8% but it has been having for the likes of uber and left, 8% to 10%. %. the ills of a billionaire are not translating for potential competition. the idea of driverless vehicles, it was going to be tesla's race to lose, or bumpy introduction at the gate. he's losing it. this is a moment and a snapshot in time. taylor riggs, "the big money show" guys. taylor: happy friday. i am taylor riggs. brian: i am brian brenberg
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