tv Varney Company FOX Business October 14, 2024 11:00am-12:01pm EDT
11:00 am
11:01 am
with some sort of restrictions obviously, but we do need workers and we have a labor shortage in the country. >> there's house races incredibly important in those districts, and donald trump wants to win the presidency but the house for republicans. >> we need an efficiency coalition that gets rid of the programs that are simply not working or inadequate. >> getting in office and sat down and we updated the nafta agreement and prime negotiating tactic. stuart: okay, i get the significance. it is columbus day. check the markets briefly. dow and s&p both hit all time
11:02 am
intraday highs earlier today and dow up nearly 50 and nasdaq going strong up over 100 points. big tech earlier check them out. they were all up. now we've got one loser and that would be amazon down ill 76-cents. price of gold down 2,006.62. now this, it's the most significant space development since 1960s, and elon musk did it. over the weekend, a spacex rocket twice the size of the sat earn 5 that took apollo astronauts to the moon, blasted off from texas. it went to the edge of space and bigger than 747 and traveled at the speed of sound. then just using three of the 33 engines, it returned to land perfectly on the launch pad. that is a reusable booster capable of putting a giant payload into space time and time
11:03 am
again. later, the star ship itself landed with pinpoint accuracy in the indian ocean. this means within this decade, a reusable spacecraft carrying heaven knows what will be taking off and landing on a regular basis. musk has a vision of using it to colonize mars. okay, that's a distant vision. the weekend launch opens the door to new era in space exploration and again, it's elon musk who did it. he pulled it off. is there any doubt that he's the pre-elmore nathanial hackette business and -- pre-imminent business and scientific talent of the age and who has thal tent to build the car company and ai company and neurolink to harness the computing power to the human brain and topping it off spacex extraordinary starship launch. two points. first, this is all private enterprise. government got out of the way. kamala harris is not a private enterprise kind of person. second, musk used his own money. he's the richest man in the
11:04 am
world and has plenty, but he's never been afraid of risking it all to pursue his vision. kamala harris has a plan to dismantle private wealth called confiscation. thank heavens she hasn't gotten her hands on his creative billions, at least not yet. if trump wins, he plans to put musk in charge of ripping the waste of the federal brock seizure disorders. bureaucracy. that's been tried before but not with a man like musk. if hi can revolution nice cars and says, he can surely work wonders in washington. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: i'm joined by brian brenberg. i'm posing the question again, any doubt that musk is the person of the age? >> you fired me up with that one. that was awesome. here's why. elon musk basically performed magic with that rocket. and he invented the whole thing,
11:05 am
he didn't sake any of that from anybody. he put everything he has at risk to make it and we live in a world with kamala harris talking about taking fair share from billionaires. what fair share do we owe him for that? he'll change our world in extraordinary ways. he's not asking for anything from us. stuart: what do you want to see musk doing if he wins and gets the job of chief cost cutter. >> i want him to walk in and gut what we do in the federal government. >> engineers don't decide what they do in washington and that's public policy in diplomacy and anybody in our day can walk in and say, i'm putting my capital at risk to revolutionize the world and i want to revolutionize how we do government and anyone can make the case for that, it's elon musk. stuart: you should read the book about elon musk. >> i have. have.
11:06 am
stuart: it els how you he did what he did. he's afraid of nothing. >> he's afraid of nothing and puts everything on the line and only asks for the chance to do it. we owe him the latitude to do what he can do. stuart: one thing i'd like to see if trump wins, i'd like him to go the federal bureaucracy. nobody has been able to cut the bureaucracy and musk w can do i. >> he can say this is ridiculous and let me show you why and if we get rid of it, your life will be better. that's what he can do. stuart: i'll change the subject. to your advantage here. young men shifting to the right and tim walz on a media blitz trying to win them back over and trump has been pushing to get young men on his side. who's going to energize them more? i know the answer to the question. go ahead. >> look, men are not asking for allot, but they're asking to be
11:07 am
valued. they want the idea of working with your hands to be a good one. when they try to assert, they want to do good for the people around them. men, you're good but what you're good at is good and we want more of it. that candidate be win the votes of men. people want the votes and don't care about the guy. and guys want people to care about who they are. stuart: you came from the academic world to join us here. >> yes. stuart: natural rights approacht of money from the university college of texas and 92 students in the school and have people become -- i guess they're fed up with woke ideologies in elite schools. >> yeah, and i appreciate this
11:08 am
effort and wish i could have taught at a school like this. this would be amazing. they're trying to play within a system that's dispositionally against them. you don't have to go through the college system to do it. there are other ways to make that happen. that is going tojason katz with me. stuart: looks like the path of least resistance is still up despite the middle east and
11:09 am
whatever sells on the cards. we have all these records today. >> with respect to the meltup, i was thinking about it this morning and we're having a sellers strike. so my clients do not want to take capital gains between now and the end of the year. that's on one hand. on the other hand you have the professional money management community that can ill afford to fall behind the rally and must stay invested. stuart: what's the biggest risk of the market as you see it? >> my clients share these two risks to me all the time. one mideast and two u.s. elections. with respect to the mideast, you can't be complaisant on the issue and regardsless in it's
11:10 am
tariffs and trump, the n degree to the u.s. is low. with respect to u.s. elections, we'll see the markets tense up a bit before november 5. however look at polls in the races in texas, florida and elsewhere, it's leaning heavily right. so at a minimum, at a minimum, you're probably going to get the government and markets will celebrate that. stuart: quick question back to elon musk, do they look at talent of the man when investing in tesla? invest in tesla because they believe in the man? >> listen, i know brian is so passionate about this issue. he has won the credibility war. if you get him in a position to run tesla and run spacex or actually cut the fat of the government, business people like me that look at government and shake their head, we're salivating at that notion.
11:11 am
stuart: jason katz salivating, thank you for joining us. see you again soon. show me trump media and technology group, please. that's djt. the stock up about 5%. possibly positives at 5.3%, that's a huge bounce since september 21st when shares hid a report low of 12:15 and 2658 and going for the month and 70% over the past year and coming up, spending on this year's presidential race has hit record highs. latest tracking says there's about $60 million worth of ads running daily, repeat, $60 million daily. house speaker johnson said biden and harris weak leadership made the world more dangerous. watch this. this. they're worried about the weakness on the world stage and biden and harris projected and gotten us into some of the most
11:12 am
dangerous situations since world war ii. stuart: is that accurate? former state department official christian whitten on the real dangers of this world, that's next. where ya headed? susan: where am i headed? am i just gonna take what the markets gives me? no. i can do some research. ya know, that's backed by j.p. morgan's leading strategists like us. when you want to invest with more confidence... the answer is j.p. morgan wealth management teeth sensitivity is so common. it immediately feels like somebody's poking directly on the nerve. i recommend sensodyne. sensodyne toothpaste goes inside the tooth and calms the nerve down. and my patients say you know doc, it really works.
11:16 am
it's the verizon 5g home internet i got us. oh... he used to be a competitive gamer but with the higher lag, he can't keep up with his squad. so now we're his “squad”. what are kevin's plans for the fall? he's going to college. out of state, yeah. -yeah in the fall. change of plans, i've decided to stay local. oh excellent! oh that's great! why would i ever leave this? -aw! we will do anything to get him gaming again. you and kevin need to fix this internet situation. heard my name! i swear to god, kevin! -we told you to wait in the car. everyone in my old squad has xfinity. less lag, better gaming! i'm gonna need to charge you for three people. stuart: four israeli soldiers are dead and more injures after hezbollah launched a drone attack. trey, has the idf responded? reporter: stuart, they've not yet responded but i want to start with more breaking news. earlier today sirens were sounding across central israel and more than 180 communities
11:17 am
heading to bomb shelters as three short range ballistic missiles for fired from mesoblah towards central israel and comes after that deadly drone attack yesterday targeting a military base north of tel aviv. that attack killed four israeli soldiers and injured 51. israeli officials say this is yet another reason why the ground operation against hezbollah must continue. over the weekend, we got a firsthand look at the war that continues to unfold between israel and hezbollah. reporter: right now we're with israel's 91st division in the northern command heading to a village in the southern part of lebanon. arriving nearly two miles from the border with israel, the 18 jordys are on high alert. the battle against hezbollah rages on in the distance. much of the group's former stronghold is being reduced and twisted metal and mountains of
11:18 am
concrete. concrete. we see the bulldozers like this one behind me, a lot of destruction to civilian homes. why did this have to happen in this village? >> as you've seen with your own eyes, some of the homes we've visited here are in the outpost hidden within the civilian population in this area. reporter: inside some of those hopes, an arsenal of weapons and sniper rifle, grenades and antitank missiles and questions of where all the equipment came from and what it was going to be used for. >> all these weapons are back to their home. reporter: and lebanese civilians allowed to return to the village? >> of course. reporter: despite the promise
11:19 am
that idf able to return home and on a video posted to social media raising the israeli flag and officials talk of build ago buffer zone between the two countries. this while people are displaced. they wait to return home. the situation got very bad, fatima explains. they began hitting our village and said we had to leave the village so we fled. reporter: they're targeting positions inside the gaza strip and inside horrific video emerging from the hospital in one of the cities and the israeli struck a tent complex next to the hospital and there were reports of a secondary explosion and the israelis said they were targeting a hamas command center but officials on the ground say that a number of civilians were killed and israeli haves not yet provided any additional evidence to
11:20 am
support their claim. stuart. stuart: trey yingst, thank you very much. pentagon sending antimissile system to israel along with american troops that know how to use it. it's all to bolster israel's defense against iran. christian whiten is joining me now. are we in full support of israel in their fight against iran? >> i would say no. this is something that's typical of the biden harris administration and against the back set of a policy of appeasing or of being soft on iran, they will occasionally do something tough to have a talking point to say we're doing something tough. sending this, it's useful and we're talking about 50 intercepters. this is actually part of a biden harris effort to stop israel from retaliating against iran for iran's ballistic missile attack. stuart: we don't want israel to attack iran, but if israel
11:21 am
attacks iran and iran responds, we'll defend israel with this fad system; that that is the bottom line here? >> i think that's right. yeah, biden said explicitly that israel shouldn't attack iran's nuclear program. that seems very odd. former president trump said that was odd. i think that was actually breaking new ground for trump. he hasn't before said we'd support an israeli attack on iran's nuclear system but, yes, we'd defend them in cooperate with the arab partners too. stuart: mike johnson said we're in the most dangerous situation since world war ii. watch this. >> when i go to blue states and blue districts and swing districts, the number one concern on everybody's mind is the cost of living right after that is the wide open border that the border czar kamala harris enabled and put together all the catastrophe and worried about the weakness on the world stage that biden is harris projected and got us into the most dangerous situation since
11:22 am
world war ii. stuart: the tension level is raised all around the world, isn't it? >> it does. i think johnson was right saying we're in the most dangerous situation since world war ii. i think if you use hyperbole and look at cuban missile crisis and points of the '80s and came in conflict with the soviet union and that's a bigger power. china is the big threat and threatening taiwan and fighting a gray zone as its called and low intensity conflict with the philippines, which is an ally of the united states. no world war iii but, yes, a dangerous world with multipolar threats. stuart: who is the greatest threat to the united states on the world stage? >> by far china. iran is second and sees itself as already at war with the united states but china with its economy and billion people and
11:23 am
cultural political warfare against the united states and desire to pick on all of its neighbors. stuart: the economist has a terrific story and i don't know if you saw it or not about putin. he's launched attacks, cyber attacks, and using agents all over the world to create mayhem and chaos and doing it inside the united states. i recommend everybody read that article but it makes out putin to be arch villain and actually acting on his sentiments. have you seen it yet? >> i haven't, but putin plays a weak hand very well. there's 100 million people, that's a third of our population and certainly innovated warfare and we've learned a lot about the w ways and how wars will be fought in the 2030s from this. china is a much more significant threat and xi jinping is not as flashy as putin but the threat is big. stuart: i want to repeat the point that the economist said
11:24 am
putin's spies are plotting a global chaos. good read. christian whiton, thank you for joining us. opec cut prediction of oil use in the future, down goes the price, just a little. check out the big energy names this morning. a mixed reaction and exxon is up five-cents and eog resources on the downside. coming up, an oregon state employee has been put on leave and he focused on qualifications instead of diversity when making hiring diss. what's wrong with that? we'll take it on. kamala harris accusing trump of making a basement strategy? >> why does he staff want him to hide away? are his people afraid that he's too weak and unstable?
11:25 am
11:26 am
there are many ways to do things. at old dominion freight line, we do them this way. this way has people who start early. people who care and inspire each other to do things the way they should be done. this way uses technology (♪) and goes the extra mile (♪) to deliver your promises on-time, every time. this way is why we're the number one national ltl carrier for quality. for us, this way is the right way which is why it's the only way we go.
11:27 am
what will you do when the power goes out? power outages can be unpredictable and inconvenient, but with a generac home standby generator, your life goes on uninterrupted. because when your generac detects a power outage, it automatically powers up, giving your family the security and peace of mind they deserve.
11:28 am
we don't have to worry about whether we lose power or not. if the utility company does not come through, our generac does. after the hurricane happened, we just want to be prepared for anything. 8 out of 10 home generators are generac, with thousands of satisfied customers. number one thing to prepare for is extended power outages. don't make it so hard on yourself, have a generac home standby generator. and owning a generator is easier than ever. special financing and low monthly payment options are available, and if you call now, you will also receive a free 5 year warranty valued at over $500. call or go online now to request your free quote.
11:29 am
11:30 am
caterpillar is down 2% and shaves 60 points off the dow and morgan stanley gave them a downgrade to underweights and hitting a new intraday all time high and politics this year's election on track to shatter spending records. william lan is with me. >> here are the two most aired spots from harris and trump. >> it feels good to get ahead. we're proud of bidenomics. that's the kind of president we need right now. someone that cares about you. >> i want to show you where the ads are running most: pennsylvania, followed by michigan, georgia, wisconsin,
11:31 am
arizona north carolina and nevada. in fundraising, harris has support of about 20 billionaires and more than trump and they arm about two to one and outspending him and 12 of the last 13 weeks. >> that's not a good sign for trump but fundraising can reflect enthusiasm. >> that shows up in the 2022 congressional races and the biggest spender won 94% of house seseats and 88% in the senate. right now, it is not a good sign for republicans because democrats are outspending them by $150 million in key races and look at some of those. ohio incumbent democrat sharod brown up 2.6 points on rcp average and about three to one in fundraising over moreno and in nevada, rosen up seven points
11:32 am
and going to find about the same margin in arizona democrat gallego and that's an open seat. pennsylvania incumbent bob indicationy there up by 13 million and three points or 3 points average and michigan that's tightening and democrat slacken is quadruple in cash and only 1.9% over rogers and wisconsin, tammy baldwin up three points and horde of cash and one outlier montana where incumbent donald trump john tester remains down 7 points to tim sheehy despite a huge fundraising lead. stuart, this is interesting in the last five presidential elections, democrats outspent and outraised republicans in each race and bush, clinton to trump and this time clearly we'll see it's important but not
11:33 am
decisive. stuart: important but not decisive. well done, william. brian brenberg with me, 60 million worth of tv ads a day. that's a big number. >> it makes me sick. spend all the money you want to get your message out there but our federal government is too important and has too much sway and the stakes are too high and all the money is spend on this and you've got government outright and wouldn't spend so much money on these politicians and you could invest it in something that creates wealth, stuart. stuart: you're never getting the government. brian, i think you're all right. thanks for joining us. all right, kamala harris says trump, it is trump who is hiding from voters and rejecting the debate and 60 minutes interview. roll it. you've got to see this. >> makes you wonder, why does his staff want him to hide away?
11:34 am
one must question, are they afraid that people will see that he's too weak and unstable? is that what's going on? stuart: nags nag press secretary trump 2024 karoline leavitt with me now. i call that ridiculous. have at it. coming froms woman who can't speak without a telepromter and said joe biden was up to the
11:35 am
task and he wasn't. trump has more energy than anne donovan i've ever met. stuart: he's a little older than i am and i could no wrote near keep up with the man. three new national polls that show trump really has momentum and harris losing steam. how does trump keep the electiol election day? what's the strategy here? >> if you look at the average, he's winning and performing seven points better today anne donovan in 2020 against joe biden and picking up historic margins with key demographics and he's cutting into the base and he has a running message to put more on him to secure the southern boarder and bring law and order to the country and everything kamala harris is not. stuart: a plan to help black men
11:36 am
including one million forgivable, totally forgivable loans. what's with that? >> more give aways that probably aren't even legal like the student give aways they promised young people and they're trying to buy people's votes and if kamala harris cared about black men and people, where has she been for three and a half years as vice president. unemployment has gone up and wages are down and inflation is up and president trump has a real plan to put real money back into people's pockets and again, that's why he's receiving a historic margin of the black vote right now and that's why kamala harris released this 22 days before the election. where has she been the last four years? stuart: thank you, karoline, for running this great line and it's a real problem on television. >> thank you. busy day in new york. >> it's 40% last year and there's a proposition in place to let law enforcement crack down and however, government
11:37 am
11:38 am
when you're looking for answers, it's good to have help. because the right information, at the right time, may make all the difference. at humana, we know that's especially true when you're looking for a medicare supplement insurance plan. that's why we're offering "seven things every medicare supplement should have". it's your free, just for calling the number on your screen. and when you call, a knowledgeable, licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free. and there's no obligation. you see, medicare covers only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. that's why so many people purchase medicare
11:39 am
supplement insurance plans like those offered by humana. they're designed to help you save money and pay some of the costs medicare doesn't. depending on the medicare supplement plan you select, you could have no deductibles or copayments for doctor visits, hospital stays, emergency care and more. you can keep the doctors you have now, ones you know and trust, with no referrals needed. plus, you can get medical care anywhere in the country, even when you're traveling! with humana, you get a competitive monthly premium, and personalized service, from a healthcare partner working to make healthcare simpler and easier for you. you can choose from a wide range of standardized plans. each one is designed to work seamlessly with medicare and help save you money! so how do you find the plan that's right for you. one that fits your needs and your budget? call humana now at the number on your screen for this free guide. it's just one of the ways that humana is making healthcare simpler. and when you call, a knowledgeable, licensed
11:40 am
agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free. and there's no obligation. you know medicare won't cover all your medical costs. so, call now and see why a medicare supplement plan from a company like humana just might be the answer.
11:41 am
11:42 am
reporter: it has been in addition to the 400,000 approximately customers without power as we speak. gas stations are slowly coming back online but even those with gas, there's very long lines of cars and so officials are urging people to be patient. as far as cleanup goes, this building behind me is the headquarters of pilgrim perm coat, a family owned business that before the black tarps went on, this looked like a doll house in the wake of the hurricane. late 1800s cigar factory that later became the headquarters for pilgrim and family owned construction product since 195 #. >> there's smaller hurricanes
11:43 am
and that building is helding amazingly well and we weren't so lucky this time. >> i've been at this building since a little girl roller skating around and i have a lot of found memories and it was -- fond memories and really hard seeing it like that. reporter: on sunday, president biden met with first responders in the nearby community of st. pete beach pledging the full support of his administration to help florida get back on its feet. >> you made a big difference. we're going to do everything we can to not only help you recover and build back stronger.
11:44 am
just out of the street in one of the peaks homes and they are still in business and they have their war house and part of the damaged building and they can still do protection there. as for the power at peak, more than 3 million homes and businesses without electricity statewide. bit end of business tuesday, utility companies are here back online.
11:45 am
>> they end up in situations like this and don't know what kind of policy they own and when they get denied, they could be on the hook for hundreds of thousands of dollars and can you stay in the environment like that and the cost out of your pocket is that high? i agree and don't think they will. stuart: calling that a disincentive and thank you, brian. switching gears. bill clinton made a surprise visit to mcdonalds in georgia. workers thought he was joe biden. stuart: clinton made the stop
11:46 am
11:49 am
it's our son, he is always up in our business. it's the verizon 5g home internet i got us. oh... he used to be a competitive gamer but with the higher lag, he can't keep up with his squad. so now we're his “squad”. what are kevin's plans for the fall? he's going to college. out of state, yeah. -yeah in the fall. change of plans, i've decided to stay local. oh excellent! oh that's great! why would i ever leave this? -aw! we will do anything to get him gaming again. you and kevin need to fix this internet situation. heard my name! i swear to god, kevin! -we told you to wait in the car. everyone in my old squad has xfinity. less lag, better gaming! i'm gonna need to charge you for three people. hi, i'm rashod and i've lost 118 pounds on golo. the highest i've seen on the scale was 417. it was a real reality check, it was really scary. diabetes and high blood pressure runs in my family.
11:50 am
i knew i had to do something, so i starved myself and i lost 100 pounds. but i ended up with an injury and i gained almost all of the weight back and fast. i was super defeated. so i went to the golo website and ordered a 90 day supply and i never looked back. if you tried everything else and you're just about ready to give up, give golo a try. in california. voters there have the chance to impose stricter penalties for retail theft and crimes involving fentanyl. max gordon in la for us. is this going to be approved? reporter: yeah, well, stu, it appears californians are getting fed up with the retail crime and according to a recent poll by la times, about 60% of likely california voters support prop 36 and crack down on serial shoplifters and those that engage in the mob style smash
11:51 am
and grab robberies and that's what occurred at 7/eleven behind me and video from that incident. the wake of the robbery and group of 7/eleven officials and franchise owners are the news conference and going to announce their support for california prop 36 and measure implement harsher penalties for people repeatedly caught stealing on the crack down smash and grab robberrobberies and thefts. >> we believe it'll reduce crime and return safety to our communities and help police officers mess. reporter: still, governor gavin newsom and democrats are against it.
11:52 am
the unfunded mandate and the legislative office and saying if passed, the measure will likely cost the state tens of millions annually and prop 36 would crack down on drug crimes and would warn drug offenders that if their drugs kill somebody, they could be charged with murder. stu. stuart: constitutional rights violation. that's a new one to me. max gordon, you're all right. thanks for joining us today. see you later. take a look at this headline from the seattle times, a trump victory would at least shatter the seattle economy. really? our seattle guy jason rantz is joining me now. what's the reasoning behind the seattle times suggestion?
11:53 am
>> a low 2.2% pre-covid and 4.4% now and inflation is double where it was under donald trump. gas prices went at low of $3.14 and to $5.20 and this idea that all of a sudden impacting the economy and mostly in large part because the council policies were the ones that ruined this local economy and he takes on amazon for example is what amazon would crumble under donald trump and seattle policies went after amazon with a payroll tax after a failed head tax. and as a result of that, amazon moved some 10,000 employees and nearby bellevue and entire argument revision is history and completely false flat.
11:54 am
stuart: focused on qualifications instead of gender identity. how is this a problem? >> well, understand that according to the radical left, any time you look at merit, it's part of a white supremacist culture. it's part of white supremacy system. and that needs to be dismantled and what we heard from the very people, and it's not just about race and gender identity, it's looking at any marginalized community and if someone does better, it's not because they are better at a job or more gifted or studied harder or whatever it is, it's because of some kind of privilege. in the case of gender identity, if you're a cisgender, heterosexual male, you have privilege that someone that's transgendered does not. someone looks at qualifications and rather than checks on a check box; right. we're going to judge people and it's best for the position and not because we can pat ourselves
11:55 am
on the back and pretend that we care about a marginalized community and basically created. >> let's return to meritocracy. jason rantz on the question. see you again soon, jason. thank you indeed. >> thank you, stu. stuart: it's that time when we give you the monday trivia question. the week will be on state capitols and it's not my forte and i'm good on global country capitols. but here it is. what's the capitol of north carolina? charlotte, durham, greensboro, raleigh? the answer when we come back? daughter: hey, dad. dad: hey, sweetheart. daughter: what are you doing? dad: i'm gonna clean the fence. daughter: it's a lot of fence. dad: you wanna help me? dad: aim at the wall, but get closer. daughter: (gasps) what the?! daughter: alright. dad: side to side. when you work with someone who knows a lot
11:56 am
11:57 am
11:58 am
their very liberal rates on idle cash, unlimited deposit bonuses and handsome retirement matching? they would descend into chaos. merciless chaos. meet kandi technologies, where innovative, eco friendly design meets exceptional performance. our diverse portfolio includes utvs, go carts, golf carts and e-bikes. explore electric investment opportunities. kandi technologies. ♪ (alarm sound) ♪ amelia, turn off alarm. amelia, weather. 70 degrees and sunny today. amelia, unlock the door. i'm afraid i can't do that, jen. ♪ (suspenseful music) ♪ why not?
11:59 am
did you forget something? ♪ (suspenseful music) ♪ my protein shake. the future isn't scary. not investing in it is. you're so dramatic amelia. bye jen. nasdaq-100 innovators. one etf. before investing, carefully read and consider fund investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and more in prospectus at invesco.com. stuart: this could be trouble. the state capital trivia this week, here we go. what is the capital of north carolina? is it charlotte, durham, greensboro, is it raleigh in i'm not sure about a states, i've got e my thinking cap on -- >> mr. international over here. stuart: you're first. what is it? >> yeah, i'm going to say raleigh. stuart: really in i'm going to agree with you, i think it's the value league. it's raleigh, yes. known as the city of oaks. it became the state's capital in
12:00 pm
1792, it was named after the english statesman -- statesman? if sir walter raleigh was a statesman? >> well, it depends on how you define the term. >> he discovered tobacco -- >> entrepreneur. stuart: guys on the street smoking, on one occasion someone tipped a bucket of water over him because they thought he was on fire. >> i don't know how he knows the stuff he knows. the trivia a you know. [laughter] stuart: thank you for sticking around for the entire hour. >> is that sincere? stuart: we'll watch "the big money show" today the, 11 p.m. eastern, brian, seriously -- 11 p.m. eastern. time's up for me. neil, it's yours. neil: all right, thank you very much, stuart or and brian. in the meantime, you probably saw this a little earlier today, but it bears repeating in the context of what's happening right now. take a look. >> super heavy booster back at the launch tower -- [cheers an
0 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on