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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  October 29, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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stuart: a tough one. how much money did americans spend on halloween last year? ashley is not with us so he can't be first. standing in his place is mike murphy. ladies first. >> since stuart is in charge, i was going to pick the highest number, americans spend a lot of money even though people might be coming back. stuart: what have you got? lauren: $15 billion. stuart: i will go for $14 billion. according to lending tree, spending is expected to decline. coast-to-coast starts with ashley. it is yours.
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ashley: i got that wrong but thank you. happening at this hour, one week to the election with donald trump, we are hearing from donald trump right now but we bring you the latest. first we begin with investors digging into a pile of data trying to predict not what voters will do next week but what the fed will do. let's begin right there. i am ashley webster. let's begin with the 10 year treasury yield trading at a ties level since july operating at 4.32%, leveled off a little bit. joining us from gib's wealth management, aaron gibbs, let's begin with treasuries.
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it was still pretty high. >> a couple things are moving it. to be accustomed to the idea of that we might see one more rate cut this year. those yields can persist, higher yields are longer. another point, we've seen a lot of risk-taking with other markets, equities, bitcoin, not doing this flight to safety. people are feeling more confident and pushing bond prices down and yields higher. those are combining to keep that 10 year relatively high. ashley: some believe the market is at the very least bottoming out, others say we are poised
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for downside volatility for the coming weeks because there's a lot of uncertainty on the landscape. what do you think? >> we can see some volatility not only with the election but earnings season, disappointing reports coming out today and the challenges companies are seeing, negative guidance saying it's a struggle. the one head scratcher coming out today, in 2021, we are seeing, warning negative signs in the economic data but the consumer doesn't seem to feel it. ashley: obviously we've got to
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talk about the fed, reading comments of larry fink at black rock, there is embedded inflation the markets are ignoring and could be disappointing when it comes to the fed cutting rates. what say you? >> completely agree. we've been disappointed to by the fed. with the exception of the last rate cut. wall street had greater expectations. if the cut comes in november rather -- if the rate cut doesn't come in november and comes later in the year in 2025, that would not, it would be unjustifiable given the type of battle we have seen. ashley: lots to speculate about. at the presidential election, we have the fed decision.
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can't even imagine. thanks for joining us. really appreciate it. as we mentioned, donald trump speaking in palm beach and then he will head to the battleground state of pennsylvania. brian yannis has the latest. one week to go. >> reporter: good afternoon. one week to go. it is all about pennsylvania. the trump campaign is confident about pennsylvania particularly its new ground game strategy to get out the vote effort because particularly they are focused on getting out the vote in the largest swing state county, bucks co. . there are more registered republicans here than registered democrats. they think they can flip this county read. it went for president biden by four points in 2020. we visited a trump field office
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and they showed us how they are using data to target likely trump supporters who have never voted or sometimes voted. here is tim worthington who is on the ground trying to make it all happen. >> low propensity voters and targeted 7000 of them. that's the difference would i give democrats credit. they have done a better job over the years getting their team out to vote but this is not going to happen. we are going to get our people out to vote, 9% of those folks to vote, donald trump would be the president now, we are not making that mistake again. >> reporter: the strategy relies on thousands of volunteers who have been establishing relationships and encouraging early voting. >> it became evident that i needed to be involved, had to
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get active. i don't have time for this, i have two kids, amazing husband, i am a full-time lawyer but i'm devoting my time to donald trump because i feel strongly he needs to be elected. >> reporter: the democratic ground game is more traditional, they are knocking on everyone app store spending more than republicans statewide attacking trump as a fascist. pennsylvania's governor, josh schapiro, tells me he thinks the strategy will work again. >> since donald trump won by 44,000 votes, each time that segment of voters, they end up -- pennsylvania has a history of stopping extremism and voting for common sense. >> reporter: today's the last day voters here can get a mail in ballot and application and to get their mail in ballots, long lines across the commonwealth. one last point in 2,020
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democrats had a 3 to one advantage on the early vote. thus far this year is to the one in pennsylvania, trump campaign feeling good about that. ashley: very interesting. thank you very much. let's bring in jeff mason to help us break down all of this. one week to go. kamala harris not in a battleground state, she's staying in dc. what are your thoughts on that? >> she's in this building now where i am seated been doing some local interviews. she is reaching out into battleground states via local press but not traveling there because her closing arguments speech tonight is on the lips, the park behind the white house and before the national mall where donald trump gave his remarks on january 6th before
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his supporters storm to the capital. that symbol is something vice president harris is wanting to lean into tonight drawing contrast with the former president and making her case for what is expected to be tens of thousands of people about why she should become the next president. ashley: she seems to concentrate more attacking donald trump using the term fascist all the time, references to hitler. could that blow up in her face? i think people hear that and say he was president for four years, i don't remember him being a fascist. >> reporter: i would pushback. she's not using the term fascist all the time. she was asked about it in a cnn interview, she did feel that way but that's not a regular part of her stump speech. she draws contrasts and she made a point yesterday before
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flying to michigan to continue that contrast by discussing his rally at madison square garden and the rhetoric that she disagrees with but she made her case in terms of laying out policy to bring down prices. i mentioned that because that is weakness for vice president harris, prices have gone up under the tenure of the biden/harris administration, a weakness the former president has sought to exploit. ashley: which leads me to this next question but i will put you on the spot a bit. the economy we are often told it's about the economy, stupid. that is the key issue. if that is the case, which candidate do you think may have an edge? >> a fair question a week before the election and i don't have an answer. i don't know who has the edge. that is why you see both candidates doing the what they
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can to reach the last few undecided voters as well as turning out their respective bases. ashley: on a knife edge. thank you very much for taking time to chat with us. thank you very much. we are a business channel. the presidential election finish line, his expectation is for donald trump to win the presidential election but warns it is almost a coin toss. that is a captain obvious statement. the rest of wall street is gaining the race.
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>> just blowing me away, not just wall street, guys like griffin, with david solomon, many others, they care who is in the white house for obvious reasons. fiscal policy effects their bottom line. and the margin of error, ten points, the real stuff is showing trump momentum. not going to say he is winning but it is pretty obvious and you are getting this because you see people like jamie dimon calibrating their messaging. i wrote weeks ago that jamie
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dimon was telling people, kamala harris, polls start to change. it is neutral. what he said recently about regulations, too much regulations, they are calibrating their messaging but here's where it gets dicey. not a stats guy, i know about both, the trend line is breaking trump right now continuing the next week but if you talk to the trump people, their internals are strong on an electoral college basis, there are people that are undecided in a handful of swing
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states, naturally inclined to vote for trump and that is what stats are saying. what do i know. i don't care much about the betting odds but i talk to a lot of people, they say not based on poly markets or the betting odds but based on their internal polling. this is interesting. i do think it is a strategic error. the last guest about kamala harris using the words fascist and nazi. she doesn't do it anymore. she tested it and it came back, a back lash, people saying hitler is like the historical anomaly that you can't compare anything to hitler much less a guy whose daughter is married
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to that, for national socialism, now she is going extremist. he is talking middle-class inflation, bringing jobs back, talking about extremism. some comedian at his rally. it was stupid but not x essential to this campaign, not what people care about. neil: i am afraid we are running out of time, glad he has the courage of his convictions jumping with harris and becoming neutral. charles: these guys have guts of steel, corporate american, nothing can scare them or push
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them to do anything they don't want to do. neil: tongue firmly in cheek. great stuff. coming up, forward slipping today, the company reported major losses from its ev unit, we have the latest after this. what the biggest companies deliver is exceptional customer experience.
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1-800-217-3217. that's 1-800-217-3217. ashley: consumers are not plugged in. ford's electric vehicle business are not delivering, the automaker down in third-quarter earnings, spooked investors, down 9%. jeff flock has more on ford's ev rose. >> reporter: from john kennedy forward, big time forward dealer in the philadelphia suburbs.
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it doesn't have a real. that is all -- the other f 150s have an ice engine inside. i don't want to say electric vehicles are selling, gathering dust but if you look at the window of this one you have to wipe the dust off. 68 mpgs on that. ford is making get more of these than people want to buy and that is left dealers in a tough spot. what they want to buy are the gas powered f 150s. look at the losses. q3, $1.2 billion so far this year in 2024, we expect 5 or 5.5 billion reports all over. ford's ceo is keeping his eye on the competition, specifically show me. it's a chinese consumer product
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electronics firm of the makes an electric vehicle called the su 7. i didn't want to give it up, it's great. the earnings call, the competition is only getting tougher. listen. >> we are expecting 150 new plates to hit north america by the end of 2,026. some competitors are resulting, resorting to aggressively's tactics. even with new products which creates huge residual risk and overhang and brand damage. and brian: still tough to buy a car these days. the average auto loan is $40,000 and that is for a term of 5 years, 9 months with 7.1 apr, $736 for the average car payment, pushing it out even
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farther in terms of loan deal becoming more popular, 16% of loans done in q2, up to 17%, q3, 18%. what do you do when you can't afford it. neil: out out those payments. very good stuff. let's go to the crypto market. it is booming with bitcoin searching past 72,000 for the first time since april inching toward the all time high, 70,800. it has been doing well. luke loyd, investment strategist, joined me now. crypto investors certainly seem to be feeling bullish. where is this coming from?
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>> reporter: 20% of people in america on some sort of crypto currency now. it is important to talk about it, 20% of people own it. this is all political. donald trump being outspoken about it, this is what about crypto currency getting a bumper so let's get political about it. of the founding fathers of america were still alive today they would love bitcoin and crypto currency. gives power back to the people to own their own money and transact without intermediary so essentially that is why we didn't have a central bank until 1913 which sparked our current economic system but we don't live in 1776 anymore. i spoke at a conference a few weeks ago in cincinnati, people need to understand bitcoin's biggest strength of being a decentralized currency where people own their money, bitcoin and crypto is a threat to the current monetary system. government currency is the
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government's power, two scenarios of how this ends. the government participating in this new technology, there's no in between. the bigger bitcoin gets the closer we get to one of those outcomes. of the government participates bitcoin is multi millions of dollars a coin. if they ban it, it's all going to 0. ashley: if they approve it, under circumstances, what about those regulations, bitcoin investors hate? >> that's a great question. you can't actually regulate bitcoin. the only way you regulate it is to truly ban it. what has to happen is if somebody is truly about bitcoin because we are concerned about $2 trillion of deficit spending every year which is inflationary, the government debt being 130% of gdp which is the most since world war ii,
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the current economic cycle is towards this bad past so if someone supports bitcoin, they have somebody like the federal reserve to add it to its balance sheet and they own it so instead of being decentralized the government would have to get involved and take part in it. if that happens agosta multimillions of dollars. ashley: thank you for joining us and getting us up to speed. the etf money is doing bitcoin investment a good as well. thank you for your expertise. coming up, we will take a look at the immersive way that fans are watching the world series between the dodgers and yankees, fascinating stuff. we are going to take you there. ♪
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we provide a diverse portfolio with proprietary mutual funds and etfs aimed at growth and preservation. so you can invest with confidence. visit howard c.m. funds dot com. stuart: the house judiciary committee, saying ftc chair lena kohn wrongfully used her agent, and with more details on this new report, hillary. >> reporter: the house judiciary report claims the ftc
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weapon eyes did their power against x formerly known as twitter after elon musk -- they had been dragging their feet, they left their consent decree in limbo but once elon musk about the company the ftc rushed to finalize it despite concerns from other ftc commissioners who questioned why the urgency now. in response to those questions, and attorney advisor replied to the group that urgency is due to elon musk's purchase of the comedy. the consent decree was finalized in the company x received a flood of letters with hundreds of demands during the first three months of musk's ownership, the committee writing in the report based on the documents the ftc has produced, chair can't demanded they follow the x with dated timeline because twitter agreed to sell the company to musk. the chair would use this consent to harass musk and twitter including questions
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targeting journalists that could chill first amendment rights including the work of journalists to expose collusion between big tech and the federal government. in a letter to the committee, she disputes these accusations saying it was twitter's counsel that urge the commission to approve the order expeditiously to resolve outstanding issues in the interest of facilitating the position. she continues it is customary with companies going through ownership changes, we considered whether was possible to accommodate the request on an expedited timeframe so they did. x's ceo is responding to the report saying it's clear to her the ftc was essentially targeting their company for political reasons and she wants answers saying it is in good faith. ashley: appreciate that. and at trump's madison square garden rally.
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>> to fix that. we are going to get the government off your back. ashley: senior fellow judy shelton, i am offer government efficiency, you would love to see it but it is like asking or world peace. they don't go together. >> if anyone can tackle, and it is the most inspiring program that may come out of a new administration. take a look at cutting down these layers of bureaucracy.
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in terms of the regulatory burden, there are plenty of fiscal transfers that need to be scrutinized. we should be looking at who is on the medicare roles and who is getting disability payments and see if they can find abuse of those programs with government services in a more efficient way to citizens. ashley: i want to talk about the fed. we will hear from them next week. larry think, black rock, there's embedded inflation people and the markets are not taking into account and the fed may not do what the markets want it to do.
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>> the fed didn't seem very concerned at the last meeting on september 18th. after going 8 straight meetings keeping rates at the highest level in 22 years they suddenly gave a jumbo 50 basis point cut in interest rates. the only logic that could rationalize that decision would be that they saw severe deterioration in labor markets. at the press conference following the very aggressive interest rate decision, and the labor market is in pretty great shape. and it violates the framework the fed has been putting forward to explain their decisions. they might go with the 25 basis point cut, extremely isolated
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so they want to justify it but they are concerned that in retrospect it appears the decision was unwarranted. neil: ashley: we are getting video issues but i am going to plow on. and the asset markets. the fed is too powerful, too prominent in markets and too politically. and steer financial rewards to one segment of society. and the decision coming, but they put it back one day. and all the members of the
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committee could have voted and it's a tacit acknowledgment that it is political. they are choosing the path forward of choosing a new president. ashley: i hear you loud and clear. and to the world series, they flock to an immersive venue. max gordon has the story. >> reporter: this beats watching the game at the sports par. the big star of the show, this massive 87 foot wide, 87 foot tall dome of an led screen. and 1500 tickets.
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and standing room, 434, this is the primo section where you have food and drink service, it is amazing. you feel you are at the game. not as expensive as the world series. i asked folks if they thought it was worth it. >> this is amazing. i've never been to a venue like this. the next best thing. >> look like you are sitting in the front. >> i feel like i am at field level. >> reporter: they are opening up an additional location in atlanta. more are on the way. if you want tickets for
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tonight's game 4 you are out of luck. it sold out in a matter of minutes. these are some hot tickets. ashley: they are. how cool is that. i can see that. great stuff. you can get a ticket. thanks very much. great stuff. coming up. cease-fire talks set to resume but will there be a breakthrough ahead for the us election? former israeli prime minister naftali benett will join us after this. (husband) we just want to have enough money for retirement. (wife) and travel to visit our grandchildren. (fisher investments) i understand. that's why at fisher investments we start by getting to know each other. so i can learn about your family, lifestyle, goals and needs, allowing us to tailor your portfolio. (wife) what about commission- based products? (fisher investments) we don't sell those. we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in your best interest. (husband) so how do your management fees work? (fisher investments) we have a transparent fee, structured so we do better when you do better.
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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.
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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. ashley: the pentagon saying north korea sent 10,000 troops to russia to train and likely fight against ukraine in the next several weeks. jennifer griffin has the latest on these developments. >> reporter: the pentagon has lifted restrictions on ukraine's use of american weapons to fire on any north korean forces who come to fight alongside russian troops. thousands of north korean troops are inching towards ukraine's front lines in support of russia. sabrina singh told reporters kim jong-un has sent 10,000 soldiers to train in russia and
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they will fight against ukrainian forces in the next several weeks according to the pentagon. thousands of those soldiers have moved closer to russia's kursk region where they could apprise russian troops in august taking russian territory the first time. >> concern they intend to use them to fight or support combat operations against ukrainian forces. >> the deployment of north korean troops to kursk is a sign of vladimir putin's growing desperation. >> reporter: the new secretary-general of nato speaking. russia has suffered 600,000 casualties since its invasion in february of 2,022 according to us intelligence estimates. president zelenskyy is in iceland meeting with leaders of iceland, norway, finland and sweden. >> information from all
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intelligence, we think they will have a thousand. this soon, it's not about years or months. it is soon. >> reporter: to fight vladimir putin's -- missile defense systems to ukraine until now south korea has only agreed to send humanitarian aid. lloyd austin will meet with his counterpart at the pentagon tomorrow. ashley: thank you for that. appreciate it. oil prices down slightly after making some gains earlier today following the retaliatory, damaging key iran in military bases. negotiations for a gaza cease-fire and release of
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israeli hostages remains uncertain, we are excited to welcome the former prime in history of israel naftali benett. let's begin, what is next. some sort of cease-fire in the near future. >> is real seeks quiet security in the region. according to achieve peace, we've got to neutralize the source of war and the source of terror and republic of iran, head of the octopus of terror in the middle east. where we stand right now is israel has severely weakened the arms of the octopus, hezbollah and hamas and we -- we diminish their ability to defend themselves. the time is to hit the head of
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the octopus with the nuclear program and the regime itself. ashley: you actual he said the same thing on october 2nd following the ballistic missile attack on israel, you said iran made a terrible mistake and israel had its greatest opportunity and 50 years to change the face of the middle east. that's october 2nd. of you brought that opportunity? >> ultimately we should look at this from a whole perspective. what matters is you do next. do you let go of iran and let them replenish themselves and fix their air defense and rearming the whole octopus in lebanon and gaza, or do we go all in and take out their nuclear program and ultimately help the iranian people topple
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this terrible regime that has been ruining their own lives for the past decades so what matters is what is next. ashley: it must be frustrating. you've taken out the leader of hezbollah, hamas but surely they find someone else to lead them. the ability to crush these proxy of charon is difficult and what is to stop once again reforming and going back to what they were before this war began? >> that's a very good question. the answer is to way to stop the arms of the octopus from reforming, rebuilding themselves is by hitting and ultimate the cutting off the head of the octopus. that is the only way. if you don't do that you are absolutely right. the arms and tentacles will ultimately rebuild themselves and continue fomenting terror the next 10 or 50 years.
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ashley: i want your reaction to this. j.d. vance spoke about american involvement in the middle east and its role in the israeli iran conflict. listen to this and i will get your comments. >> israel has the right to defend itself but america's interest can be distinct. we will have overlapping interests and distinct interests and our interests very much not going to that. it would be a huge distraction of resources, massively expensive to our country. ashley: there you have it. j.d. vance playing down the conflict with iran. what say you? >> reporter: as he suggests, there are sometimes overlapping interests. they are overlapping, israel is essentially doing the hard work
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for the free world. we are fighting seven fronts of radical islamic terror which we well know that if it doesn't stop in the middle east it will ultimately hit the shores of the united states of america as we saw in 9/11 and other cases. we are not asking america to fight our war or to go to war for us. quite the opposite. we are fighting on behalf of america and the free world. we are sending our sons and daughters to fight this horrible terror apparatus. we are losing boys and girls. these are true heroes but we are doing it while understanding if we don't do it no one will do it. ashley: do you feel you have the support of the biden administration?
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>> we look at america regardless of specific political administration and we are tremendously faithful to the people of the united states of america who overwhelmingly understand that there is a battle between good and evil, understand what it means to be the jewish state that is fighting seven fronts, sending our younger generations to fight these horrible terrorists and ultimately defeat them. we can only thank the united states of america. ashley: a good place to leave it but thank you for joining us today. very informative discussion. thank you, sir. >> thank you very much. ashley: we will have more coast-to-coast right after this. that work better toget. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. voya helps you choose the right amounts without over or under investing. so you can feel confident in your financial choices
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ashley: great to be on daytona beach. fox business alert, the artificial intelligence company x ai in talks for a funding round that would value it at $40 billion. the startup, $40 billion a few months ago when it raised 6 billion in the spring. a week after health authorities link the deadly e. coli outbreak to mcdonald's, quarter pounders, telling investors the situation is behind them. stock is up on news that its value meals turn sales around, stock is slightly higher but it is not down. that does it for us on coast to coast. taylor riggs

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