tv Varney Company FOX Business November 18, 2024 10:00am-11:00am EST
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there on fox square. all good. good morning, everyone. 10:00 eastern. check out how your money's doing monday morning. not that great. dow's off 95. nasdaq's only to up 15 points. this is some continuation of the selling that we saw bigtime on friday of last week. the 10-year treasury yield, that is going up to 4.46%. the price of oil around $68, 69 a barrel. $68.33 right now. and bitcoin struggling to hold on to, $90,000. st just there at 90,300. that is a look at the markets and now this. just received the latest read on home builder sentiment. is that going to move the market? what's the number? lauren: 46 in november, 3-point improvement from october. the national association of home builders credits the increasing confidence to the red sweep. they say their builders say they expect significant regulatory relief to come. that means they plan to build more homes. stuart: okay, we'll take it.
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thanks, lauren. now this. president biden has suddenly reversed course op on ukraine with. he will allow american missiles to be used the attack deep inside russia. this was announced as the president was attending a world summit where he struggled to make an impact. but this decision has great impact. president zelenskyy wants these missiles, and he wants to use them quickly. he's now to opposed by the russian army and thousands of north korean troops as well, and there's one report suggesting there will ultimately be 100,000 north koreans fighting against ukraine. zelenskyy wants the missiles so he can stop 'em. the kremlin has responded with fury saying biden has made a most provocative and uncalculated decision. their words. which risks catastrophic if consequences, again, their words. uncalculated? no, i don't think so. biden knows exactly what he's doing, having delayed and delayed weapons deliveries, he now reverses course and puts
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president-elect trump in a bind. the president is escalating just as trump takes office and talks of a quick settlement. this is not the way a defeated president should go out. it's like throwing gasoline onto a raging fire just to stop your opponent from putting it out. trump's communications director says, and i'm quoting directly now, official statements on this matter will come directly from trump and his authorized spokespeople, end quote with. no official statement has yet been issued. all the money being spent on this war became a campaign issue. why spend money over there when we're going broke at home? it was not a winning issue for the harris campaign, and voters backed trump. he wanted piece peace, biden is not making it any easier. second hour of "varney" just getting started. ♪ ♪ stuart: charlie hurt joining us this monday morning.
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biden just put trump in a bind. should president-elect trump verse the use of these missiles to be used deep inside russia? >> i think you're exactly right. president biden is not thumbing his nose at vladimir putin, he's thumbing his nose at the american people who just had an election, and it was very much about this issue, and president trump's promise that he was going to bring a quick end to this. and voters register thing their dissatisfaction with the campaign to keep this war with going. and so i think you're exactly right about it. and it does put president trump in a bind, and it makes it extra difficult because at a moment like this, you want the country to be unified in facing a foe, and this makes that very difficult by, as you point out, president trump -- president biden literally reversing course on in this issue to make it basically leave a ticking time bomb in the lap of the incoming president.
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stuart: house speaker mike johnson, he thinks the ethics committee should not release their report on congressman matt gaetz. watch this. >> there's a very important reason for the tradition and the rule that we always, have almost always followed, and that is that we don't issue investigations and ethics reports on people who are not members of congress. i'm afraid that that would open a pandora's box because the jurisdiction of the ethics committee is limited to those who are serving in the institution. that's its very purpose. and i think this would be a breach of protocol that could be dangerous for us going forward in the future. stuart: however, charlie, gaetz himself says he's not worried about this report getting out, he expects it to get out, and he's not unhappy about it. could it upend his confirmation? >> well, i think that the idea that this report isn't going to come out is kind of laughable. i think it definitely will come out. and if i'm matt gaetz, i'm going to say, well, let's just have the report come out and deal with it because we are already
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hearing all of the allegations and insinuations that are contained in the report, is so why not just kind of have it out and have, you know, a discussion about it. it's not like anybody's going to accuse matt gaetz in this report of mig that isn't d anything that isn't worse that deny than what he's been accused of. i'll leave it to mike johnson to be concerned about the internal rules of the house ethics committee. that's kind of an oxymoron in the first place. it's always been sort of absurd to me because if they do everything they can to try to make that committee nonpartisan. it's still partisan. it's always been used for partisan purposes, and i don't think this is any different. so my view of it is just let the stupid report or -- forget that. let the report come out -- [laughter] and let the american people decide when it's stupid or valuable and then evaluate it from there. stuart: are they going to be recess appointments? or is the senate going of to have hearings? not just on gaetz, but across the board?
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>> i think, yeah, i think that -- i wouldn't be surprised if we didn't see one of these nominees go down, and -- but i think that, you know, the question is if the senate does not actually vote on one of the nominees who may be controversial, but then they go out, they go into recess, will the president be able to go ahead and make the recess appointments, i think it's, i think it's -- i think republicans are unified in getting through trump's agenda. and while he may lose one of his nominees, it will happen because they get voted down, not because of inaction by the senate. stuart: got it. charlie hurt, thanks very much, or indeed. see you again soon. senator john fetterman has a message to the democrats who are melting down over trump. what is he saying, lauren? lauren: calm down. he says don't focus on the small tweets or small appointments, but on trump running the table -- those are his words or -- for two years because
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republicans control congress. >> gets the kind of thing, i mean, gets the kind of thing that he wanted, you know, like the freakout and all of those things. and he hasn't even been -- [laughter] it's still not even thanksgiving yet. and if we're having meltdowns, you know, every tweet or every appointment and all those things, i mean, it's going to be four years. lauren: i think he's speaking some common sense. elections have consequences, right? if a some point too much outrage is coming from the other side. stuart: okay, got it. let's get back to the markets, please. it's a monday morning. you want the know how your money's doing as we start the new week. not that a great. dow's off 60, nasdaq's up 60 points almost. take a look at nvidia. they will report earnings after the bell on wednesday. the stock's to down 2.5% as we speak. kevin o'leary's with me for this entire hour. what do you want to see out of nvidia's earnings? >> i think we're going to be
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pleasantly surprise. there's a rumor about overheating on the new data chips. i'm watching the insatiable demand for this technology at every sector the of the market, every single sector is starting to look at a.i. for cost reduction productivity. if i don't see why the story ends. it's not going to be one earnings report. it's going to take long time for these guys to slow down because they've built a moat around their software. nobody's even close to them yet. so i think it's going to be a pretty good report on that, on all those fronts. stuart: is it a stock you'd consider buying? >> i own it. i hold my nose on the price earning and the multiple of sales, but there's nothing quite like it. it reminds me very much of the early days of the internet and the protocols that were so powerful then. the people didn't put enough understanding is it -- into how it was going to change the economy. this is another stage with a.i. i use this technology now for lots of businesses. it really, really works.
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stuart: give we an example how you use it. >> let me give you an example. the business you know, the wine industry. right? so i can now use a.i. to look at every single order just in southern florida. the varietal for this season, this quarter, moss cat toe. it's the number one -- stuart: that's your favorite. >> i hate that wine. but the point is i grow it because that's what i know they're going to buy based on the data setses i'm scraping. and that gets my cost after capital way down. is so i move the moscato cases to the east coast and ship them to women in florida who are buying them. stuart: that's good stuff. moving on, trump is reportedly considering several names for treasury secretary. there's a long list now. who do you like? >> i've been saying this about pick, i'm very worried about it. unfortunately, we don't, in commerce and in treasury, spend
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enough time thinking about small business in america. it's around the policy. and i just, the haas three big acts and i've said this countless times, the inflation act, the infrastructure act and the support acts prior to that during the can pandemic, not a dime for small business, it's because of the mindset of the treasury and the commerce department is not to care about where 62% of the jobs are created. it's small business in america. whoever gets this mandate, i want them to understand the most important part of the american economy are my guys, small business. and i'm going to march up and down the halls. which ever one of these guys gets picked, a i'm going say, look, i want to see 60 cents of every dollar going to small business because you forgot about us, you don't care about us, and we are the economy. stuart: okay. kevin, stay with us, please. we've with got some movers, let's start with mobileye. lauren: they're in the impact zone of the report that the trump transition the team told
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advisers, hey, plan for a federal framework for autonomous cars. you can see t up 7%. tesla up almost 8% and aurora innovation which also offers autonomous driving featuretures is up 8%. -- stuart: cvs. lauren: they added four new board members, stock's up 3.33%. it had lost one-third of its value this year. stuart to south liberty energy, doesn't that have something to do with the energy secretary? lauren: yep. trump picked their ceo, chris wright, to be his energy secretary. it's a nice pop because the stock down on the year. stuart: you know, i said it earlier, but there is video somewhere about this guy drinking fracking fluid, literally standing there drinking it just to show that fracking doesn't affect the drinking water. and i digress, but thanks very much, lauren, for listening to me at least. still ahead, donald trump's famous dance move seems to be catching on in the world of sports. is this the first political dance? it looks like it, doesn't it? we're going to ask portnoy about
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that. he's on the show. prince harry could reportedly face deportation over claims he made on his visa application. we'll tell you how donald trump fits into the story. he does. and the pentagon just failed its seventh audit in a row, 17000 auditors were on the case -- 1700. you won't believe how much it cost you, the taxpayer. all that and a lot more coming up on the show this hour. ♪ did you steal my money? ♪ did you steal my money? ♪ are you out there, mr. no onei ♪ng you have... the fearless investor. the type a cpa. the bootstrapper. the bootmaker. yeehaw [narrator] but many do have something in common. we all trust schwab with our wealth. [narrator] thanks to our award-winning service, low costs and transparent advice. every day, over a million multi-millionares trust schwab
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♪ ♪ with so much great entertainment out there... wouldn't it be easier if you could find what you want, all in one place? my favorites. get xfinity streamsaver with netflix, apple tv+, and peacock included, for only $15 a month. stuart: 46 minutes into the trading session, the nasdaq's up 90, the dow is down 82. mixed picture.
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iran seems to be offering olive branches to the incoming trump administration. there's news. gillian turner at the state department for us. what exactly is iran doing to maybe change this relationship? >> reporter: well, i don't know if there's a lot of hope, stuart, but the iranian regime is making famous promises about everything now from their nuclear program, they're also promising to stop any ongoing assassination plots targeting president-elect trump. take a look at this. you may have heard trump ally elon musk met with iran's nun ambassador -- u.n. ambassador last week. iranian officials described it as, quote, positive and good news, not words we have ever heard them use before to describe interaction as with the u.s. trump's incoming -- says whatever the regime says doesn't matter. >> they were unable to get money. they were struggling. trump didn't have to bomb them, he was bankrupting them, and
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that's more effective. that could actually lead to an overthrow of the mullahs which has been an oppressive government for these wonderful people who are great folks. heavy been under this to oppression for 45 years. >> reporter: the incoming national security adviser says biden officials' fatal a mistake has been failure to enforce sanctions that are already on the books. >> we will go back the maximum pressure on iran which is the core of all evil in the middle east right now. the president trump has been very clear about that. >> reporter: despite seeking retribution for the killing of soleimani, iran reportedly assured the biden administration last month it was, in fact, standing down on its plan to essentially murder trump in cold blood right here on u.s. soil. >> every single day is going to bring continued action, diplomacy and work on our part right up until the last minute that president biden is
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president. >> reporter: so iran, the regime has now invited, stuart, the head of the u.n. nuclear watchdog to come visit on the ground for the first time since may, pretty big news. what transpires there, we don't know. they tend to block these kinds of initiatives, but it is a sign of how desperate and uneasy this regime is feeling about the incoming team. stuart? stuart: why am i not surprised? jill -- gillian turner, thank you very much, indeed deed. president biden has authoritied long-range missiles on targets inside russia by ukraine. the chem -- kremlin says that will escalate the war. kt mcfarland where me now. where does this leave trump? >> you know, that's what you can't figure out. the biden administration, they're climbing up the escalation ladder but with no idea where it goes. russia's going to use north korean troops in ukraine, so the biden administration says, well,
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you can use long-range missiles into russia. russia says we're going to use more north korean troops. the problem with it is they don't have a plan. we'll just keep throwing more money and troops at it, we won't negotiate. we don't want a negotiated solution, we just don't want russia to win, but they don't have a plan. the difference is that president trump has a strategic vision, get them both ott negotiating table. have them negotiate an end to this killing and then ukraine can rebuild and then good luck to russia. stuart: look at this video. masked neonazis carrying flags with swastikas marching through the streets of columbus, ohio. this was over the weekend. you can see them right there. this is blatant naziism right here on american soil. what are we to make of this? >> you know, i think it all starts and ends with the white house. the biden administration, certainly with relations with israel and iran and hamas and hezbollah, they kind of turned a blind wry to the anti-semitism
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in their own party -- blind eye. and as a result, it's like a nod and a wink saying, the it's okay, we're not going to complain. we're not going to cull -- call outhow -- you out from the bully pulpit. these are hate crime ares. you cannot do this in the united states. and yet we have a president who just isn't gonna do it. that's why i think social security so refreshing when president trump comes in. he'll call it anti-semitism. stop it. stuart: yeah. straight to the point. kt mcfarland, thanks for joining us on a monday morning. we appreciate. thanks, kt. >> thank you. stuart: the pentagon just failed its seventh audit in a row. all right, lauren, they don't know where they spent all the money. lauren: no, and this is the largest department of the government. they cannot account for all of their $824 billion budget. it took 1700 auditors and $178 million to find out why. if there's good news, it's this: there's not enough information
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on 15 of the 28 pentagon agencies for auditors the make a clean opinion, so it's inconclusive. hay didn't necessarily fail, but they didn't pass. nine agencies did pass. that is more than last year, if you're looking for good news, can and they plan to pass everything cleanly by 2028. so a couple more years, perhaps, of failing before they get it all together, but that's one big budget, $824 billion, and you don't know where the money goes? stuart: kevin o'leary has an expression on his face, he's not happy. maybe elon musk could have a go9 this, huh? >> first of all, $178 million for the audit itself? i am willing add to do it for half the price. [laughter] lauren: less than last year. >> that's ridiculous in itself. this is the kind of thing that musk and vivek are going to have a lot of fun with, because they can shame everybody into compliance. it's wrong for the american people to look at that and and say it'sst okay. it's not okay. that's way too much the waves. you know there's going to be a lot of fat in there.
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but, of course, they get cut a lot of slack because this is the military. this is the strength of the -- stuart: you're making trump's argument for him. >> yeah. but we want to have -- we want better efficiencien that kind of spend. stuart: we certainly do. all right, kevin, now this. take a look at this. donald trump, elon musk, rfk jr. spotted eating mcdonald's onboard trump force one. i didn't think rfk jr. cared for fast food, but there he is munching away. housing maim a major issue in the -- became a major issue in the election. national association of home builders, the chief executive jim to bin, he's going to take that on. he's in the studio next. muck work hard, play harder. ♪ get loud, go farther. ♪ any country boy and every -- ♪
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quoting, materially benefit the company primarily via changes at the sec. not only can you trade stocks, etfs, etc., on robinhood, 15 different cryptocurrencies to. lauren: hims and hers health, telehealth company, they also offer the compounded versions of the weight loss drugs. they're up after they appointed a former fda official to their board. that's considered good news. the stock has more than doubled this year. stuart: do i still need a prescription if i go through them? lauren: well, they would give it to you. the doctors on the telehealth. stuart: oh, they just give it to me. a formality. lauren: are you in the market? stuart: no, not at this -- lauren: you're waiting for the pill. stuart: jetblue. lauren: oil's up today on intensified fighting between russia and ukraine. the other airlines are lore as well. the thinking is jet fuel goes up too. stuart: we're getting a better idea of how elon musk and vivek ramaswamy are approach cost
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cutting at the new department of government efficiency, that would be doge. grady trimble joins me from washington. all right, what's the plan, grade canty? >> reporter: stu, on taxes specifically, they want to simplify the tax code. and the timing could be good because, as you know, the tax cuts that president-elect trump ushered in during his first term are set to to expire at the end of next year. so this is what the department of government efficiency posted on it official, and account. in 1955, they say, there were less than 1.5 million words in the u.s. tax code. today there are more than 16 million. because of this complexity, americans collectively spend $-- 6.5 billion hours preparing and filing their taxes each year. and it appears very little is off limits as elon new ifing and vivek ramaswamy -- elon musk and vivek ramaswamy look to cut. ramaswamy says to expect massive cuts in the travel federal government including contractors, by the way.
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some agencies could be eliminated entirely, and even defense cuts are on the table. >> the pentagon has just failed its seventh consecutive audit, nearly a trillion dollar dollars of budget. they can't even tell you where it goes. i think part of this is exposing the extent of the rot and waste. but then to take steps, first, through executive action and then laying the groundwork for broader change through legislation as well to rein in that deficit and budget. >> reporter: some democrats are getting onboard with the idea of doge too even if they think the goal of tutting concern -- of cutting $2 trillion of government spending is too lofty. >> but they could save tens or even hundreds of billions of dollars depending on how it's structured and what they do. this could be a constructive undertaking that ought to be embraced. >> reporter: so as you know, stu, musk is famous for cutting costs at his companies like spacex, x and tesla, looking to take the same approach with the
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federal government and federal spending. tu stu? stuart: grady, thanks so much for being here. kevin o'leary, what do you make of this department of government efficiency? can they really cut serious waste? >> i think they can. you have to realize that if they just solve for simplifying tax and deregulated the economy just, say, 30%, the costs that i have to spend each year just to remain comet compliant goes up about 20% a year between all the consultants, the auditors, the lawyers and the changing rules of regulation. and i participate in all 11 sectors of the economy. i have never if seen cost escalation as i have in the last five years on this area. and so i'm just one voice, but if you went and talked to the ceos of the s&p 500, they point to this as one of the most expensive aspects in terms of cost growth on hair income statements. there's -- on their income statements. there's lots of room for efficiency. stuart: all right, kevin, thanks very much.
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joining us now is jim to bin, the ceo of the national association of home builders. i want to know how trump will revitalize the housing market. >> first off a, you have the president who ran on building more housing supply, right? the first time we've seen that in at least a generation where it was the centerpiece of his economic campaign. he's talked about opening more federal lands for home building. that's going to be great in las vegas, california, utah, some of the high growth states out there. i also think expanding economy. he's inheriting an economy that's getting better. we saw his first four years in office, we saw wages rise, interest rates low, housing really boomed. stuart: trouble is, housing is regulated at the state level. not the federal level so much as the state level. not much trump can do about state regulations. >> no, but he can use federal levers to use federal grants or dollars to force state and local governments to pay more attention to housing supply. stuart: he can do that?
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>> he can. and there's a whole host of federal regulations we expect him to cut -- stuart: i just saw, this is why we need you. there's a new report and it shows that people need to earn $107,000 a year to afford a single-family home in many cities. that's twice the cost of just five years ago. how will trump fix that? >> well, again, i think a larger economy, better wages, interest rates we expect to come down. but more importantly, if you look at the worst affordability in this country, it's all california. guess what? the most overregulated state in the country when it comes to housing. i think you're going to see trump push that lore when it come tonight regulatory burden, and i think that's the way we build more houses. meeting demand means lower prices, everybody wins. stuart: it's not going to come quickly though, is it? >> ono, it's going to take some time to do it. but aalso think as interest rates continue to fall, you're going to see the pace pick up. our reading after the election, our builders are that much more
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excited for a president trump term, is so i think it's -- stuart: we don't need more mansions. what we need is more affordable housing. that's, surely, that's what it's all about. >> we need to get the churn back in the marketplace. lower interest rates bring existing supply back on but, more importantly, that first-time, first generation home buyer, we've got to get them back into the marketplace. smaller homes, more affordable, that gets the economy going again. stuart: jim tobin, thanks for being here. trump's victory could spell trouble for prince harry. ashley, what's this all about? ashley: interesting stuff, stu. good morning. legal analysts say harry is about to lose the protection of the biden administration which could expose the self-exiled prince's u.s. visa application. at issue is whether he was truthful about his drug use on the application. harry admitted in his 2023 memoir to using various recreational drugs including can cocaine and marijuana, something
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he would have been required to disclose in those immigration documents. president-elect trump has repeatedly said that he thinks harry should not be allowed to stay in the united states. why? well, he betrayed the queen, says trump, and may have lied about his past drug use on his visa application. by the way, the heritage foundation has sued the u.s. department of homeland security after the agency refused the disclose a freedom of information request for harry's files. that could change under the trump administration to make life a little more uncomfortable for the duke of sussex. stu. stuart: thanks so much, ashley. sill ahead, jen psaki admits the democrats have no leader. watch this. >> i think democrats are in the wilderness as you just said before. there is no clear leader of the party. joe biden is going to be out of office shortly are. kamala harris just lost the election. stuart: so where does the party go from here? even further left? how about that?
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possibility. a restaurant owner in new york says he only carries one fork in each of his stores. we'll introduce you to that small business owner is and tell you why he's so averse to cutlery. that's next. we cover it all. ♪ ♪ get ready for the holidays. ♪s it is a celebration ♪ ♪ what does a good investment opportunity look like? at t. rowe price we let curiosity light the way. asking smart questions about opportunities like ai. and how the industries born to support ai might better support us all. better questions. better outcomes.
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moving to america and becoming a citizen. he's with us, the owner of no fork. no fork restaurant. welcome to the show, good to see you. explain yourself, no fork. what's that mean? >> thank you. stuart: is it soup or something? >> no, it's actually sandwiches. we specializes in sandwiches and pizza as well. i think it's important to understand where it comes from, i've got to start in the grinning. concern from the beginning. i went to college at florida state university, and me and my other cofounder and co-owner, my partner, we've always dreamt on this american dream and creating this type of concept. and what better place to do that than new york city, you know? it's so diverse, so many different cultures. and the no fork just stemmed between, you know, growing up and sharing food with your family, eating with your hands, but also just, you know, recently we were seeing people eating pizzas with a fork, and,
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like -- [laughter] it just does not taste the same. stuart: against culture in new york city. you're expanding. you're expanding, just opened another one. >> yeah. stuart: obviously, business for you in new york city is working. >> yeah, most definitely. we actually opened our first location during the pandemic, and we were definitely worried. but we have a unique product that doesn't exist in the united states -- stuart: what's the unique product? >> we have a 12-inch sandwich, sub, that everything is made custom made. the most difficult part about it was we're creating an experience you would only get in kosovo or albania -- stuart: how much? >> so it's going to average around $12. stuart: $12? >> yeah. stuart: [inaudible] >> it's very high quality ingredients and, stu, i actually wanted to bring one, but you can't have that cold. you need to get one fresh, so anytime, please, stop by -- [laughter] stuart: so far, so good. stay there for a second because
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i've got kevin with me. give some advice to young entrepreneurs expanding in new york city. >> first of all, i love the marketing pitch because all of a sudden here you are on television because of no fork. i mean, that's a hook. that's a great hook. the key about the concepts, and this is an interesting idea, is repeat business. customer acquisition, because i've looked at so many deals in fast good and casual food, and they're not able to keep that constituency coming back day in, day out because you market so hard to bet that customer. it sounds like you've solved for that -- >> most definitely. >> you've got a community with this whole no fork deal, right? >> yes, sir. and that's actually, our main priority is keeping the consistency and applying that that same recipe in multiple parts of manhattan which we're doing right now. we're planning to open next year in madison square garden, and we plan on expanding in other areas of manhattan as well. hopefully in the future with the help of mr. wonderful -- [laughter] we expand all over the united states. >> got some free advice -- >> i think he's got to get on
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"shark tank" pronto. >> thanks for for coming on. bust of luck to you. still ahead, the. harris: campaign has just given a lesson on how to spend an enormous amount of money and still lose an let's. where exactly did $1.5 billion go in 15 weeks? we're going to dig into it and give you the results at the temperature of this hour. boxing fans accuse jake paul of carrying mike tyson; dave portnoy calls the match one of the great cons of the century. clearly, the man's fired up. dave is next. ♪ ♪ ain't nothing but lies, lies, lies. ♪ look into my eyes, eyes, eyes. ♪ nothing i wouldn't do for you ♪ olks, john rich here. i'm not just a country artist, i'm also a business owner. and it's frightening what banks are doing to american businesses. they've let cancel culture infect their decision making.
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stuart: there are some sports fans who are outraged about the highly anticipated boxing match. critics claim paul carried tyson through the fight. portnoy is one of those people, and dave portnoy if joins me now. i know you're not happy, or dave. let it rip. what's the problem? >> well, i wasn't that unhappy. i'm more stunned. anybody who thought this was going to be anything other than
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it was is a brain dead moron. i'm a mike tyson historian. he's a shadow of himself. he's 60 years to old. jake paul is an average boxer. he's fought one guy who i would say is a semi-pro boxer and lost. i actually tip my cap to them because i think jake made $40 million, mike made $20 million. if i could make that much money for basically doing nothing, i would. jake paul is the greatest marketer probably i've seen in my lifetime that he gets this many people to to care. i wasn't mad, i was more, like, what did people expect in no kidding, this is what happened. i told everybody this is what would happen. s it is one of the great cons of all time. but, hey, if i could get that money for doing it, i would do it to. stuart: sure. but netflix doesn't come out of this well. they were streaming this thing. they were live, and a lot of people really complained about it. they couldn't see what was going on. they didn't come out of this well. >> yeah, i don't know. i'd love to have a truth serum with the netflix executives.
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they're going to have the nfl. they obviously had too many people, but they were bragging about it after, stuart, saying how much people watched, the most-watched event. sometimes the i honestly don't know if a netflix executive was it -- sitting there. it was a disaster because it kept -- oh, there you go, give me the numbers, stuart. it's up 2%. so how bad could it be? the numbers talk. stuart: right. 60 million people watched it, how bad can that be? you got it, dave. how about donald trump's dance move? it seems to be catching on. it's sweeping through the sports world. just watch this. seven seconds, just watch. [cheers and applause] >> smith with the sink -- stuart: student dave, is that a political dance, the first ever who? yeah, i guess if you're looking at it as a technicality, that is a political dance.
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it's also -- now, coming from a guy who can't dance, who can't do much, it's pretty easy to imitate. you just go like this and you got it. are are people getting worked up over it? yes. who cares, let 'em have some pun? stuart: the guy who came on with a trump hat in an nfl wrap-up not too long ago, they fined the him $11,000. >> bosa. stuart: yeah, right. are these guys gonna get fined? >> i don't -- they may be. listen, i get that you want to keep politics out of sports. it's the old michael jordan quote, it's how i run bar item stool. blue states and red states both buy sneakers, so why alienate some of your audience? to me, this is harmless fun, more like a joke than the hat. but i get why you want to keep politics out of sports, i do. stuart: fair enough. did you see this picture, trump,
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musk and rfk jr. sharing mcdonald's? don jr. joked make america healthy again starts tomorrow, that's a quite. rfk's getting some heat for what he said about breakfast cereal. what do you make of this? my question is, look, have you ever thought of pitching your one-bite pizza review to the president-elect? he'd jump on it. >> yeah. if i could make money, i'll do it. i don't know, mcdonald's isn't my cup of tea. they better have a big toilet. and if rfk is going to be like, yo, i'm mr. healthy, a maybe you put down the burger for a minute. listen, i remember gavin newsom, he said you've got to wear a mask, and then he was celebration -- celebrating at the french laundry. i don't know if i'd do it. stuart: you're not a health food nut, are you, dave? >> i tried to to be. the only thing i really have to
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look forward the now in life, stuart, is eating. so, no, i am not a health nut. i love food, i love eating. stuart: the only thing you have to look forward to in life is eating. i do you want to take that -- >> i start planning, i wake up at 10 a.m. stuart, and i start thinking about dinner. stuart: you've only just woken up, is that what you're telling me? if i can't believe it. >> yeah. stuart: bitcoin, it just topped $9 2,000. are you going to buy any more? >> bitcoin is like the girl that just keeps getting away from me. i have 14 bitcoin. i should have a lot more. this thing's incredible. everyone tells me a i'm not late, i'm early. you get the price you deservement i'll probably end up buying more. this thing, stuart, it's a robert ship, huh? it's just craze concern rocket ship, it's just crazy. stuart: life treating you well in the new trump err a? is it? that's not a political question. >> yeah, so far so good. it's not much different than it
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was a week ago for me, but so far so good. stuart: hey, portnoy, you're a great broadcaster, and we love having you on the show. good luck. >> see you soon. stuart: kevin o'leary's still here. what do you want to talk about, the fight or bitcoin coyne? >> i want to talk about oprah. stuart: you'll is have a chance in just --? >> the fight's the fight. 60 million people watching it, you won. period. controversy follows up, a this that's even better. the fight's a winner for netflix. bitcoin is going to hit $100,000 long before the holiday, i think. it's so close. there's no resistance here. this is the crypto of choice for financial institutions and sovereign wealth. they don't care about anything else, just bitcoin. and so the aspect of mining it gets more complex. big debate about the electricity needed to do this. but at the same time, it's an alternative asset here to stay. stuart: weren't you over there in qatar, something to do with a crypto conference over there, you had something to do with it? >> yes, i was there. we still --
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stuart: a springboard for -- >> well, the truth is sovereign wealth has still yet to get get involved. people keep talking as if they are. not yet. but when they come on, this will go and go and to go, because they're agnostic to the price. >> i'm going to ask you to sit there for ten more minutes. you know why. >> why? stuart: you know why. >> you're killing me. stuart: still ahead, or joe concha will take on jen psaki admitting that the democrats don't have a clear leader. we'll talk to dana perino about a veteran pollster who's quitting her job after missing big in iowa. kennedy will take on a blue state governor. and dr. marc siegel will dissect r rfk jr.'s warning about a prop lahr g popular breakfast cereal. the 1-ging success -- 1 success hour is next. -- 11:00 hour is next. ♪
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