tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business November 21, 2024 12:00pm-1:00pm EST
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we got, the answer is ontario. the light covers just over 7300 mi. , lake superior is the largest covering 32,000 mi. . that to the birthday girl, you may blow it out, make-a-wish, make-a-wish, make-a-wish. okay. you know what, i knew it was your birthday and i was going to bring in a bottle of varney wine and send it out on the kitchen counter and i walked out the door and forgot it but you will get it tomorrow. lauren: you will see me on set for the rest of this new year. i'm not supposed to tell you. stuart: we will figure it out, happy birthday. our time is almost up, five seconds left to. you know how i countdown to the end of the show? 3, 2, one. neil. neil: cupcake?
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she is a star. other shows have a budget for cakes, maybe big lunches. are you in charge of this? stuart: point taken. neil: happy birthday. good to know. notwithstanding we've got a little bit of a non-extravaganza. a lot of people are not able to crunch nvidia's numbers and whether they are as good as they seem. it is a sense of where does the market go? liz claman just talked to the ceo and what he's thinking about. and the impact is having more
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to do, the magnificent 7, which is a part of why this might be in danger. mondays is not a trend or make. >> reporter: nvidia is a proven leader. it was not good enough. here are the numbers. one quarter, $35 million in revenue. on an annual basis, that is 94% to. it's a high-class problem. everybody wants to grow their revenue but for nvidia that's the slowest rate of growth in seven quarters. then they gave an update on the new chip. it four times more powerful than the old one. the ceo said they will produce several billion in revenue, but guess what, blackwell is expensive to produce and some analysts worry about lower margins. looking at nvidia stock, up 152, 189% on the year. those are some things today, look at the rival chip stocks
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mostly higher, specifically supermicro up 14%. they make the ai servers and nvidia with a shout out on the earnings report, they called supermicro a reliable partner. nvidia does pack a heavy punch. nvidia is responsible for 25% of the s&p 500's again this year and replaced intel a couple weeks ago and that might explain the split market because the dow is price weighted and nvidia is 2% of that whereas it is more prevalent in the s&p 500 and the nasdaq which is down 1%. i want to point out google, down pretty sharply today as the department of justice pushes them to break off their chrome browser on antitrust concerns. neil: i want to go to lose claman.
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to get a gauge of what is happening, who better than the boss that runs nvidia. good to see you. tell us everything you learned. liz: the most important person, talk to any analyst or shareholder, talk to anybody in the ai business, he's the most important person in the industry and has been for several years. he started the company 30 one years ago. let's be clear here, this is not an overnight success. he looked down the horizon and saw the future and that is why nvidia has such a huge jumpstart. lauren was smart to point out the blackwell, the new one that is shipping right now, going to ship soon. some customers have a few in their possession. the earlier iterations, these
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are preowned, one is brand-new for $45,000 blackrock very expensive and the entire system is not just the chip itself but the rackets, the whole system could be up to several million dollars, everybody wants these. elon musk put together the whole data center in nashville, 50,000 of the current iteration so everybody wants the new one too. i asked to the ceo how he figures out pricing. everybody around the block waiting for his chip, couldn't he raise the price, how do they work on that? >> we always do pricing based
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on value delivered when the simulation of these ai factories. in a lot of ways the way to think about this is here's this machinery, this big huge machinery you apply energy to it and what comes out of it is ai. we call it generative ai. it's like generating electricity, there are all these machines called ac generators and they produce electricity, we are producing this miracle called artificial intelligence so at the core that is what we do and every generation, we simulate regular sleep to predict the production output of that factory and always deliver a lot more value at the same price so that's the way we do pricing. always value-based. liz: it was a year ago in january 2023 he was in stockholm, upgrading their
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supercomputer to have a chat bot that speaks fluent swedish. what do these things do? what does everybody want them? look and throb, growth from x ai, everyone is rushing to have these chat bots, it is the way of the future. it is quite the unbelievable run-up of the past couple years. i was talking to one guy on varney's show, and investor at circle square, several years ago he bought nvidia at $3 and said mark my words, it will be a big company and sure enough it is the biggest. neil: how he views the market reaction to this, the ai market got big in the last two years. nvidia was already big but
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accidentally grew, the chips behind those and easily segmented this business and owns the business but does even he himself look at his stock run-up and say these investors are getting ahead? >> he looks at her daily basis not at the stock but the business. word is he doesn't wear a watch because he only think about today. so many analysts, a couple of them have a hold but he looks at analysts and probably thinks you do you, we have to fill these orders. we are going to be behind for the next couple quarters. a multibillion-dollar addition to the bottom line, the to the sales line, you can decide of this is overvalued or not but they are for now the big leader. doesn't mean somebody else is going to come. i always, the splenda affect.
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it started with all the sweeteners and went to equal and splenda took over, who is next? there's always somebody coming up from behind. they are far behind on the track. >> she gets them all. he avoids the press like the plague and an amazing achievement. i want to go to charlie gasparino on the tech fixation because that is going south, that is going north in record-setting pace closing in at $98,000, what is behind that? charles: breaking news on treasury secretary, you are always throwing them at me. this has been a long drawn out process. fox news first reported it was
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put in limbo earlier in the week because scott besson looked like he was going to be the treasury secretary, howard lutnick pushed him aside, trump opened it up to many candidates. it is coming down to just a handful. mark rowan is still there, bill haggerty, the senator, is still involved. trump has made his decision. i don't know what that decision is. the decision should be imminent. one thing i know about donald trump, he has a flair for the dramatic. for all i know he wants to unveil this. i'm told by people he knows who his guy is. i'm using the correct pronouns here. is coming soon. it is different from the others that the markets would love any
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of those people, all smart guys, one reason bitcoin is on fire is a story that will be published imminently on fox business.com how trump is so embracing crypto that he is thinking of doing a crypto advisory panel. this is the big thing. is going to appoint the former cftc chair, major player in his transition team and somebody known as the crypto dad because he supports the formation and expansion of the industry in the trump administration and private practice. a good shot if this panel is correct that he is going to be
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the chair he will be the crypto czar. kamala hers was the borders are, barack obama had 33 czars doing different things on the environment and you name it, trump whittled it down to four and a lot of republicans are skeptical of this expansion of what they would call the administrative state but trump has been meeting with crypto executives, he met with brian armstrong. they have all pushed him to create this panel because crypto needs something special. it's not an expansion of government. the cftc, traditional regulators are busy with regulation and enforcement. this takes the notion of pushing legislation for congress to fulfill donald trump's mandate to be the best crypto president to push this
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industry, to bring the innovation back from on shore as it was during the biden administration's regular tory crackdown, you need a body that can deal with congress, the administrative state, the sec, donald trump and that is why a lot of people believe trump is leaning toward creating this thing. we hear that it has been pushed, they like it, they like jean carlo, there could be other candidates, never know with donald trump. the treasury secretary, don't be surprised if a dark horse the marriages. as of five minutes ago the main candidates were not called. we are going into left field on this one too. neil: you could be in the running. charles: for some reason i don't think so.
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neil: it was a compliment. a thank you. you are the best and you stay where you are, i want to go to how lambert, he is been coming on the show for a while. always respect is financial prowess and the way he carries himself. for all i know you could be under consideration for treasury. what is going on? wouldn't be a bad choice but what's going on here? obviously something happened, the original cast of characters being considered, howard lutnick i think gets connors but the others remain, the mystery continues. what do you make of it? >> it was reported there was a battle between musk and another guy on who would be treasury secretary and howard lutnick
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was in the paper but he's going to be commerce. i think it will be scott besson. we will see what happens. that's my prediction. i think all of this, you brought up bitcoin. nvidia was the story of 2,024. probably 23 as well. bitcoin is 2025 and here is why. if you look at donald trump's election he wrote a new playbook how to get elected and it is going to be studied not only in this country but part of the playbook was hugging the crypto world. they become a powerful force. $250 million that we know of in this election cycle, democrats and republicans, those who support crypto. this is not an accident. what is happening since then, a candidate calling for bitcoin to be part of their reserve. you will see more candidates talking about it which means more individuals going i should own some of this because it is
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going to become more mainstream. i think bitcoin could have a large move in 25. as it becomes more mainstream, the house and pennsylvania has to have crypto on bitcoin be part of their reserve for the pension plan. is this mainstream? neil: it is up 30% since the trump election but i like how you say the treasury secretary surged in bitcoin. i understand not that it is a qualifying factor but among the factors is healthy appreciation for bitcoin and the new rogue currency technology and tariffs and looking good for individuals struggling to embrace that. what do you think? >> he won the election. he will put people in who support his views.
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let me mention real quickly if i have time on tariffs. tariffs ra tax on the individual, the consumer. in a free-market that in a free market that is the case. we put a tariff on germany will be passed through. you want a managed economy like the ccp, the communist party of china, they can subsidize. i have friends with factories in china were trump put the tariff on, they were approached by the government, don't raise your prices, we will lower your costs so that the end product is the same price as the consumer, just don't move your factory. that is china paying the tariffs. it is not fair to say all the individuals in this country will pay those tariffs. there's a lot of dynamics to it. some of it is passed through but at the end of the day trump's goal is to create fair trade and get more manufacturing in the united states so again, when you have people that support his views those are people he puts in the cabinet so you will see
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treasury secretary that supports tariffs. neil: there is only so much china will employ. we will see. always good seeing you. all right. russia has fired a medium-range ballistic missile, this follows on the same missile yesterday. by the way, this is not only the first time this is happened in ukraine but the first time a major superpower has done this in an act of war ever. ever. the implications of that after this. ♪(voya)♪ there are some things that work better together.
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>> reporter: ukrainian officials say russia fired an intercontinental ballistic missile into ukraine. this is not yet confirmed. western officials are pushing back saying it may have been a shorter range missile but it -- if confirmed it would be the first time since the war began that such a large weapon was used and raises questions about the message about nuclear warheads. russians have not commented on the strike that injured two people. the hypersonic cruise missiles they fired into ukraine. the escalation comes as ukrainian forces are targeting deeper into russia using us and british supplied long-range missiles. the biden administration approved the transfer of antipersonnel mines to ukraine. these moves are seen as crossing a redline prompting officials in kiev to brace for an increase in missile and
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drone attacks. fox news visited a civilian emergency response center to see how the ukrainian capital is, the city's mayor says air defense is still working well but ukraine is fighting for its survival. >> almost three years later, how would you describe the current state? >> difficult to explain. one long day and we are fighting for our future to be part of the democratic world and difficult time because we want everything to be stronger position. >> reporter: it was the first snowfall of the winter the ukrainian capital and it was a reminder that as russia continues to target ukraine's
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energy grid there are serious consequences headed into the month of winter. neil: trey yingst following that. great video from vladimir putin. he no doubt is addressing a missile situation, don't understand russian so don't know what he is saying but he did telegraph there will be more of this on the part of ukraine to use us military armaments they have been given as well as those from other nato countries to attack positions inside russia. let me get your take on what we are witnessing here. this is normally the kind of stuff that would send markets into a freefall, non-reaction reaction. they are not worried this will
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escalate. are you? >> i'm always worried about cooler heads not being part of the decision cycle. that is what we need is calm, cool heads that say continued escalation serves no purpose. we launch one missile from ukraine into russia, russia blames us and says you launched six in total, we will on something ukraine now and here's the message you can' t do this and expect is not us not to reply. doesn't necessarily mean we need to continue pushing the escalation button and making it worse in the immediate future as the story is still developing. hopefully we are sitting back and saying let's wait and confirm what we have, be calm and cool about it and make sure we don't make it worse by our
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reaction. nato, the west end ukraine. neil: donald trump is a transactional type of guy. i give you something if you give me something, he talked about ending this ukraine war and most of taken that to mean by giving something, vladimir putin keeping some of the lands he has already acquired, that's a no go, we are told by ukraine but that might change under new circumstances. what do you think? >> i expect he would continues to do that with ukraine, we need a strategy to end this. whether that end is a complete and total victory by ukraine or face-saving by russia and ukraine, come to the table and say we accept these terms, trading land, trading something to make sure this war ends.
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all we are seeing now is continued escalation, no plan to end it. that is just cannot be sustained. the killing needs to end at this point. all wars are ended at a table. whether it is through complete and total victory or a deal getting struck. it is fair to say it is time to give trump a chance to go to that table with them and see if he can do what he promised he would do. neil: nothing to lose. thank you for your service to the country. we are hearing from austen goolsby, maybe the pace of rate cuts is slow given promises the trump administration has made. that continues a theme the
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>> matt gaetz has taken himself out of the running to be donald trump's attorney general. cheryl casone he, what do you have? cheryl: he posted on x nine minutes ago. the dow and s&p art session highs, matt gaetz withdrawing his name from consideration for us attorney general. he said, this is a few things he writes. i had excellent meetings with senators, appreciate their feedback, the moment was strong, it is clear my confirmation was unfairly becoming a distraction to the could go work of the trump/vance transition. no time to waste on washington scuffle, i withdrawing my name from consideration to serve, to see donald trump is the most -- i will be honored donald trump nominated me to lead the department of justice and i'm certain he will, quote, save america. yesterday's news was the ethics
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committee reported not been released, forcing that to be released, republicans blocked that yesterday. as meetings with senators unfolded yesterday, on the hill with matt gaetz and vice president elect vance, we don't know what was said. many senators were tightlipped about at some point yesterday or this morning it is clear to matt gaetz that he didn't have a path forward to get confirmation as attorney general of the united states. neil: will see who donald trump picks to replace him. markets did move up on this. equities did. the yield on the 10 year note slipping on concerns of what's going on between russia and ukraine. we are back to this idea of an
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overheating economy and higher interest rates. the chicago fed president saying he might slow the pace of those rate cuts because of these inflation concerns. robert corcoran, shark tank affection otto. great to have you. first off, on the rate environment between these headlines and everything, rates have been backing up, we saw a 30 year fixed-rate mortgage up to 84% from 6.78%, before the market rate run ups. how do you view the environment for lending? >> we need more first-time buyers, 24% of the people are first-time buyers, at an all-time low. rates of been bouncing around a
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why all now. people are confused, don't have big expectations, no longer waiting for of tremendous rate dropped. the last year we've sold 3. 5% more houses despite what's going on in the interest rates but the first-time buyers aren't much a piece of that. neil: existing home sales, 3. 4%,%, the first year over year gain we've seen. what was going on? that surprised me. >> more houses on the market, 25% more choices coming out into the market but the buyers themselves have gotten accustomed to rates being what they are.
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and and we see that in the last month. neil: a lot of them look at that 7% handle on fixed rate mortgage, getting close to or over the recovery. what do you see? >> it would slow down the hall market, the economy and support services. i don't think people are thinking it will go much if you look at the experts, that could happen, and interest rates above 7% again or go lower. >> donald trump, say what you will. the tariff thing. he's going to pour a lot into
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tax cuts, some worry it is going to get prices going higher. don't know how long or how much but that will be the inevitable consequence. do you agree with that? >> inflation is on everybody's mind. we are going to find out, we will see what happens. neil: what about his cabinet picks? matt gaetz is out of the running for attorney general. the pics you've heard considering for treasury or economic positions was what do you think? >> it is like watching a checker match. we are going to get great entertainment. lauren: 1 do know whoever he chooses for treasury as someone who embraces the concept of tariffs and will be very pro getting this economy all the goosing that you've get.
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>> anyone who sees any change isn't going to happen. rob: probably right. >> and in some areas of texas were really hot. it's not quite as hot, the same conundrum, people who own a lot of homes are reluctant to give them up, and sell in a partial run up. and >> not just in the south. the south hasn't done as well, it has gone up 7% compared to a year ago. that is incredible. 7%, one year when everyone is talking about market being so bad. i think it is a vital market, a
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lot more stew in it and i am waiting for that 5% number and you're going to be moving and i'm selling you a house. neil: could happen but normally would associate that with a weaker economy so it could still happen. i cannot see it so soon but could i get your sense of who is by inga? young people in particular are getting older and older and older when it comes to buying, they can't afford to or get their careers going but the average age of buyers has creeped up into early to mid 30s. >> it locks so many people out of the market. what is disturbing is the number of first-time buyers at 24% and the number of all-cash buyers is highest in history at 27% and the average age of the individual buying the first-time home doesn't look
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like a first-time buyer, 35, many are 45 and 2 that's and that's the first chance they have to purchase a home because of the interest rates. i say my prayers at night and pray for lower interest rates. neil: that will be crucial. the hot markets particularly in florida. do you see a bubble, i read a lot of that press, i don't see the devil may care flipping of properties or anything like that that accompanied the last bubble. >> this is nothing like the last bubble. 3% are investors. that creates a bubble. these are home users, i don't see a bubble at all especially i see the houses are staying on the market long enough for people to buy them. i always watch what percentage of houses are going to overbid. year ago it was 25% of the
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houses went to overbid. you might say that's not so good but i don't see it. when houses go to overbid, you are a long distance from a bubble. neil: i miss a lot of things. thank goodness you are here to straighten me out. barbara corcoran. for those just joining us, matt gaetz is out of the running for attorney general. always dangerous at fox business. what about other controversial cabinet picks? what could happen there, sort of like a come to jesus moment when matt gaetz met with other republican the senators. are going to be a heavy lift so he took himself out of the running. what does that mean for the other controversial appointments? we are on that next.
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>> matt gaetz was just here on capitol hill last night, he met with j.d. vance and other senators, members of the judiciary committee, some like marsha blackburn signaled they would support him but we knew there were deep-seated problems with this nomination. he left the building last night and said i look forward to doing this work and taking care of fentanyl and doing issues at the department of justice. yours some reaction from capitol hill, roger wicker from mississippi says this is a, quote, positive development. remember we think the president-elect may have been burning off a lot of capital putting a lot of republican senators in tough spot to might not be willing to support this nominee because they vio him as so badly flawed. the democratic senator from oregon said this is not surprising and he is considering his manifest unsuitability. here is the interesting dimension of this. you had matt gaetz resigned
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from congress and in his letter that was read on the house floor, he said i do not intend to serve in the new congress. he was duly elected to the new congress a couple weeks ago. even though he wrote that letter and is not a member of the house of representatives right now, he could write back to the clerk and say sorry, i have changed my mind, i'm not going to go through the product formation process to be attorney general and i do intend to serve in the new congress. what is this about? the math. we talked about them losing three members or more if they go to the trump administration and the house of representatives. elise stefanik will be the un ambassador, michael walls to be the national security advisor and matt gaetz. you had these numbers dwindling in the house. we've not heard, to be clear, if matt gaetz will serve in the new congress but this comes in the shadow of this ethics
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committee report the ethics kennedy refused to put out yesterday. it seemed the democrats on the committee, the republican from mississippi who chairs the committee said there was not an agreement in the committee so i pressed mike johnson and that this morning at he says it was under his impression that it was not finished and when i asked him directly, did he put his thumb on the scale to persuade the ethics committee not to release that report, he said i didn't do that in my role as speaker of the house. the ethics committee in the house, regardless what matt gaetz's status is, they have this ethics can be report. it could come out at some point. it's possible democrats and some republicans after the thanksgiving recess were talking about a resolution to pry that loose from the ethics committee and vote on that on the house floor, that won't come until then. matt gaetz will not be the attorney general.
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neil: thank you very much, ozempic teen -- they are trying to crack down on how to sell off a chrome browser because the justice department is saying it got too big for its britches. where does this go? when there is building pressure from the justice department to say sell this thing and the sooner the better and the trump administration wants to go after google it looks like that could happen. >> reporter: this is a fairytale solution going after a nonexistent problem, the doj has been good at. chrome has been around 16 years. as long as i have had my company, it's a great browser and is google responsible for unfair practices? absolutely. is this the way to get them to conform? now. to would purchase chrome?
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you got microsoft, apple, a browser is hard to monetize. he will only have a handful of companies, and what will they do with it. do i think we should force google to be more fair how they do advertising and ask more transparency in the algorithm since their first page is all baer platforms, these are things that would move the needle for the average american. chrome is not going to do anything. my prediction is it won't go through. neil: what we are seeing, alphabet overdone today? >> google has more than chrome going for them and in many ways this is a red herring. neil: i apologize for how this was shortened but thank you. we will have more after this.
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neil: matt gaetz has taken himself out of the running to be donald trump's attorney general, donald trump saying i appreciate the recent efforts of matt gaetz seeking approval to be attorney general. he was doing well but at the same time did not want to be a distraction for the administration, a wonderful future to look forward to watching all the great things he will do. we don't know whether matt gaetz continued in congress, he is considered to be interested in the governorship of florida which will be up next year. a lot of things, another name to consider for attorney general. the numbers that will guarantee you acceptance. "the big money show" right now. brian: we
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