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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  December 13, 2024 10:00am-11:00am EST

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stuart: rich friends. we are talking about plutocrats and billionaires in the administration so the song is appropriate. rich friends as you gather on 6th ave. new york where it is very very cold. it is 10:00 eastern. straight to the money, the nasdaq hit a new all-time high, now we are at 20,032. the treasury bond, treasury securities a yield, 4. 36%. the price of oil $70 a barrel this morning and bitcoin holding onto $100,000. that's the markets. now this. to be a part of the trump
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administration, it helps to be very wealthy and successful in a capitalist. also helps to have made big contributions to the trump campaign. hard to remember anything on a scale like this. 8 appointees to the administration, all billionaires. elon musk, vivek ramaswamy, howard lutnick, warren stevens, jared isaacman, steve wycoff, kelly leffler, leaving out musk, their net worth is over $11 billion. musk himself has moved above 400 billion. these people earned is this money, they are successful in their line of business, repeat line of business, that's important because it points out the capitalist nature of this administration, you don't see any socialist or activists in this lineup, they've made their mark, they are largely self-made and are loyal to trump and his policies. many have given generously to trump's presidential campaign. musk gave over $250 million,
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warren stevens, ambassador to great britain gave 25 million. linda mcmahon nominated to be education secretary, 24 million, howard lutnick, kamala's secretary, $13 million. the left is apoplectic about this. they say we are just are plutocracy, this is the rule of the billionaires, they bought their way into the government and are manipulating it to their own ends. that's the way the socialists see things, business is bad, profit is immoral and success only comes on someone else's back. totally wrong. trump has assembled a team of winners, a capitalist team, what america wants and needs. second hour of varney just getting started. jason chaffetz with me this morning. like it or not, this is shaping up to be a plutocracy, isn't it?
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>> the democrats like to flail about this but they have their own set of billionaires and millionaires. inc. of the oprah winfreys, george soross of the world, bill gates of the world, those types of folks, they can flare all they want, the most overused term, billionaires and millionaires, these are successful people and i can tell you there are people like sean duffy and doug collins and kash patel and pam bondi and a whole host of other people that are nowhere close to the billion dollar mark i can promise you that. stuart: the chair of the house oversight committee, james comber, throwing his support behind aoc's bid as ranking member. >> i'm a big aoc fan. i don't agree with very much of her policy but she's a good person, well spoken. i did not have a good relationship with jamie raskin, the democrats have nowhere to
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go but up after having jamie raskin for the last four years. aoc will be great. if it is aoc we have a good working relationship, we have a lot of differences on policy but i think she is a good, well spoken person for the democrats to serve in that position. stuart: surprised to see that. nancy pelosi is working to tank aoc's bid. come on in, you were once the house oversight committee chair, why would comber want a socialist on his committee? i don't get it. >> the contrast couldn't be greater. i appreciate him doing that with a straight face, she's not that smart and not very good at making an argument, she flails a lot, she can throw her arms with the best of them but you have people on the committee with more seniority who are much smarter in making an argument so i am thinking bring
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aoc, show the contrast in the policies, that would be a real good thing. i had a larger coming. he and i worked together when i was chairman and he was a great man and we never had crosswords with each other but it was a good working relationship that paid off for the american people. stuart: it is friday morning so i will ask again. are you, do you miss politics? >> i like being in the fight, i like the job but love my family more. i've got to give balance in life. a fight with aoc every day would be fun. stuart: it has been a wonderful year in politics, fascinating for people like you and i. >> will slow down as donald trump as president, strap it
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on, this country is on the wrong track. he is going to move some things and has a mandate to do so. stuart: jason chaffetz, have a great weekend. a little bit of red down 20 points. we are half of 1%. tom hayes joins us to cover the markets. looks like we will get a corporate tax cut. what kind of gain will that imply for the stock market? >> corporate tax rate comes down to 50%, it would increase s&p earnings by 4% meaning estimates for 275 to 286 which is a good deal. sectors that would have the greatest benefit is consumer
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discretionary earnings, 6. 8%, healthcare 3%, industrials 4. 3%. 3%. this is important because we will see a broadening in participation. correlation of stocks at a 23 year low. stuart: vote correlation of stocks is at a multi-year low. >> the market went down, everything went down. we were rewarded for the indices. with correlation so low, there are pockets of opportunity if the indices are up 12% more, those companies like consumer discretionary, are now going to participate.
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not everything will move up and down in the same way. you can find opportunity in healthcare and so on. stuart: we want a victory lap on two stocks, you brought it at 15, where is it now and where is it going? >> it is up 40% since we brought it to the network. the story is the new ceo turned the company around, got $1.5 billion in cash. they are doing a collaboration, off of the charts. this stock will double over the next two years, 35 bagger. stuart: it is at 90, where is
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it going? >> it will push over 100 and go to 150. alex, chris, the stock had a 35 bagger. 6 billion in buybacks, improving margins, the checkout fast lane increased from 50% to 80%, over one hundred 50 the next couple years and we have paypal. stuart: have a great weekend. please come into this. broad, is down 21%. ashley: the company past the $1 trillion market, also reported earnings yesterday afternoon, ai revenue surged more than 200%.
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jpmorgan, and the $27 price target. there is a positive outlook for penn saying favorable risk reward scenario. salesforce, keybank, top pick for 2025 and upgraded the stock. now 360, stock up 3 quarters of one%. stuart: elon musk want to turn star based site into a city. how does he do that? ashley: needs the county to agree. petition was filed asking for an election to turn starbase where it launches its massive starship rockets into an
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incorporated city. and the southern tip. and the social media company, from california texas. and the lawsuit claiming phase thegloggle is harming the area, and ashley: the labor fight over automation, and the money saved is no a new the stressed automation causes for american workers. xi jinping rejected trump's inauguration invitation. what does that mean for their relationship.
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is the collapse of syria and opportunity for regime change? we ask rebecca heinrich next. no. i can do some research. ya know, that's backed by j.p. morgan's leading strategists like us. when you want to invest with more confidence... the answer is j.p. morgan wealth management to go further, you need to be ready for what's down the road. as energy demand continues to rise, we're harnessing breakthrough innovations to increase production in the u.s. gulf of mexico. our latest deepwater development, anchor, produces previously inaccessible oil and natural gas, allowing us to deliver the energy we all need today so everyone can follow their own road. that's energy in progress.
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♪ it's time to try defying gravity ♪ ♪ ♪ stuart: 40 minutes. the nasdaq is up 110 points earlier today, 20,030. secretary blinken said there was a broad agreement between turkey and america on what they would like to see in syria. trey yingst is an dumb mask us. what would that future look like?
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>> good morning, major questions what the future will look like on the ground in syria as american officials are urging everyone in damascus and other parts of the country to search for american citizen austin tice. a hundred locations are being checked, we visited two of them earlier today. >> after receiving a tip from a us intelligence source we arrived at the national security services building in damascus. local residents say this is where the assad regime held the most support prisoners, looking for information on one in particular, austin tice was kidnapped in 2012. >> we underneath the security services building. for many of the high-profile prisoners believed to be held under the bashar assad regime. for any information about him. >> reporter: what many are urging, the basement is a jail,
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signs of torture and horrific conditions. no signs of life. upstairs the hallways of this facility are charged. some of the rooms have detailed prisoner logs for a variety of syrian detention centers. they also have thousands of prisoner cards. >> so much information. when you see all of it, hard to imagine how you could go through it and these kids are bringing in photos of the detainees. you what just wonder is there a photo of austin somewhere here. austin tice. remarkable the amount of information left behind by the bashar al-assad regime. looks like officials left quickly and lit everything on fire to destroy as much information as possible but left behind in the is filing cabinets, these prisoner sheets
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have on them mugshots of the syrians being held in the bashar al-assad regime prison system. down the street to a central hospital where families search for their loved ones in the morgue. doctors at the hospital tell us there is no sign of austin. rebels have been in control of syria less then a week and time is running out to find people who are still alive but being held in prisons not yet discovered. stuart: rebecca heinrich is next. is the collapse of syria and opportunity for regime change in iran? >> i want to say about austin tice, i talked with austin's family, the bashar al-assad regime knows where austin tice was come he was taken with the
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russians, i hope the biden administration is making an effort to find austin. iran is in a week post addition because of how successful the israeli counterstrike far across the region. i would like to see a return to the pressure campaign. make the iran regime broke so that it cannot reconstitute its forces and can't spread terrorism. stuart: general jack keane suggested the all-time native should be sent to the mullahs. stop work on your nuclear program or else. that is a pretty pointed thing to say. >> donald trump since of the 90s has been beating the drum, it was north korea coming out is iran cannot be permitted to
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have nuclear weapons that can threaten the united states. when you have nuclear weapons you don't have to employ them, you can use them coercively and donald trump said that is intolerable. he is right in focusing on that element. all options on the table because you want to put pressure in the right place to make sure the iran regime understands the united states finds that intolerable. stuart: hoauguration. are they close? >> it is so interesting that the incoming president put that pressure on the situation, to solve this problem and that is where you are finding a lot of movement, the biden administration got cold in its ability to make anything happen
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and it is interesting now that hamas has been destroyed. 's real said it was going to do, there's still some militants left and we need the hostages out. almost like a collaboration between the trump administration and the biden administration even if it is not on purpose to get the deal done into healthy israelis get those hostages out. stuart: china's president xi jinping declined trump's invitation to attend the inauguration. is this a snub to trump? >> what it shouts out loud and clear his donald trump is interested in peace and diplomacy and xi jinping slammed the door. marco that down for the record that that's the direction he wants to go. it's not good for china. stuart: they are not happy about tariffs on chinese exports to the united states. sorry i am out of time. see you again real soon.
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this is hard to believe. massive pro eu protests taking over the country of georgia. what is going on here? ashley: membership in the european union. the government announced a delay in that effort, the overwhelmingly pro-european georgia population got upset, tens of thousands of protesters took to the streets in cities across the country, the protests have been triggered by a general election in october and allegations of fraud by the incumbent government. many businesses from hospitals and simply went on strike, riot police have deployed tear gas and water cannons and accused of savagely beating those
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protesters but demonstrators are showing no signs of backing down. they want to join the eu as quickly as possible, that's going on in georgia. stuart: video those materials drones now flying over another state. >> we should be doing some intelligence analysis and take them out of the skies if they are flying over airports or military bases. stuart: why don't we know who is putting these drones in the air? it seems like canada is preparing for trade war with america looking at taxes on uranium and oil exports to the united states, we are dealing with that next. ♪
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get four iphone 16 pro on us, plus four lines for $25 bucks. and save on every plan versus the other big guys. what a deal. that's a lot if you ask me. ya'll giving away too fast t-mobile, slow down. stuart: one hour into the trading session, it had been up 100.
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there is green on the screen. start with taiwan semi conductor. neil: the company's is newly completed chip plants making history as the most advanced fabrication plant and they say the plant will make more advanced chips, apple will be its biggest customer. next one is a firm, they just inked a $4 billion loan deal with a private credit phone. it is up half of 1% and upstart, the ai lending platform on their way up, they seo better stronger balance sheet takes an outlook for the lending program. it is up 8%.
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neil: donald trump met with the president of the port workers union, supporting them and their anti-automation stance. the deadline for a deal is right before the inauguration. does trump want that things settled? see clearing the decks with this? >> reporter: january 15th, donald trump won this election with the rank-and-file union members vote even though union leaders endorsed the opponent. ahead of the deadline, denouncing automation replacing jobs, and the amount of money saved is nowhere near harm because for american workers, in this case longshoremen. the president-elect met with
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union members, ford companies made record profits and should spend it on the longshoreman. industry experts worry about a 1-sided deal. >> he will cut a deal that protects the people who have jobs now but over the longer term looks to phase in the technology to make it competitive. >> the group representing them, the trump transition team too soon. adding trump called the group from union head's phone. in an official statement, they want to -- this goes beyond our ports, access to global marketplace from farmers to manufacturers and innovative stocks for new markets. it must debate to compete and keep prices low.
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stuart: edward, let's get john launceston, an economist who will look at this problem for us. why are we not going for innovation at the docks? >> we want to improve productivity, lower costs and benefits all consumers, there are some groups that will be hurt by movement toward automation and gradualism is the best compromise. you have the republican party of the working class, democratic party is a party of the elites, high school professionals, as well and those that are impoverished. stuart: who would think a republican president would say no innovation on the ports, we don't want to efficiency. we have a department of
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government efficiency. >> doesn't make much sense. >> they are considering export, in uranium and oil and a trade war. >> in that direction, let's hope that would be nothing more than threats, bargaining chips, efforts to get a more balanced framework for international trade. if we have a trade war, suddenly paying more for phosphates, for oil and uranium, energy prices and food prices would move higher. this whole thing would lead to higher prices and less economic activity, ruinous for the us economy.
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stuart: when the chips are down and you are about to impose those tariffs, somebody's going to blink and presumably it will be the weaker power who blinks. >> the assumption that the weaker power would be stronger power, they are more dependent on us than we are on them. there is no uranium being produced in the united states. you need that for nuclear power plants. we have to rely more on nuclear power if we are going to proceed with electrification of the us economy. stuart: what do you think of imposing extra tariffs with american companies producing goods overseas and bring them back to america? car companies producing in mexico, trump says you're not bringing them back without a big tariff? >> you can go ahead and do that but the american consumer has to realize this does risk
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higher prices for these goods being imported into the united states. you have these polls, 60% of those polled want to lower prices. it will be difficult to get more prices if you impose tariffs. stuart: are we rolling the dice for tariffs? >> you could be but trump has a point. there is some strength to the argument you just mentioned, that we have a upper hand in these negotiations. on the other hand if some country decides to retaliate and doesn't back down we could have a mess on our hands in terms of higher prices and less output, fewer jobs eventually. stuart: thank you, see you later. tech leaders looking to rekindle ties with trump, visiting him at mar-a-lago and donating millions to his
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inauguration campaign. is america having retirement crisis? not all people with access to 401(k)s are taking advantage, how do we change that? we will deal with it next. ♪ 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. when a tough cough finds you on the go, a syrup would be... silly! woo! hey!
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stuart: take a look at this. 75% of working americans have access to workplace retirement plans like a 401(k). among those, one quarter don't
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take advantage of it. the chief investment strategist at empire joins me now. do we need automatic enrollment in 401(k)s? >> it is a step in the right direction. to encourage that's not a behavioral choice where you are just enrolled in the plan. it is important to take a look at the workplace plan. a series of simple steps engaging with a plan contributing on a regular basis and maintaining the contribution to take advantage of compounding. we need additional education to make sure employers are taking advantage of simple steps in front of them. stuart: it is found money. you get into a 401(k) plan and how can you turn that down?
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>> people get caught up in their day today and not focused on something that feels like decades away. increasingly the conversation is the importance of saving for retirement. we can edge people who are slower to adopt the plans to get in motion. stuart: don't ever take money out of your 401(k) or ira if you can possibly avoid it. >> absolutely. it is a hugely important role. we do see people tap into their 401(k)s whether for discretionary purposes or needs based purposes and it is disruptive because the rule of thumb is driving to the deck of the compounding is one of the most powerful rules in investing and with compounding the growth of assets earning
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its own growth. watching grass grow can have a profound effect on what people experience. stuart: hard to explain to a 20-year-old that in 40 years you will be worth a million bucks but you should try that. what do you do if your employer does not offer a 401(k)? >> if we take a look at companies with 100 employees or more they are offering a workplace plan. that means a lot of small businesses are not offering a workplace plan. when you look at people who have exposure to work face plans, robust saving rates drop off for those who don't have workplace plans. a big part of the retirement problem is making sure we are expanding access. we see that with states taking
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on legislative efforts to create iras that offer the chance to have these and seeing that on behalf of companies like that. stuart: you can go out and get an ira your self and manage it yourself. you can do it. we are out of time. marty norton, come back and see us again soon. big tech leaders lining up to meet with trump before his second term begins. grady trimble with us. who is he meeting at who is donating to his inauguration? >> open ai ceo sam altman is donating one million to the inaugural committee after meetings with zuckerberg and others, saying in a statement, quote, donald trump will lead
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our country into the age of ai and i support his efforts to make sure america stays ahead, this comes after mark zuckerberg's matter and jeff baeza's's amazon donated $1 million, amazon contributed another million bucks to stream the inauguration on prime. mark zuckerberg met with trump last month. trump says he will meet with jeff bezos next week but just because the ceos are trying to the gray sheet themselves to the president-elect doesn't mean the trump administration won't go after their companies. >> combating tech censorship will be one of the top priorities for me, you mentioned facebook and other companies, they worked with advertisers, government officials to censor the free-speech rights of every day americans. >> reporter: trump has allies in congress trying to stop online censorship.
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senator eric schmidt introduce legislation preventing collusion between federal agencies and social media companies which republicans have shown happened during the biden administration. it is a new day as relates to tech and online censorship in washington dc and check ceos trying to get ahead of it. stuart: still had, the president-elect plans a dramatic start to his administration, doesn't want any loose ends to upset his game plan. some bartenders in washington dc want to make members of the incoming administration feel unwelcome. politicizing your dinner. he's on the set, welcome, good to see you here. ♪ the soul searcher. and - ahoy! it's the explorer! each helping to protect their money with chase.
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stuart: on the market this morning a turnaround or, we were up on all three indicators, now we are down 40 but we are holding onto a 24 point lead for the nasdaq which had another record high.
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the federal government released new dietary guidelines saying people should eat more plant-based foods but they wouldn't give any recommendations for those ultra-processed foods. where do you stand on highly processed foods, should we make changes on menus? >> everybody knows they are bad for you. it's junk food. we all know ultra-processed foods will lead to chronic diseases, certain cancers, type number 2 diabetes, the list goes on and what is funny is they are avoiding touching this. only in the world in which rfk is saying we need to cut back on it, trump is on that, it starts to feel very political and grudge like. almost have to follow the money. all shifts know about highly processed foods.
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when you say plant-based foods it is a way of saying there's no meat in it and the way they do that is they add these chemicals to try to make it taste good. we are not talking a plate of broccoli or vegetables. any package will say plant-based food. that's what they are referring to. stuart: do we need to put labels on menus? this dish has x number of processed foods or chemicals? >> the nanny state can get overwhelming when we mandate labels on this or that. people have their own agency to do their own research and figure out what they should or shouldn't be eating. when you have the government coming into act like they are everybody's master, people lose that. stuart: chemicals and preservatives on everything we eat? >> not real foods but they are trying to put it on everything. if you look at the last three decades, the bigger the fda gets, the bigger the usda gets,
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the sicker we get, the chemicals are not good but they are in a lot of our foods. stuart: try this will. waiters and bartenders will make sure members of the trump administration will not feel welcome when dying out, employees promise to refuse service, and small acts of resistance to take their power back. >> stupidest thing i've ever heard, the type of petulant and childlike behavior america voted against. so many groups said we are sick of this resistance and gives hospitality a bad name. food is a unifier. we bring people together to drop all this nonsense and they are throwing toys around and say i won't play with you. early when i think it would backfire to turn away business on political grounds i think you lose business. >> back to the nanny state, the government will give us money.
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stuart: great name for a chef, see you again later. the rv industry says california's 0 emission rules are driving out business. max gordon is in fountain valley, california. if i was an rv dealer i would be mad as hell. are these guys? >> reporter: they are. right now i'm surrounded by brand-new rvs and they share one thing in common. if you look under the hood you will find the gas or diesel powered engine but they want to change that with new rules regulating trucks, currently 5% to 9% of 2024 models have to be 0 emission, it depends on the rv type sold by manufacturers, to increase 7% to 11% 0
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emission and by 2035, 75% of rvs must be 0 emissions in california but here's the catch. right now there simply aren't any 0 emission rv offerings on the market. manufacturers have to purchase credits to comply with california rules. the industry association trying to work with the resources board to find some sort of exemption. >> along with manufacturer and dealer partners, we want to implement practical solutions that ensure consumers continue to purchase all types of rvs. >> reporter: they say this will hurt them, no demand for ev rvs and this will limit internal
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combustion engine offerings, they have to comply with new percentages. this doesn't just impact california. there are two and other states that follow these clean truck rules. stuart: max gordon in the middle of it. still had, tammy bruce on trump hitting the ground running and tying up loose ends. kurt volcker comments on benjamin netanyahu dealing with hostages and the cease-fire. john tapper on trump admitting lowering grocery prices will be very hard. senator warren sympathizing with united healthcare ceo killing. the 11:00 hour is next. ♪ ♪ is just one thing i need ♪ i don't care about the present ♪ underneath the christmas tree ♪ i don't need to pay my
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stocking ♪ on the fireplace ♪ santa claus (singing) i'll be home for christmas.
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>> everything is setting up to really have a super charged economy and stock market. you talk about the rally and i think it's got moving really long legs. >> wants to get government that allows capitalists

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