tv Varney Company FOX Business January 24, 2025 10:00am-11:00am EST
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david: earth, wind, and to fire. i'm david asman in for stuart varney. lips get to your money. 2 of 3 of the indexes are trading in plus category, the s&p and the nasdaq, markets seem to be on the gain rather than the losing side, 7 basis points to 4.65. are we going to look at the 2-year which is down a bit. it is down a little bit. crude oil is down $0.29 to $74. bitcoin was way up earlier and
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is still up $2,000 to one hundred 5936, almost one hundred $6,000. we just got the latest read on existing home sales. madison: it rose on a seasonally adjusted annual basis so higher for the third month in a row. prices came in at 404,000. david: third year is up 7%. consumer sentiment. lauren: down 4%, first decrease in six months. the issue is tariff fears which are inflationary, one year inflation expectations. david: that is a lagging indicator. this is a time everybody thought this was one of the first things donald trump would be doing, may be better now. alexandria ocasio cortez ranting about donald trump's second term in office. >> he is much more normalized
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this time around than he was the first time. all of these people who were scared before about being associated with him, from the most common basic level to the most elite level, they are all like, they are all in now because this is now a billionaire feeding frenzy. it is a kiss open bracket bleep] race. david: she went on to talk about how everybody is getting ripped off by donald trump, got to face the music but think of all we've discovered over the last several months about who was doing the big con, the biden competence con, the lawfair con, the kamala con that she was a sweet person that would do well and look what she did to those democratic donors.
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who is the con artist? is it trump or the folks in the democratic party? >> the democrats had more dress-up playing with comic con level dress-up when it came to trying to pretend that kamala harris was going to be a generation shifting world shaping political talent. that was the biggest one of all of the cons that you mentioned. they went all in on that including the media going along with it and the american people didn't buy it. they bought donald trump and the reason they bought him his they view him not in this age it is very important as being more authentic and people who disliked trump the first time basically after four years of whatever this biden administration was essentially an administration led by staff as opposed to the president himself they wanted someone back in charge so that is why they voted for him and as much
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as aoc can complain about the situation she doesn't have a problem with the billionaires when they are on her side. david: she got more of them than donald trump did leading up to the election. >> exactly and that is something time and again we hear this from democrats and it is critical because we see what their billionaires have done to cities across america particularly when electing prosecutors, when it came to law and order, allowing their communities to turn into chaotic hellholes in some instances and that was bad for the country and part of the backlash that carried donald trump into the white house. david: the biden empathy, we saw what happened, he cares most about himself and his family more than he does about the country when you think of what he did with china and ukraine. and the other thing is getting
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to what you said, people who are not as open about being empathetic and caring, like donald trump, helping people in need with biden and aoc and others talking about it but don't deliver. >> one of the big things, democrats talk about the empathetic side but to your point what biden cared about the most was enriching his family and protecting them when the law came after them. that he was never going to pardon members of his family, he and his supporters precipitated in the past several years turned out to be something that was a total lie and what we see in this next term from donald trump's he will remain popular and be very popular because it is such a break from the ludicrous nature of the lack of leadership. david: we are about to see him
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in north carolina and they really suffered, we will see who delivers more, the biden administration in their final days are the trump administration, we will see what happens. great to see you. thanks for coming on. back to aoc calling out democrat hypocrisy over what? lauren: she is outraged by insider trading by members of congress and so is jon stewart. watch here. >> democrats who walk the walk and talk the talk, there's an insane amount of hypocrisy. one of the most biggest examples of this is insider trading in congress. people think that every day people are stupid. do you really think that people don't see this? >> they sit on a committee and get information about a drug or contract and immediately make a call to stop broker changes thing. >> and money doesn't only corrupt republicans?
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lauren: nancy pelosi reported stock trades on inauguration day in our big tech companies, got call options for amazon and her husband, paul, bought nvidia. david: millions of dollars, i agree with jon stewart. schumer had the right thing too. back to the markets. ryan pain is with me here. a slow market today, we are in the midst of this mood of optimism, in davos as well. >> world peace would make not only the us happy but globally. and we see a end to the war in
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ukraine quicker rather than later and you may want to own global stocks, destabilization around the world everywhere, in your portfolio. david: the uk is run by people who do the wrong thing in my mind. >> the biggest global companies. it is as provocative as it sounds. they are priced worst-case that mariupol's. it is 3% next year. the same as the us. a lot of companies. david: like investing in the deepest part of the pandemic. we wonder if the tax extensions
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in time by 2026 and all taxes will go up dramatically. dark clouds on the horizon. >> it is not priced in because we don't know what will happen with individual taxes but one thing we can bet on is deregulation. if you look at the profit cycle, 10% profit growth this quarter for q4. on top of the economic growth already tracking at 3% which is very good. david: would you take them all to gather. >> right now, 7 stocks magnificent seven rai related but 30% of the index, overall growth in the economy, if you
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get exposure to the entire economy are get outside of the s&p 500 because you're getting skewed to small caps, industrials, financials, a rally of different sectors. david: wonderful stuff. got to leave it at that. you are looking at some movers. lauren: mark zuckerberg put his money where his mouth is when it comes to artificial intelligence, spending from 60 to $65 billion of this -$65 billion this year on artificial intelligence building out data centers across the country including one opening next week. david: chipmaker down on outlook. lauren: that is where they do business where you see the inventory buildup, stock is down sharply 5%. david: brinker international. lauren: the stock tripled last year.
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3% decline is nothing. keybank came out and cut their rating from a buyer to a neutral. david: thank you for coming in. appreciate it. good to see you as well. trump is heading to north carolina where communities are trying to recover from natural disasters. we brings that, the fight over birthright citizenship continues. house republicans trying to back up trump's exec in order with legislation. trump met with three lawmakers who are for districts the kamala harris won. congressman mike lawler is one of them. he joins us next. y updating our kitchen. for all those people who never seem to get around to it... —...a breakfast nook. —chase has financial guidance.
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david: checking of the markets, we are in the red. all three indices down, the s&p and the nasdaq negative but very small losses today. not a lot of trading going on. pete hegseth will know by the end of the day, the strike of midnight if the senate confirms him as defense secretary. aishah hasnie is on capitol hill. it is all about the math. i know a couple republicans said they are not for it but we may have a democrat who might vote for him. >> reporter: fetterman voted against the first initial procedural vote yesterday. we might see that we only have two republicans that vote against pete hegseth which means he would have enough
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votes to finally get confirmed as trump's new secretary of defense. right now the way things are going if democrats or republicans don't come to a time agreement we could see this vote at 9:00 p.m. later tonight. these are the two senators that probably will vote no because of the vote they took yesterday. lisa murkowski and susan collins, citing lack of experience, past allegations. with two people out on the republican side, expect all democrats to vote no, pete hegseth is about to get 50 one republican votes he needs without vice president j.d. vance. yesterday the senate confirmed john ratcliffe as donald trump's cia director, a 74-25 vote, big bipartisan showing for him. he was sworn in shortly after. you might wonder why things are
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moving so slow and we only have marco rubio sworn in so far. democrats are forcing republicans to sit through 30 hours of debate for each nominee. republicans say there is no debate going on on the senate for, just democrats wasting a lot of time. if we keep going at this rate, kristi noem wouldn't be confirmed until sunday. trump has threatened recess appointments but hasn't pulled the trigger yet. >> it is up to john, john thune, no stuff inside out. would use recess appointments if you wants to do that absolutely. they always delay. more hearings put on schedule for trump's controversial nominees on wednesday.
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then face-off with senators but speak to senators and testify on thursday. david: i thought fetterman might go but he voted no yesterday. appreciate it. congressman mike lawler, republican from new york. you and two of your colleagues, republicans from district that went for kamala harris met with trump wednesday. some kind of a deal on the salt deductions, local tax deductions folks in very high tax states like new york need desperately? >> the president set on the campaign trail and reaffirmed at mar-a-lago, in the oval, that he supports lifting the on salt and that is important as we work through this negotiation.
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a final agreement, we are working through the numbers of the ways and means committee as we work through the reconciliation bill. david: you say lifting it, doesn't mean they won't have a top. the president has mentioned doubling it from $10,000 to 20,000, would that be sufficient for you? >> the president did not suggest that. some folks potentially in the admin had floated that. that obviously would not -- david: when you say obviously what are you talking about? 20,000 but protect people up to $250,000 a year. what kind of limit are you talking about? >> i introduced legislation that could deduct $100,000,
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marriage filing jointly. in states like new york and districts like mine, westchester, the highest property tax counties in america, we blow through the 10 to $20,000 cap on property taxes-$20,000 cap on property taxes before you get to state income tax. it would not be sufficient for districts like mine and it is a reality we have to deal with. we are donor state, we send more money to the federal government than money we received back. other states are you they don't want to subsidize bad state policies. they get more money from the federal government than tax revenue they generate to the federal government. we can sit and go through chapter and verse on that but to me the issue is simple.
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if we don't pass a tax bill salt comes back unlimited. however it would be associated with the largest tax increase in american history. david: forgive me for interrupting but the point is, of our reality is if a deal is not made before the end of this year taxes will go up on 65% of american taxpayers. one of the biggest tax hikes in history. that means republicans would lose the house if not the house and the senate which means donald trump would have a lame-duck presidency? >> that is why we are in the process of negotiating a tax deal. david: don't you have to come down from one hundred thousand figure, a lot of people in states where there are no taxes like texas, why should we pay for the new yorkers. >> they blow past the $10,000.
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they negotiate in good faith. we can do nothing. that can result in the highest tax increase in american history, not willing to do that. donald trump understands the on salt had a negative impact on states like new york and he himself has he wants to lift it. david: i don't want to see 65% for higher taxes. >> attacks bill. david: good to see you. in the big apple, we send madison alworth to the longest-running boat show.
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david: checking the markets. it has come down for the s&p and the nasdaq, the nasdaq is down 21. dow jones is maintaining a downward trend over 100, down 107 points. lauren: up 20%. a cloud communications software company opening businesses a way to use artificial intelligence to improve how they talk to their customers. it issued a positive profit forecast for three years out. they see margins at 22%. railroad lower profits, sharp decline in coal revenue, fuel surcharges and disruptions from the hurricanes. david: united airlines. lauren: shares rising 70%, one hundred $65 a share. they watched to the earnings
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report, the best idea stock for the year and they cite several reasons. one is united has to deal with starling, elon musk's company, to give its entire fleet fast wi-fi. david: a health and fitness brand cofounded by jaco willing. tell us about your business? is it made in america? >> we got manufacturers in new york, new jersey, california, texas, and florida, we are proud to make it here. david: it must be music to your ears to hear donald trump say you get a big discount are you eligible for that? >> i have another company where
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we make clothing in maine and north carolina and see how that plays out not only for us, the people that work here. there's a lot of competition in terms of health foods and health drugs you take etc. . >> i always look at it, the market is saturated. we have a monopoly on the market. we use clean ingredients, no artificial sweeteners, the best ingredients into the product, when it comes to nutrition and supplements. i feel we are ahead of the curve and on the clothing side we are literally manufacturing not only making of the stuff here in america but materials we use are 100% sourced in america. we are ahead on both fronts.
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david: listen to what donald trump said about pete hegseth's confirmation vote for defense secretary. >> are you worried about his confirmation? >> no surprises. the way it is, too bad. >> without recess appointments? >> listen to john thune. i would be you willing to use recess appointments. it is up to john. david: it does look like even though two republicans say they will vote no and no democrats will vote yes, he would just squeak by. not only pete but tulsi gabbard, they were in the nomination process, how do you deal with of the defense of this nation, people with a lot of experience on the ground.
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>> i support them both and look forward when they took over the department of defense and the intel community need change. we lost a couple wars, had a bad situation, look at the afghan withdrawal. we can't look and say we want the same people in those jobs. we need fresh blood and fresh ideas. they will bring that to those departments. david: we were talking about the recruitment going away down, we are there may be exceptions but not many but somebody who has spent time on the ground dealing with the grunts that do the tough pool in the military. somebody like that is who we need to pool more people into the military, no? >> absolutely. people who want to go in the military want to follow people who are war fighters and they are war fighters and i think recruitment is going to go up as soon as they get put in those positions.
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david: we need more recruits. great to see you. thank you for your service to this country. appreciate it. the world's longest running boat show is back in new york city. madison alworth is there. how were boat sales last year and what does that say about our economy? >> reporter: we are getting official number some 2024 but we can see sales are improving but volume is down. people paying more for the same fewer amount of items but industry experts are hopeful things will improve and shows like this do that. let's look at those sales numbers coming in 2019, and improvement of 28% so that captures new boat sales, accessories, everything but look at volume and you see certain areas we need, looking at powerboats, you see that
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last year, 40,000 units in 2019 pre-pandemic but consumer sentiment is improving. we've seen interest rates come down. stabilization and the economy. we talk to attendees here and they are ready to buy. >> i would like to have a boat right now so i am here to buy a boat but i was terrified, i feel good about the economy. the new administration, the money will be flowing and we will be good to go but the purchase of high items. >> i've heard a lot about the administration, signs of improvement for boatbuilders but another one of trump policies could cause problems, last time trump put tariffs in place american boatbuilders were hit with retaliatory tariffs from canada, our largest exporter when it comes to boats, the uk and the eu. industry leaders are confident trump can steer away from that this time.
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>> we are always in communication with the administration. we are confident because of his love of domestic manufacturing, his desire to strengthen american manufacturing and ensure that american industries that are globally dominant will remain dominant and get stronger. >> when it comes to american-made, 90% of the boats are made in the us are made right here. i will leave you with is this, this beautiful boat sells for just under one million dollars. i would love it even more if a friend had it. david: people always say the best and worst day of my life is when i bought and sold a boat that i have. still ahead, carolyn levitt shared a photo writing
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deportation flights have begun, border guy joining us on the progress of that. back in october we spoke to the owner of asheville tea company after hurricane helenthe washed away her entire building. she joins us next with what she wants to hear from donald trump during his visit to north carolina. ♪
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now, i'm a superstar. my a1c is 5.7. my a1c has never been lower. no other cgm system is more affordable for medicare patients than dexcom g7. don't wait! call now, and talk to a real person. david: checking of the markets, dow is down 111, s&p and nasdaq down fractionally. donald trump is on his way to california and north carolina, places devastated by natural disasters. jackie heinrich is in asheville, north carolina,
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center of the damage, jackie. >> reporter: the community is picking up the pieces. piles of rubble all over the place. more than than 1,000,000 yd. , but officials haven't gotten to the waterways yet. i was told by one person involved in the cleanup, two yards of vegetation sitting in one area in a nearby river which is a site for tourism like tubeing and fishing, victims also got sudden notices that there hotel vouchers were expiring, prompting people on the ground to make frenzied calls to the agency to get that fixed.
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>> stopping in north carolina because those people were treated badly by democrats and i'm stopping there and we will get that straightened out because still suffering from months ago. >> reporter: the president wants to overhaul fema. according to his former fema administered to the system is bogged down with bureaucracy. 90 different recovery programs are creating delays when the survivors and communities need swift clear support. 's mollica mental policy changes are no longer enough. we need reforms accelerate recovery, roadblocks and equipped communities to appear effectively for what lies ahead. conditioning 8 on preparedness, shifting more of the burden to states are two proposals in congress after the california fires, donald trump threatened to withhold help for that state of governor gavin newsom doesn't amend the water management policy which prioritizes wildlife conservation. newsom that he will be green trump on the tarmac when he heads thereafter north carolina.
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>> a lot of relationships of trust. i communicate with a lot of folks around him, foe to have his ear and influence so this is a sideshow a lot of the stuff but i know it is a show that has to be the focus of a little bit too much tomorrow when all i care about is what we can do together. >> reporter: the debate over conditioning aid could be a test for the president's dhs secretary, christine gnome. she was asked by democrats if she would politicize disaster aid to states if she got such a request from donald trump. a lot more debate on all of this is still ahead. david: what kills a lot of people, stuck in my ears, the housing vouchers are expiring at the same time we think of all those housing vouchers for illegal migrants around the country. there doesn't seem to be any
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rationale. appreciate it. jesse dean joins me now. so much talk about helping folks in north carolina and so much need to. what do you want to hear from donald trump today? >> thanks for having me. we are a small business in asheville, we make tea and focus on ingredients from local farmers. it is important to come here and see on the ground what happening in asheville and what needs to be done, my hope is the federal funds. that was a month ago. beside a japanese restaurant. we hope the funding will become
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accessible for things like small business grants and help with housing. david: the american relief act was 20 one billion dollars for farmers, $10 billion for direct economic assistance, a lot of money for relatively small part of the united states. have you seen anything close to that in terms of relief funds? >> we see relief funding from the state and otherwise there have been a lot of nonprofits raising money for grant funding. i will say folks still interested in helping can donate to a lot of those grant funds to our website. there's a list of those. in western north carolina, a
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drop in the bucket and has been lost. but has been out located is extremely important as a continued focus. david: when we last spoke with you, your whole inventory, you got to start from scratch. >> we are rebuilding, moved into temporary space and working with farmers in the us, to find ingredients and started making tea again. david: by the way, what we i see on the left of the screen, it is amazing that you went through that and are beginning to make the tea a bit. that is an extraordinary story. >> we have a lot of support in the community too. i'm grateful for that. david: it was a lifetime
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experience, let's hope it is the only time in your lifetime you have to deal with anything like that again. thank you so much. appreciate it. >> thank you so much. david: trump's crypto czar predicting that the us will catch up in the industry. >> the us leads in every category. crypto is one of the few exceptions and i think that's going to be rectified because of donald trump's exec in order. david: we are following that one for you. liberal parents struggling with their trump voting sons and daughters. republican club president gavin wax has a word of advice for them. that is next. ♪
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the way i approach work post fatherhood, has really trying to understand the generation that we're building devices for. here in the comcast family, we're building an integrated in-home wifi solution for millio in the a, there are dozens of connected devices. connectivity is a big part of my boys' lives. it brings people together in meaningful ways. david: the new york times reported liberal parents are struggling with their conservative trump voting sons and daughters after the election. the president of new york
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younger republican club which is a stick in the mud, younger people trying to bring new life into the republican party. the same happening in california. the kids who voted, i say kids, 18 to 29-year-olds who voted for trump this time, do have parents who voted for biden. their parents were stuck in the older generation that believed in legacy media and believe what they are hearing about biden being okay and all the other myths that were reported before the election where young people were dealing with the social media side of things that reportedly told the truth better than legacy media did. >> we see a huge generational divide in terms of media consumption and economic opportunities, older generations getting it from legacy media, the traditional mainstream media getting a
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distorted view of what is happening domestically and internationally as pertains to the biden administration if you look at outcomes for young americans, just graduating college entering the workforce, not doing as well, struggling to get a home, struggling to start a business, to move up the corporate chain, get well-paying jobs and the democrat party wholesale abandoned particularly the biggest shift donald trump, young men who have been left behind from an economy that outsourced to their jobs, fight forever wars, major issues impacting young americans particularly young men. david: the overall 18 to 29-year-olds 47% voted for donald trump. we have seen this in the past too, the second term of ronald reagan, 60% of the youth vote, wondering if the parties themselves which become a
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little too solidified in their ways might be, should be giving more rope to younger folks to make hay out of what we've seen. >> first millennial vice president in j.d. vance, embracing younger rising stars, moving up the ranks of the political party, it is an aging, ossoff fight out of touch elite just not moving the needle forward. we are seeing a monumental shift. the numbers would have been unthinkable not many years ago even during the obama administration where he activated the young vote. people have become disillusioned and you see past millennials, moving further to the right than millennials. david: i am wondering whether young republicans all over his own nation are unifying, young americans for freedom.
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>> the oldest and leading the charge in new york, to support donald trump and will continue to do so. david: terrific stuff. steve hilton on gavin newsom's plans to crash trump's tour of the los angeles wildfire damage. border guy on 530 illegal migrants caught in a single day by ice. josh altman says 70% of palisades residents will not return after the devastating fires. the 11:00 hour of "varney and company" is next. advil liqui-gels are faster and stronger than tylenol rapid release gels. ♪ also from advil, advil targeted relief,
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the only topical with 4 powerful pain fighting ingredients that start working on contact and lasts up to 8 hours. morikawa on 18. he is really boxed in here. not a good spot. off the comcast business van. into the vending area. oh, not the fries! where's the ball? anybody see it? oh wait, there it is! back into play and... -oh no, it's in the water. wait a minute. are you kidding me? you got to be kidding me. rolling towards the cup, and it's in the hole! what an impossible shot brought to you by comcast business.
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from companions to helpers to caregivers. find all the senior care you need at care.com shopify's point of sale system helps you sell at every stage of your business. with fast and secure payment. card readers you can rely on. and one place to manage it all. whatever the stage, businesses that grow grow with shopify. >> i think there's optimism across the range of the issues. it's crypto, it's the softening discussion about tariffs across china and across parts of europe. >> we do know thanksgiving this asset is probably the single most important asset in finance today. there's an asset that's that important to the investors, we need to unshackle it. >> she lost the race and called a loser and i would say a sore loser. if i'm kamala, is that how i
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