Skip to main content

tv   Boom Bust  RT  February 17, 2021 1:30pm-2:01pm EST

1:30 pm
going to kill you. we know and if we don't. let me put it down it is a leader let me just when i actually took her as her son i'll just put a point to curse because cursed is going to be viewers watching this right now as some have their own farms have grown up loving their animals being very ethical towards the and then did you get entire nations like arlen to argentina depending on farming industry for revenue the the in my call you inhumane for some of your comments saying we'll just leave out by the wayside and we'll just concentrate on plants that we've got to evolve as a society we've got to look at what we're doing and whether it's ethical these animals are exploited they're kept in confinement against their will you should see them at the slaughterhouse they are drugs they 5 lives for their survival these are sentience beings just like us with their own families and i'm friendships it's completely immoral and unethical to kill the food i think now we are
1:31 pm
experiencing of evolution in society where we've got millions of people that are understanding this they want to make compassionate choices to help animals and we know that each new pekin diet is good for your health it's going to stop the suffering of $200.00 on the most a year and it's going to have the planet so if you care about the climate you must change peter the last 10 seconds to you ok i respect the ethical position that killing animals is wrong but we have distinction from the climate position which is that less and better meat will do what we need to do in terms of saving the planet thank you both very much for a spirited debate enjoyed out this question very much we've been speaking to peter ritchie from nourish scotland and dr curtis bennett senior corporately also officer peter u.k. thank you thank you well if you're not for no more grant programs right ahead.
1:32 pm
this is a boom bust for the one business show you can't afford to miss friendship or in washington as we have coming up by the administration has started talks with german officials about the north stream to high point of a report out of berlin about the future of the controversial project plus u.s. equities touched fresh record highs as big point eclipsed the $50000.00 mark the panel of experts on hand for insight into this latest boom and later concern the social media site parlor is back after finding new postings to go over the alternative to facebook and twitter as a return on line impact show today let's dive right in. and oil prices hit their
1:33 pm
highest level in more than a year as the southern portion of the united states has been battered by cold weather halting operations at oil wells and refineries in texas on monday now the cold weather also caused restrictions to natural gas and oil pipelines the state produces roughly 4500000 barrels of oil a day and is home to the most refineries in the u.s. the cold weather has helped to support the oil rally we've watched in recent months due to opec plus cuts for more on this and what's moving markets to settle let's bring in michelle schneider partner and director of trading research and education at market gauge dot com and octavia moran's the c.e.o. of optimists l.l.c. thank you both for being here i'm active you know i want to start with oil prices obviously this type of weather event isn't going to cause lasting changes in the commodity but we have watched prices steadily increase due to those cuts we previously talked about. and
1:34 pm
a perceived increase in demand as we see the vaccine rollout taking place what's your analysis of the sector at this point octavio. well i think that the price of oil through through the severe weather you see in the u.s. at the moment has actually been remarkably stable so we haven't seen much of an impact from that but i think the game in is really opec having cut this production quite severely and a whole bunch of north opec countries also having cut their production because the your oil prices came down so low so a lot of oil facilities were simply not profitable in particular in the u.s. and in china and places like that and cut their production response so it's been production cuts but we see now of course the power 6 or 7 months production inching back up. in terms of price for back to sort of pre-code levels so it's looking kind of encouraging return to normality but we're still under the covers really seeing a collapse in demand for oil most of the oil you use in the u.s. in other developed markets is for travel rather nice or other application so that
1:35 pm
is where the the bulk of things happen and it's interesting right now in europe for example the shutdown seats are getting more severe and worse even than they were just a few weeks ago so it's not clear that we're really returning to a normality anywhere in the world of the states but the balance of the risks look like we might have for the shutdowns and for the crimp some travel so opec's going to keep a very close eye on that and maintain the price ability but i think the price of me to see has been as a result of them sort of fine tuning their production a little bit and i'm going to say we're going to keep an eye on that as always because opec class discussions kind of it they get a little bit heated but they always seem to kind of agree on got that the end of the day and keep this movement going michelle i want to move over to equities now after hitting record highs early in the session tuesday on renewed stimulus hopes the 3 major indices here in the u.s. the dow s. and p. and nasdaq they fell into negative territory the dow however was able to call back some gains by the end of the day what are you seeing moving markets tuesday. we're breaking that's going around the markets right now as far as terms are going
1:36 pm
a little bit down. in those 3 days the market has been going straight up and many times when it's some kind of a correction has been buying in there so instead of looking exact thing in the sea i think you have to look at exactly what you're saying is what is going up and i think the biggest winner today in terms of the macro and the health of the market and its penchant for the economy is the transportation sector which actually went to new all time highs today and close in the green that in the junk bonds which also is a little bit red but is near. i should say actual highs 52 week highs and so i think there's still a lot of optimism based on the stimulus package but just stepping back in terms of the overall market we're really going inside the range of last week except in semiconductors that went to new highs that went to new highs so it's a mixed bag but still the overall health looks pretty good at this point i mean and as you said if you look at where we've gone from the beginning of the pandemic with things really fell we've basically been going straight up for about the last 9
1:37 pm
months octavio we're also seeing 10 year treasury bond yields top 1.25 percent for the 1st time since march of last year at the onset of the pandemic 30 year treasury bond yields are also rose to 2.08 percent what does this rise in bond yields tell us about the state of the economic recovery. well i think what we're seeing is an increasing concern about inflation and so it seems of those bones the eyes of the rest of the asylum sales for more of a premium for holding on and taking on that increase inflation risk so the fed has just pumped a huge huge amount of liquidity into the markets and that has a risk of coming back and boomerang in the form of inflation and i think you saw to see people increasing concern about that so this could be pressure on longer term rates i mean the fact is been very effective about keeping short term rates very very low and that's what most of the buying it too as he said has been has been short dated a bunch of that into the yield curve and it looks like the long term rates might be
1:38 pm
getting a bit away from them so we'll have to remain and see but i think what we're seeing there is people concerned about inflation and saying if i'm going to take on these long term rates i better be compensated for it and now we get to the fun because another record on tuesday finally eclipsing the $50000.00 mark going as high as $50602.00 around 7 30 am eastern time now the world's most popular crypto currency has basically been on a tear in 2021 gaining roughly 70 percent since the start of the year on the back of the rally that began to close out 2020 institutional money has really pushed the price up recently and news that tesla had bought $1500000000.00 and because it has further supported that rally meanwhile we're also seeing all coins like ripple in the theory and they're making says substantial gains as well now michelle what do you make of this latest run as someone who probably has more of a traditional equities investor how important is this injection of institutional
1:39 pm
money into because it. well before i answer that i just want to jump on octavius point about inflation because big part of the move has been as a sort of new hedge against inflation so i just want to mention that that is a real concern in terms of going back to the institutional investments in because and i think it's incredibly significant we not only write is tesla doing cash for big cohen but you had b.m.y. now in last week mention that they were also going to be looking at a digital asset. you have jack dorsey talking about square crypto which basically is going to get grants to bitcoin developers and if this trend continues even michael strategy came out today and said they were going to borrow 600000000 dollars. so as this continues to be a trend i think that bodes well overall for big coin and we can see as you mention it is now trickling into some of the other alternative currencies the theory of being 2nd being 3rd and even though is corn really reflects the hysteria that we're
1:40 pm
seeing here as far as the volatility of coto going forward so i think it's going to be a while before we saw it to see that change obviously you have to look at. look at any type of equity and look at it from a technical standpoint now that we broke some 50 came back down i'm looking for 47 to haul otherwise we could see some shock selling otherwise we get back to 50 we'll have up to 60 s. what i want to hit hit on before we go we just mentioned it pops 70 percent just this year alone we've talked about it on the show that could be headed to $100000.00 you know while ago that might have seemed crazy but today not so much do you see it continuing to go up or are we do for a big point correction at this point. let's not i mean it's almost a fool's errand to try and predict what the corner is going to go 100000 you know why not 100000 is my favorite number but i will say i think it's interesting that the mosque has converted tesla into
1:41 pm
a crypto hedge fund that happens to produce have a sort of salient profitable line of car manufacturing on the side and that's where he's going to make all his money in the in the coming year looks like with quite investing so maybe he'll ill spin off the car side of things and just focus on crypto investing and focus on that since he seems to really good at the. optimum michelle snyder of market gauge dot com thank you both for your time today. thank you thank you. and the biden administration's move to open talks with germany over the future of the north stream to pipeline to 1200 kilometer pipeline is set to carry russian natural gas to germany but meet the baltic sea construction of the $11000000000.00 pipeline resumed earlier this month after being shut down more than a year ago due to the u.s. congress's authorization of sanctions on companies involved in the project so what is the future of the pipeline and where does the new u.s. administration stand on the issue largely correspondent peter oliver has been
1:42 pm
following the story and filed this report from berlin. president but same old problems when it comes to north stream to barack obama's policy was to try and make it take as long as possible donald trump sanctioned it into suspension on the joe biden though we have seen construction of the pipeline resume with less than 50 miles away from completion and pipe being currently laid in danish waters at the moment joe biden doesn't like north stream to he never has liked it he's being quite outspoken about that in the past he would see its completion as a win for russia also that it would tie europe far too closely to russia when it came to energy needs something he would find incredibly difficult to sell at home if not almost impossible in fact we've seen some u.s. senators clutching at that pearls and fretting that the north stream to gas
1:43 pm
pipeline could ultimately put the whole nato alliance at risk might be going a little bit too far booked this brand new pipeline does have the potential for causing headaches for the u.s. administration particularly when it comes to ukraine because it could cook ukraine out of europe's energy transit supply route at the moment the vast majority of russian gas coming into the a you makes its way. across ukraine and ukraine takes a transit fee for that this pipeline could could kiev out of the deal so what we're seeing at the moment is germany attempting to try and find a rock wash more with washington over a century allowing the project to be completed there are a number of things that have been floated recently among them a mechanism that would allow. could off the gas being sent from russia should ukraine because out of that supply chain also
1:44 pm
a new deal for ukraine for transit fees for gas moving across its territory. for germany to help ukraine to. give a huge influx of cash essentially to ukraine to allow them to diversify their gas transit infrastructure for the transportation of hydrogen across their borders now there are some here in germany that have gone further and would say that they should complete the north stream 2 gas project but have a moratorium on allowing it to open until russia shows what they've called a a show of good faith say the release of kremlin critic alexei no violently from prison that is only likely to go ahead because why would you finish a multi-billion dollar project and then leave it sitting idle there's also a lot of legal questions over whether it would be legal it all for berlin to step in and shut off gas for
1:45 pm
a project that angle or merkel herself has been particularly at pains to say is a business venture and infrastructure venture not a political one germany intends to go carbon neutral by 2050 gas is seen as the bridge to allow them to do that but the brass tacks of all of this is germany needs the gas russia has the gas nordstrom's. 2 allows the gas to get directly from one to the other it leaves very simply 2 options for the u.s. administration either they allow this project to go ahead or we could well see sanctions again placed on germany and other nato allies we're going to hear from joe biden speaking at a virtual munich security conference we're all not gathering in munich this year because of covert 19 but that will be on friday he'll be giving that virtual address lots of eyes looking to see what he has to say about nord stream to that
1:46 pm
for boom bust i'm peter all over in berlin. there while there are encouraging signs in the fight against the copen 18 pandemic with cases down 40 percent compared to 2 weeks ago spread of more transmissible and potentially deadly or variants of the virus could once again slow the economic recovery r t correspondent saya tavenner joins us now with more side tell us about these variants and what we need to know you know brenda vegas shock to the global economy right now is mutating and live oly you know just when we're seeing daily cases drop drastically in the u.s. like you said cases are down 40 percent that's down 22 percent plus the rollout of vaccine which had raised hopes for a quicker economic recovery instead we're now seeing more transmissible and
1:47 pm
potentially deadly a variant of the cold in 100 striding very quickly globally now i hear as a major culprit 19 there eons that have emerged on february 7th the b 117 variant doubled every 10 days in the u.s. that's when we thought that this is a very and was just more contagious 30 to 50 percent in fact more contagious now this group of corner virus came to light in britain now also on february 7th south africa they stop using astra zeneca vaccine against a b 1351 variant because there antibodies won't grab the virus tightly now this variant was 1st identified in south africa in december and on february 11th to vary and also was confirmed in the u.s. now the f.d.a. is preparing a plan for updating back scenes if this variance surges in the u.s.
1:48 pm
because so far. only a handful of confirmed cases we're seeing here and then on february 13th studies confirm that the b 117 is also likely more deadlier than other variants and remember just a week ago we thought that the very end was just more contagious and now we're seeing that it's also more deadly then on february 9th of 15 scuse me as americans anxiously watched a variance in the u.k. and south africa spread right here in the u.s. scientists found a number of new variants are that originated from right here the most dangerous one being the q 677 spike imitation which has been found in the u.s. right now it's difficult to answer even basic questions about the very end because the u.s. the research is less than one percent of corn a virus test samples now lastly on a february 16th and another
1:49 pm
a very contagious and deadly there ian was also found in a several continent in fact this latest variant has been detected in 11 countries listed right here plus the fact that this is very and has been in so many countries indicates that it's been around for some time now now the fear is that this a mutation could also make the vaccine less effective and brand all these new variants a post to major threats 1st to counteract the higher risk of infection t.v. could once again be tightened pushing you know economies back into recession in britain for example where one of the fast spreading variant is now widespread they really entered a full lockdown on january 5th now the 2nd thread of a possible do variant is that they're resistant to immunity by the existing that
1:50 pm
scene's and passive infections well. they could trigger a new cycle of restrictions and who acquired a new round of vaccinations so now again we're talking a bad being said back up lamont so either way either way you look at it this is just not good news especially for the economy brant barky correspondent side tapper thank you so much for keeping us up to date. and time now for a quick break but here because when we return conservative social media site parlor is back after finding a new host we'll check in on the emerging competitor as we go to break here the numbers of the close.
1:51 pm
in the 1920 s. and thirty's several 100 african-americans moved to the soviet union and many of their descendants still live in russia. looking at the mostly cloudy and on the left but also just to be truthful with the cyclone things on their way. back home like american suffered from racism and a complete lack of respect. the real. one by elsa still on her by doing. so they decided to leave everything behind and start a new life in a country about which they knew almost nothing at all some of the african americans who were thrilled to hear in the ninety's purity sound great the crowd. to the moon if you want to go along. and now almost a 100 years later history is repeating itself my great grandfather george time went
1:52 pm
. russia. how did the worst time to go anywhere by not mean. when i come here. and welcome back conservatives social media app parlor has finally made it back online after being removed from amazon web services servers last month now the relaunch of parlor comes with a new server provider and now a new c.e.o. joining us now to break it all down for an investigative journalist ben swan a social media expert if i've ever seen one absolute. well parlor says it is
1:53 pm
back is it actually i what's different and what's the same well let me ask you this have you tried to go on parlor today so i did because it's part of my social media savvy i have a parlor account and it is unbelievable how how messed up the site is still you try to get on it doesn't work properly it doesn't load 8 of them with a big wrench on the screen and says we're having technical issues when they do finally get you in after you by the way have to completely reset your passwords and start all over again your feed is gone see here's the problem lot of people don't realize this when parlor with set up through 8 of us and amazon web services apparently the very very wise people who ran this company didn't bother to back anything up so why now they've moved over to a new server system they apparently don't have any of their original information it's. it's hard to imagine brant a company was so much money behind it and so much momentum behind it over
1:54 pm
$20000000.00 users by the time they were shut down they have so much going on and they have so little that they did right and bet is that reason is that because it was kind of started under political motivation rather than the tech people that you kind of see who start most social media sites so i don't know that it's because it was started out of the political motivation i think it's more because there was an assumption made a wrong assumption and that assumption was we could just build it remember libertarians and conservatives they loved to say you know if if you don't like twitter and you don't like facebook go make your own right that was the excuse for a long time so that's what parlor did parlor and john mattes the c.e.o. of harlow rebecca mercer the conservative donor who called the money into it when they decided ok we'll start our own the problem is they didn't realize that google and apple were going to say actually you don't get to do that and amazon was going to say you don't get to do that and so they built this thing as if they would be welcomed with open arms by the tech world of course they weren't and i think they
1:55 pm
underestimated what would happen and so they got kind of flat footed now they have a new c.e.o. this guy in the tea party patriots mark meckler who is now running running parlor bud just to say that they're back up and running is probably a pretty big understatement if they're really not working it out right now meckler it to your point meckler actually said they wouldn't be reliant on big tech so how does that change now. yes so what he's saying is they're not reliant on big tech but they have an answer or solve the real problem and the real problem is that they are not they're still dependent on tech companies to provide for instance their their server issues so i the company that's essentially doing this for them and i want to get their name here is called sky silk it's a company that's providing servers for them instead of amazon now well sky says hey yeah we're in agreement with the idea that people should have a chance to speak and we believe in free speech great the problem is though it's parlor still dependent that sky still doesn't change their mind at some point in
1:56 pm
sky's so besides all of a sudden you know what we changed our mind we got some pressure put on us from other clients and so we're going to drop you they're out of luck again so they have not built themselves to be non reliant on big tech they have just made themselves non reliant on amazon and that's not the same thing and you you mentioned parlors former c.e.o. john mattes he said his ousting was in response to his push for more strict moderation of extremis and extremism and violence on the platform and so does that is basically what he's saying is that partly the new parlor the new version of parlor on sky zone is not going to be more strict. i don't think they'll necessarily be more strict but if we're going to be honest here i don't think that's the reason that he was removed and now so the c.e.o. i don't think it's because he wanted to to crack down on violent speech i think it's because quite candidly he bungled a company that had all the momentum the number one downloaded app on the apple app
1:57 pm
store at the time they were taken down why were you there in the 1st place being built the way that you were built i mean they've been down for weeks and as i said this reemergence is that so. obviously you know the former c.e.o. wants to make the case that it's for ideological reasons that he's out not because i ran a tech company and it didn't work i didn't do a good job of protecting it no one's going to admit that so i'm skeptical of his reasoning for but at the end of the day we'll see of parlor actually gets its momentum back i'm suspicious that it won't because i think there's a lot of users who are going to come back to them now saying we don't trust you're not going to get taken down all over again i just think they had the momentum and it's difficult to recapture that and if you look at it from a tech perspective ben i mean you have to look at it as you create a new site or or you relaunch a site you have technical problems that you just mentioned obviously it's day one but unless people can get back on it and actually use the service well they're just not going to come back i totally understand that bus co-host and investigative journalist bents one thank you so much for following the story for us thanks. there
1:58 pm
and that's it for this time you can get boom bust on demand on the brand new portable t.v. apple bail bond smartphones and tablets through google play and the apple app store by searching portable t.v. sort of t.v. can also be downloaded on newer model samsung smart t.v.'s and ropey devices or somebody talk about a portable t.v. we'll see next hour. imagine picking up a future textbook on the early years of the 21st century what are the chapters called gun violence school shootings homelessness 1st it was my job it was my field bill it was my savings i have nothing i have nothing it is not like i don't trust aloof or resources i look for jobs i look for everything i can to make this house. in oil of doing is. the road to the american dream paved
1:59 pm
with dead refugees and this very idealized image of all america needs americans look possed the deaths that happen every single day this is a history of the usa america tonality. though do you trust your book in europe to. the mostly from blue. book with relation missionize sort of the beach or storm of lower street view or restroom. when you go to the movie way of lingo it in the video it appears. that in still chilly it is the soul of the bees and how many to choose to.
2:00 pm
child trafficking forced labor allegations filed in a lawsuit against some of the world's largest producers we hear a disturbing testimony. were not given any few visible scars from. coming up on the program a court declares the government's covert curfew. we're going to. miss you heard some hours.

18 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on