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tv   Boom Bust  RT  June 3, 2021 9:30am-10:01am EDT

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the, i don't know, i mean there some steps in there were rescuing the food that they were not scavenging or were rescuing resources that are still good. this is best by march 21st, which is in 2 days. all these potatoes, holla, pianos, onions, all of these came from waste ground sources. this is great for me because i'm always looking for a way to give things away. dr. because the tax laws, you know, definitely do benefit the wealthier people in our society. so that makes sense for them to throw it out right off, rather than give it to somebody who could use it. and then that person is not going to buy it the
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the well, this is the one business show you can't afford to miss. i've been one and washington coming up j. b. s is returning to normal after a massive cyber attack, but the blame is already being placed on crypto currency. we'll talk about that. and amc a surgeon to new highs as the me economy as it's called return. then we're joined by professor richard was to talk about the in inequality is tied to vaccines and the 9 new billionaires created during this pandemic. we have a fact show today. let's get to it. we begin today with the story that you had to know with coming just 24 hours after the world's largest meet packer j. b. s is shut down by a ransomware attack will now come the calls to ban crypto currency. it is so predictable. so here's the time table, brazil base j b s has plants all over the world,
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base it on sunday that hackers had hit their north american and australia operations according to the company they can't process meet without access to their systems or j. b. s cells, beef and pork under the swift brand with realtors like costco carrying the pork loins and tenderloin j. b. s also owns most chicken processor, pilgrim's pride, they so organic chicken under the just bare brand. but this rant and the tag was very short lived, in fact, j b. s. and now on wednesday that many of its operations would restart on wednesday . that's just 2 days of interruption. but who's at fault, or j. b. s. notify the white house that the hackers are believed to be hiding in russia. in the last a, j. b. s. notify the administration that the ransom demand came from a criminal organization likely based in russia. the white house is engaging directly with the russian government were told on this matter, and delivering the message that responsible states do not harbor ransomware, criminals, and quote, boy, it was only a few weeks ago. remember that georgia base colonial pipeline was shut down after
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hackers got control a part of the company's billing system. but remember, there it was, in fact the company c e o, who made the decision to shut down operations that lead to fuel shortages along the east coast. which leads us to what i call before the predictable response that crypto currency. yeah, that's the real problem here. according to one study, 2020. so roughly $350000000.00 in crypto currency payments to ransomware attacks, which is triple the previous years take. in fact, a reason op ed in the wall street journal makes the claim that banning crypto would in ransomware. spoiler alert, it would not, and that if you can't bang crypto, we're told the fed should instead ban crypto exchanges. now, recent op, add on coin deaths to this issue on the right or david, the more put it this way when it comes to banding crypto quote. there are many nuanced reasons to reject this argument. you could compare it to demanding a ban on cheese because your house is infested with rats. you could say that it is
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a massive category error, that mistakes a tool for a cause. and that, of course is the right point. and here's the biggest reason for it to pretend that banning crypto would in ransomware attacks is nonsense, largely because ransomware attacks predate crypto. and let's be more precise here. the one biggest battle that we have with hackers is really not over ransomware. in fact, the biggest tax and recent history have nothing to do with ransom or crypto. in 2013 hackers sto credit card data and other personal data of 40000000 target customers in 2017 equifax, which holds financial data on a huge portion of american adults with rob to 147900000 consumer records and the terrifying solar winds hack in which allegedly russia backpackers spied on dozens of us entities where they, by the way, still may have footholds was revealed just last year. by the way, none the facts involved, crypto currency ransoms, and of those examples solar winds may be the most important one. state back
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espionage has no strategic overlap with ransomware. in fact, the entire point is to remain undetected. also, the target is equifax breaches. they're similar to ransomware attacks in that they were aimed at accessing data, but that data was ultimately most likely monetized via identity theft and loan or credit card fraud, not crypto ransom. so coming back to j. b as in colonial pipeline. the real question surrounding all of this is, is the problem crypto currency, or is the real root of the problem. the automation of society, township cybersecurity, expert, a president of dark and tell he joins us now to discuss. tod, it's good to have you here. you know, yeah, her set up here, it appears that a lot of these recent high profile kind of claims about these crypto attacks in a lot of these, the wrong question is being asked. the question always seems to come back to how do we de monetize the incentive here instead of looking at the security issue,
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how do you see it? well, i don't think you're wrong and that i think, you know, we had all taken the position with paris and kidnappings, in general, from you know, 2030 years ago that we don't pay them. and, but now this whole ransomware problem, they've opted to pay them. and so now we've encouraged the behavior by the bad guys, the people that are out there, whether they're in rush or not, that are doing this behavior to do more of it because they know they're going to get paid. so i think that's part of the problem is that they end up paying them well they do in the paying them. we know that with colonial pipeline, they paid almost $5000000.00 in right. and ransom colonial pipeline was the authority though, that actually shut down operations. so we were led to believe in the beginning, it was indicated to us that the shut down happened because hackers got into the system and they were holding the pipelines hostage. essentially that's, that isn't what happened there. j b s was down for just 2 days. i'm not saying that it doesn't have an effect, but they were down for 2 days. and yet all of a sudden this is a national security threat, but none of the concern that i'm hearing seems to be over the security systems that
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are in place to protect these companies, as opposed to the crypto currency issue. why you're corrected and we saw a j b s handle this much differently than colonial pipeline did. colonial pipeline came out and started screaming immediately. oh my gosh, there's this problem and we're going to do all these things. j b s was far more reserved about it, notified the officials and never said who, it was very different when we knew that on colonial pipeline, it was dark side that did this. we're not for sure who did this one yet. so j b s handle it much differently and i think it calmed everybody and they were able to look back in handle it much quicker on their n. colonial probably could have done the same thing. had they not reacted the same, you know, frantic way that they did, the colonial story seemed so bizarre to me because of the way they handled you're mentioning the right there. they handled it in such a strange way because it wasn't unlike j b s where j b says listen,
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they're in our system. we're going to take a couple of things offline for a couple of days, get them out and restore service and start processing meet again. that didn't happen with colonial. in fact, colonial did the opposite. they came out and said, we are deciding to shut down operations and they kept everything offline. i've heard a lot of people question whether or not there was a financial incentive. in doing that, i don't think you would necessarily have the answer to that, but it certainly seems bizarre in the way they behaved. it was, it was very different in that behavior. and i think that example of what not to do as a company when these things occurred. because once we found out what actually happened, then it was their billing department that got hit, not the pipelines, the whole thing changed rapidly. but initially we all thought that the pipelines were being hacked and, and we were not going to be able to get gas or gas was going to be, you know, open up in flooding, you know, communities. and that's not what occurred at all. and that's why i think j b s did a much better job of handling this, and they need to be the positive example. now we don't know if they paid the ransom
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or if they're going to, but they're handling the media much better then colonial pipeline did. and then j b . s. this case, it seems like whatever has happened here, it doesn't have a long term effect in terms of the me processing because it took 2 days to get everything back up and running again. and again, it was a voluntary decision correct by j b. s to take the meat processing i know here in the united states and in australia, offline for a couple of days. well, i think part of that has to do with a c, e o in a, in a c o at the top that had a concept of how to respond to this kind of problem. they probably learned the past 2 weeks over what happened with colonial and may have had some other training regarding technology issues. but they were able to respond to a so much better manner and made sure that they probably had the backups in the things that we talk about, you know, from the technical point of view to have in place in place. and they're able to go, okay, you know, we've got this done, they got a bad on us,
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but we're able to recover fairly quickly because we had the right stuff in place from the beginning about 30 seconds laptop. but i want to ask you is a part of this problem, the automation of society, that there is too much time being spent trying to automate everything. because as long as you don't allow people to be in charge of machines are someone can always hack them. well, that's always going to be the problem. i don't know that there's going to be a solution in the next in the near future, because everything from your refrigerator to your car, to your the phones you're carrying your pocket are automated. and we're going to have this problem going forward. it's just a matter of trying to figure out how we can forestall and prevent some of these problems. and it's a challenge. it is a challenge todd chipley, president of dark in tell, thank you so much. thank you. remember just a few weeks ago the whole game stopped amc read it, crowd trading story. it was everywhere. well guess what? it's back wednesday. a frenzy of buying of amc entertainment stock triggered several trading halls with mean stock traders fuel in
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a search of more than 100 percent. in fact, trading was halted several times. for brief periods shares changed hands that pretty brisk pace. more than 500000000 shares were exchanged on wednesday. so what's going on here? let's get analysis. so michelle snyder, partner and director of training research in education market gage dot com and boom, both co host christy i. thanks for being with me. michelle. let's start with you. what do you make of this mean stock trading? is this going to become the new normal for the market? do you think? well, certainly has become the new normal over the last year. and yes has may be hard to justify evaluations for stock like amc or game stop. but amc actually had some real news in that they were able to actually sell $230000000.00 worth of stock to an investment firm. so they are raising money. now the, i think the biggest problem though, when you're looking at these is there still been nothing done with the fact that these hedge funds can go short. they have very little regulation. they can kind of
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do it under the wire, and they pay very small fines. if they actually get caught and it seems, the regulators are kind of helpless and powerless when it comes to all of this. they haven't really been able to do anything about it. so as long as that persists, then i think that yes, i think this is the new normal that you have this crowd coming in and they're able to send these fox flying. not just amc today and game stop it, also pets when crazy as well. so maybe it's a free tub of popcorn that you get with a m c. i don't know. maybe it is a. m. c, christie kind of balloon to a record market cap here of $33000000000.00 and this training prince. he, it's lead just as we mentioned, several trading holds as it serves more than 100 percent health wall street feeling about this. and honestly, why shouldn't mean traders be doing this? i mean, if they have the ability to wall street does this kind of thing all the time, why can't the average joe do it? exactly. there's absolutely no reason why they should and right now whether they're
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just getting a kick at sticking it to wall street and basically popping all the short sellers. but at the end of the day, it doesn't make any sense because he has a market value about 30000000000, as he said. and the theatre has been closed for most of the pandemic. they're expected to lose money this year and next. so most people short the name feel that it's overvalued and right now, even with the economy reopening, that still doesn't change the fact that the company has about $5000000000.00 in debt and need to defer about 450000000 in lease repayment. so right now, while she has very, very low price targets credits with the target at a $1.15, the party had that $5.00. the most aggressive call comes from like chad who says it's worth about that target siding. that movie going habits have permanently change with hollywood, crushing the theatre industry by releasing new movies on streaming services the same day as there's the optical release. so things like consumers have actually embraced streaming from home and are likely to be far more selective in what they have to pay to sienna theater going forward. but all those on mental reasons why
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and they should be short. it is kind of law on the rhetoric crowd and as a result, wall street parasol about $1200000000.00 in real life. and unrealized losses last week and short positions helped him to the start of the year when it stopped for nearly $6000000000.00. mark to market and losses. so know right now retail investors, they're having a kick, but i think their time in the sun is going to come to an end because it costs them incrementally more in order to buy additional stock. and the higher the market cap balloons do, the more cash it will take to keep it afloat. so michelle, with this idea that trading gets halted. is this something that happens often, or is this something that's been especially reserved for the the mean crowd when they get involved? because i don't remember hearing this happen very often when wall street traders go in heavy on a stock. but all of a sudden when the read it crowd does it's, it's a, let's pause everything and make sure that this doesn't interfere with the systems that are already in place. well, there are breaker systems in the market,
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as we know, certain on big down days. we've seen that happen. we've seen stocks halted in in the face of big news coming. so it's not something completely new. back in the day when i was trading commodities, we would see commodities get halted as well. and then there was a natural limit limit upper limit down as far as you could go. so this isn't highly unusual. today the robin hood firm was the one that 1st was rumored to be the reason why was halted and they said no was just to reset with the volatility. going crazy. so it's just, there's a, i really listen to kristy stanton and yes, and may not be a forever thing, but i do believe that there is now going to be the targeted stocks that get over shorted by firms. and the fundamentals may or may not agree, but like she said, it's true. we're going to see the stocks continue to fly and it may not necessarily always be the ones that we've seen recently. but i think we can see. ready some new
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ones emerge. i think cannabis now is a target. let's watch for till ray went up crazy today. we'll see what happens tomorrow. in christie, in terms of this, this mean stock kind of phenomenon, the mean trading phenomenon because it's also true of those corner as well, right? doesn't necessarily have value except for the value that the, the buyers decide that it has. they're the ones who choose to invest in it. but when we're watching kind of these mean stock go up, is this a fad or do you think it's going to kind of redefine the way the market's run based upon how the crowd views it? i think right now crowd trading is definitely the same because people have this mentality that they can band together make money together, stick it to all of the big institutional. but the problem at the end of the day is still the same because size at the end of the day matters and the bigger and market cap that don't coin our amc or gain my new when these things 1st started, all of their market hats were in the millions they are now in the 1000000000. so the bigger the market cap gets, the more capital is going to take to keep it propped up or move it forward and keep
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the raleigh going. and if you can't keep the rally going, then every single read it or every single trader is just going to keep on dropping out because they're going to be like, i'm going to take property here. i'm going to take profit here. as soon as people start taking profit, that's going to be a don last down because it takes incrementally more buyers and more dollars. so it really can go on forever and there will be a tipping point that the entire structure will come crashing down as going to come one after the other because the market cap has are surprised that of game stop when game stop has mom in the spotlight so retail will feel short on cash soon, but the thing is, unfortunately, there are rumors that of a possible 4th and 5th round of direct stimulus checks. and we've seen these proposals come through and although they're supposed to be going towards helping the people get food, get their life back. in order after cobit, it seems like the stimulus checks are more toward given into whether it's don't coin or read it. i mean start going more towards gambling now, so it's not really having the effect it was intended to have. well, that, that definitely happened. i think a lot of new investors, especially into that crypto space don't understand the concept of taking profit.
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there. they think everything is diamond hands stick with the diamond hands and we say it's not. there are folks who are going to take profit at some point room. but christie, i michel schneider of market gage dot com. thank you both for your time. well timed out for a quick break, but when we come back, vaccines continue to roll out across north america and across europe. but there are still there's a staggering gap of shots for the southern hemisphere. we're going to discuss economic implications and professor richard walk. and as we go to break, here are the numbers the ah, welcome to financial survival guide. looking forward to your message, this is what happened is the benches in britain delicate that you watch,
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kaiser report hello is driven by a dreamer shaped by those in me i think we dare to ask me ah, we're segregated all along my social class. most people though, also covered by 1st if you're born into a 4 family, you're born into a minority family. if you're born into a family that only has
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a single parent that really constrains your lives, chances people die on average. 15 years old, born 80 generational poverty is a, it's a fight every day to meet your needs and the needs of your family. me the of the number of people contracting corona virus in the united states is falling fast. in fact, sunday, fewer than 10000 americans tested positive for corona virus, but well, a handful of well off nations have reached the 50 percent vaccination mark. at least $41.00 countries have yet to provide at least one dose to 2 percent of their population. that's according to data from the new york times. in fact, according to a recent report, the worst off of the nations reporting vaccine numbers is the central african
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republic. but the population of close to 5000000. just 667 doses have been administered according to the guardian as of may 30th, only one percent of the 1300000000 shots administered around the world have been in africa though the continent represents close to 17 percent of the world's population. so why is this aps, professor richard wolf is host of economic update and joins us now to discuss. professor glad that you're here. that's breakdown what's happening with these vaccines because it seems that the reason for such a profound inequality largely breaks down to 2 factors. here, rich nation stockpiling vaccines and the difficulties developing nations have faced in distributing them. how do you see it? well, i think it's, you're right, it's those things. but i would add a couple of pharmaceutical companies, many of which got public money in the form of subsidies to develop the vaccine. and all of which were promised enormous purchases by rich government,
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which took away the risk of doing it on their own. and so they went into that direction, they want to make money, and to make money, you gotta be able to sell these vaccines either to a governmental authority or some private system. poor countries don't have the money and it's very ugly. but it's very simple. they don't have the money. that's not where the money is. you're not going to get the prime prices there for it. that's why we saw wealthy people from 3rd world countries flying into europe or north america, often misrepresenting who they were to get to vaccines. i think we're seeing something which we will look back on as a horrible moral and ethical lapse because we are giving life saving vaccines to people who are rich and depriving that same like saving vaccine. depriving people who are poor. and i don't know of any ethical or moral or
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religious commitment that could justify doing that. it is really extraordinary. and if we believe, as i do, that eventually the time will come when we will have me here that day in those countries will be able to help us meet. they may be hesitant to do so. remembering what was done around the coven situation. the thought of the stockpiling issue, because it is fascinating to me that the biden administration is pushing for vaccination campaigns here in the us are trying to, in something that they're referring to as vaccine hesitancy. in fact, president vitamin spoke on tuesday and talked about being at 51 percent of the population being vaccinated and he wants to see more of the 70 or 80. the problem is there are a large portion of people who don't want to be vaccinated in this country while simultaneously, there are people in other countries who desperately want to be vaccinated, and yet they can't get access to the vaccines. it seems like
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a huge problem to hoard, if you will, vaccines here, and try to convince people to take them here. when there are people around the world who were waiting for them. you know, it's even worse, had been a number of officials here in the united states who have said that they expect to be an added states will now export vaccines because they can't find americans to take them. i mean, literally your point, but let me, let me stress something we know enough about this illness. we know enough about the variance, the different forms of this virus. it is very short sighted and self destructive of the united states not to make up priority. recent vaccinated all of the front line medical workers around the world. because if we don't, then they will be in a position to get the disease to spread the disease, to give the opportunity for new variance to emerge that will be resistant to the
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actions that we add. this can come back and give us here in the united states, all know the problem, all mother surge. so it strikes me as bizarre to give the low risk population in this country of that scene that you're not providing to front line medical workers who want to be in a position to help their own people cope better. this is a global virus, it's not going to be contained in one country when we have global air travel and all the rest. so i think this is not only morally awful, but it is a very dangerous activity, even for the most self interested kind of perspective yet. and even the fact that we keep pretending that some groups aren't low risk. there clearly are, are different levels of risk here. but i want to ask you quickly about this new report from oxfam. it explains that at least 9 people, 9 people have become new billionaires. since the beginning of the coven pandemic,
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thanks to the excessive profits of pharmaceutical corporations with monopolies on the coven vaccine. and especially when you consider you mentioned this a moment ago, the fact that every one of these vaccines was heavily subsidized by taxpayer dollars. this seems to be the worst kind of cronyism that there is that you're taking advantage of a medical moment to become billionaires and it's happening at an incredible rate. every one of those 9 new billionaires is an idea or a major shareholder of a major pharmaceutical, involved in the production of vaccines against colvin. so it is crystal clear. and as many commentators have notice, if you add up the 19 or so 1000000000 that they have collected these 9 folks, that would be enough to vaccinate 780000000 people on the old. so that money flowing in that case of $9.00 individuals deprived $800000000.00
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of vaccine, which that money would have paid for. i mean, these kinds of comparisons are going to come back and haunt us in the years. richard, what post of economic update, thanks so much for your time. that's it for now, but we'll see you back here tomorrow. i'm pretty me ah, me. oh, bank size or finance or the rival guys. when customers go buy you reduce the price . now, well, reduce the lower that democratic,
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but what's good for food market? it's not good for the global economy. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy foundation, let it be an arms race is often very dramatic. development only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very political time. time. sit down and talk to me on my little weekend. can obviously the number you get me up. not because i'm not going to the up in the
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kitchen table out tomorrow. i gotta give my don't get a she will put it on the shoulder. we've got meeting the brittany home like he's in this young lamp, me up and everybody who bought them by little my know behind me and because you guys are not the man why or why not what i think i was a super star city like case studies of make it the transformations over the past decade, advance mega project most go in for him to. and when he won the largest
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international congress on make, it said he development the headlines and t support his opponents of a new governments of rallied in israel. the coalition set to end but who's 12 year road. c for this. 6 i came to you because we have been betrayed, and i've called the benefits and good you have betrayed us. russia is flagship business of envy. some petersburg international economic forum officially begins with plenty of high level guess. we catch up with the foreign ministry spokesperson, maria the cut over and show he evidence emerging. france that shows bodies donated to scientific research have been sold for use in military experiments and crush test. ah.

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