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Oct 23, 2022
10/22
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carleton: one with the bp.e waiting for the energy transition to take place but you are getting up 4. 8% dividend yield. doesn't look bad at all and expects that the renewable business could generate $10 billion by 2030. the other one to look at would be exxon mobil getting a healthy dividend, seeing its growing business generated returns of 4,000,000,000 x 2030. jack: i sense a little skepticism on your part. if you were advising the big oil companies would you tell them to keep pumping oil? andrew: that is what exxon and chevron are doing, investment in renewables but focused on core business. that's why they traded big premiums to the european majors which are focused on renewables. investors like the approach american companies are doing. jack: supercheap those european big oil companies. is that interesting? andrew: they are cheap for a reason but trading for half the valuation of the us companies because of the pressure on european companies for the government and climate activists, much tougher to operat
carleton: one with the bp.e waiting for the energy transition to take place but you are getting up 4. 8% dividend yield. doesn't look bad at all and expects that the renewable business could generate $10 billion by 2030. the other one to look at would be exxon mobil getting a healthy dividend, seeing its growing business generated returns of 4,000,000,000 x 2030. jack: i sense a little skepticism on your part. if you were advising the big oil companies would you tell them to keep pumping oil?...
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Oct 29, 2022
10/22
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my colleagues been levisohn, carleton glitch and jack hough.ech mostly mostly have an off weekend the s&p is off 5%. what happened? ben: a tough week for big tech stocks not named apple. the dow finished up 5.7% which is amazing. it is a little about earnings, the market is looking at the meeting next week, we are going to get a signal the fed will slow down the rate hikes and that is the thing that is concerning the market all this time. even though we had bad earnings from microsoft and alphabet, the possibility of a soft landing that inflation will come down and the fed will pause those rate hikes, got the market excited. >> you looked at some numbers and saw the spread between tech and everything else is dramatic. ben: there has been a 9% difference, 7 times are bigger than that. most of them occurred during the dot.com bubble. maybe we'll get lucky, but okay, this will look a lot like the dot.com bubble, working off different valuation premiums and tech stocks before this started. jack: what do you expect? fed hikes will take their toll? b
my colleagues been levisohn, carleton glitch and jack hough.ech mostly mostly have an off weekend the s&p is off 5%. what happened? ben: a tough week for big tech stocks not named apple. the dow finished up 5.7% which is amazing. it is a little about earnings, the market is looking at the meeting next week, we are going to get a signal the fed will slow down the rate hikes and that is the thing that is concerning the market all this time. even though we had bad earnings from microsoft and...
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Oct 30, 2022
10/22
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carleton: curious what the midterm elections going forward? >> watching this closely. the midterms mean everything for the fiscal spending we will see going forward. in the past few years, probably little to no fiscal relief in the event of recession. that will leave the central bank on its own to navigate us through. any recession is nothing like extending an employment aid we had in previous years, nothing like that. they are on the road to pull the monetary lever and see what they can do. jack: we have asked a couple times are ready. is there anything republicans or democrats will agree on or anything that is going to get done? >> a couple things. closer we get to 2024 the more both parties shall before presidential election they are able to get things done so they are looking at ways to compromise. we know they are on the same page about china and industrial policy, the chips actor earlier this year, that incentivizes more semiconductor production in the us and that could build on that, higher end production as well. and incentivizing near shoring, bringing more pr
carleton: curious what the midterm elections going forward? >> watching this closely. the midterms mean everything for the fiscal spending we will see going forward. in the past few years, probably little to no fiscal relief in the event of recession. that will leave the central bank on its own to navigate us through. any recession is nothing like extending an employment aid we had in previous years, nothing like that. they are on the road to pull the monetary lever and see what they can...
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i felician paul good is a professor of russian studies at carleton university and canada. and he told us here at dw more about the purpose of putin's address. yeah, it was, it was very clearly, i think, a speech for domestic consumption. it was striking that he firstly framed today's events in relation to 2014, of course, when russia annexed crimea and a staged referendum in crimea, that sort of, you know, gave some modicum of legitimacy or thought some modicum legitimacy for that annexation. and so that was pointedly reference today as an attempt to save c. we've effectively done this again. but what was further striking was that put in repeatedly reference 1991 and the breakup of the soviet union and all of the perceived injustices flowing from that. in a sense, this was very much a nakedly imperialist speech that was designed for domestic consumption to help people understand why they were feeling all these consequences arising from russia invasion of ukraine. russia has vetoed a un security council resolution condemning moscow's illegal annexations in ukraine . devoted
i felician paul good is a professor of russian studies at carleton university and canada. and he told us here at dw more about the purpose of putin's address. yeah, it was, it was very clearly, i think, a speech for domestic consumption. it was striking that he firstly framed today's events in relation to 2014, of course, when russia annexed crimea and a staged referendum in crimea, that sort of, you know, gave some modicum of legitimacy or thought some modicum legitimacy for that annexation....
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this week's addition of carleton "barron's roundtable" is about how to approach the coming decade. special section in this week's "barron's roundtable," how to invest for the coming decade and it helps to figure out where we were versus where we are going. looking back to the financial crisis we came out of that with slow growth, no one is building houses because we built too many, companies are retaining earnings. there is high unemployment rippling down slowly. we had a radical maneuver by central banks flooding the market with money and fabulous returns on the stock market. tell us about the dynamics. >> it was the perfect environment for long-duration assets, the majority are growth stocks, bonds and the result is small number of stocks outperforming the market with growth companies, big tech stocks, apple, amazon, earnings, multibillion-dollar market, 25% of the s&p 500. on the bond market, interest rates from central banks, quantitative easing, going lower and lower. at the end of the cycle you have a rally where stocks are relative to earnings. jack: we have high inflation,
this week's addition of carleton "barron's roundtable" is about how to approach the coming decade. special section in this week's "barron's roundtable," how to invest for the coming decade and it helps to figure out where we were versus where we are going. looking back to the financial crisis we came out of that with slow growth, no one is building houses because we built too many, companies are retaining earnings. there is high unemployment rippling down slowly. we had a...
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Oct 30, 2022
10/22
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carleton: root for the phillies in the world series, a finance focused show, take a look at visa this week. despite the worries we have, doing a new buyback program picked by nick. jack: a sponsor of athletic events. great ideas, all of you. check us out on elon musk' much, thank you for watching we hope you have a good weekend and join us again monday night. >> from this talk studio in new york city, this is mario bartiromo wall street. liz: hello every one. welcome to the book about positions you for the weekend. i am maria bartiromo, democrats on defense with election day a week away and republicans getting momentum, democrats are scrambling to change the midterm message senator marsha blackburn on why voters are not buying it. no in the insight, the fed about to make another aggressive interest rate hike on tuesday and wednesday to cool raging inflation from a kansas city federal reserve president thomas onegin on the growing risk of recession. the pentagon says china remains a top security threat to the united states amid reports the communist regime is now operating dozens of se
carleton: root for the phillies in the world series, a finance focused show, take a look at visa this week. despite the worries we have, doing a new buyback program picked by nick. jack: a sponsor of athletic events. great ideas, all of you. check us out on elon musk' much, thank you for watching we hope you have a good weekend and join us again monday night. >> from this talk studio in new york city, this is mario bartiromo wall street. liz: hello every one. welcome to the book about...
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Oct 25, 2022
10/22
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carleton. >> hello, mrs. reagan. just as a kid, i'd just like to thank you. [applause] thank you. i really have a whole bunch of questions, but i am going to try to hold it to just one. >> oh, go ahead. [laughter] >> well, like the squeaky wheels, the druggies seem to get most of your attention. what would you recommend for parents and teachers, for us kids, for us many kids, who are responsible and drug free? >> yes. i know, it's true. you are absolutely right. bad news seems to get more attention than good news. as a matter of fact, bill, can i tell this story? bill was -- bill was on a morning show with a couple of his children, and, who had drug problems, but he has another child who has had no drug problems at all. and the two children that hadn't had drug problems were on the program with him. and it was pretty exciting for them to be on this big show. but the other one i said, dad, you know, i haven't done anything. i've never smoked pot. i've never taken anything, and i don't get to go on national television, and that doesn't seem fair. so, they asked me if i would go on t
carleton. >> hello, mrs. reagan. just as a kid, i'd just like to thank you. [applause] thank you. i really have a whole bunch of questions, but i am going to try to hold it to just one. >> oh, go ahead. [laughter] >> well, like the squeaky wheels, the druggies seem to get most of your attention. what would you recommend for parents and teachers, for us kids, for us many kids, who are responsible and drug free? >> yes. i know, it's true. you are absolutely right. bad news...
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Oct 1, 2022
10/22
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he is a graduate of carleton college in minnesota. he first joined my office seven years ago handling my work on the commerce committee. he went on to work on the campaign side, came back and has been with the committee for the last couple of years and minority. he was here on january 6 in the capitol with. we are going to miss him tremendously, he is going on a tremendous job with small business administration. we are very proud of him and i ask colleagues to join me in thanking tommy for his service. [applause] senator blunt? >> thank you. the vote on the committee and the effort put together by this bipartisan group all indicate the reason this needs to go to the floor and it needs to get past this year. we will move into next year with this done and it will be a helpful addition to the process. thank you for your leadership. sen. klobuchar:, everyone. thank you everyone. the committee is adjourned. [inaudible conversations] >> sunday on q&a author and poet javier zamora discusses his book in which he details his migration from el
he is a graduate of carleton college in minnesota. he first joined my office seven years ago handling my work on the commerce committee. he went on to work on the campaign side, came back and has been with the committee for the last couple of years and minority. he was here on january 6 in the capitol with. we are going to miss him tremendously, he is going on a tremendous job with small business administration. we are very proud of him and i ask colleagues to join me in thanking tommy for his...
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Oct 30, 2022
10/22
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MSNBCW
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tucker has the murdoch's, he has -- the minute loughlin decides he does not want to support tucker carletonbut i mean, i think what joe rogan, that is a good point, and it was a long -- he spread a lot of misinformation about vaccines and medical stuff, and it was really quite dangerous and scary. i think ultimately, is this tipping point. it is one does the disgusting this get the public outcry, and i do think that the public outcry was faster for kanye than it has been for joe rogan. i guess in a certain way,, yeah, this is all very unfair. we see and are living in america is racist and anti-semitic, and people like trump are getting away with stuff. you know, yeah, i think it's really problematic and that. i think the -- i still don't understand why -- i just don't understand why there needs to be this kind of hate. it's so, you know, really heartbreaking. >> kurt, we have about 20 seconds left, but should apple and spotify drop kanye west, or can they separate the arctic from the heat? >> no, i think that they are one and the same at this point. every company right now that is in the co
tucker has the murdoch's, he has -- the minute loughlin decides he does not want to support tucker carletonbut i mean, i think what joe rogan, that is a good point, and it was a long -- he spread a lot of misinformation about vaccines and medical stuff, and it was really quite dangerous and scary. i think ultimately, is this tipping point. it is one does the disgusting this get the public outcry, and i do think that the public outcry was faster for kanye than it has been for joe rogan. i guess...
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Oct 12, 2022
10/22
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FOXNEWSW
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well, a local professor of kalita at carleton university, professor of geology, he liked my article so much, he used it in his course on climate change and but he said to the students, but that part about venus is wrong. what happened on venus cannot physically happen on the earth. and he explained why now i thought, who is this climate change denier? well, he invited me into his lab and he showed me the geologic history that he and others are finding. and they found no consistent correlation between carbon dioxide and earth's temperature. at times, co2 was 13% of today, and we were stuck in very cold conditions. >> so it was all over the board. so i started wondering, well, maybe he's right. he exposed me to a lot of people who actually showed me that there are thousands of scientists. and here's a book actually that illustrates that it's called climate change reconsidered. and this is on climate change reconsidered. there are thousands of references here which talk about the fact that there is no foundation into the climate scare. it's all based on models that don't work. but, tom ,
well, a local professor of kalita at carleton university, professor of geology, he liked my article so much, he used it in his course on climate change and but he said to the students, but that part about venus is wrong. what happened on venus cannot physically happen on the earth. and he explained why now i thought, who is this climate change denier? well, he invited me into his lab and he showed me the geologic history that he and others are finding. and they found no consistent correlation...
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Oct 23, 2022
10/22
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celebrate its centennial the ideas of people like theodore roosevelt john muir, george catlin and carleton watkins, which are some of the names recognized for their contributions to creating america's best idea, the national park service. but it also became apparent that the name olmstead would be left off this list, and it was important to amplify the generational impacts of the homesteads on the agency and this country and more was needed to daylight these accomplishments. it was from this void that the national park service commission, a comprehensive study, led by ralph dehaven. we hear from in a moment, ethan carr and lauren meyer, to better understand these immense contributions to spanning a contribution spanning from the monu mental writings of yosemite report and the organic act, which created the national park service to the enduring conservation efforts to the expansive design work within the park service itself. this report produced a robust body of research and design on the i'm sorry, on the design and planning work of frederick olmsted senior. his sons george charles olmstea
celebrate its centennial the ideas of people like theodore roosevelt john muir, george catlin and carleton watkins, which are some of the names recognized for their contributions to creating america's best idea, the national park service. but it also became apparent that the name olmstead would be left off this list, and it was important to amplify the generational impacts of the homesteads on the agency and this country and more was needed to daylight these accomplishments. it was from this...