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May 11, 2018
05/18
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then she was sent to wheaton college. that is where they met. and they met at wheaton college. when they got married, they first lived in chicago where daddy had a little church outside of chicago. and what he relies he was going to be traveling as much with use for crisis, he began with used st, he traveled a lot, and as my mother, if i'm traveling this much, where would you like to live? i would like to live close to my parents. when the communist came into the china and my grand parents had to leave after 25 years of living there, they settled here in the valley of north carolina. my grandfather was a surgeon. he had a practice in asheville. it was -- he was a very beloved dr. in asheville and very instrumental in pulling together the little clinics they had at that time here into what is now mission hospital in asheville. ring\ we are sitting at one of the most before places in north carolina, in my opinion. the cove is a place mother and that he felt years ago they had this vision where people could come and study the word of god. now, many
then she was sent to wheaton college. that is where they met. and they met at wheaton college. when they got married, they first lived in chicago where daddy had a little church outside of chicago. and what he relies he was going to be traveling as much with use for crisis, he began with used st, he traveled a lot, and as my mother, if i'm traveling this much, where would you like to live? i would like to live close to my parents. when the communist came into the china and my grand parents had...
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May 6, 2018
05/18
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. >> joining me is the chief global strategist for wheaton and company, the head of global strategy at td security, and the chief income strategist at jd montgomery. great to have you with me. there are no inflationary consequences, seemingly, in terms of wage growth. why not? >> productivity is keeping wage inflation low. until you see wage inflation, incomes are not growing. does the fed need to accelerate? there is no inflation pressure. let the economy heat up a bit. to the feds really need to go to more times? let inflation really pick up before they try and get to neutral. >> the statement from the federal reserve did not sound like a fed that was in a hurry. >> two mentions of one word, the clearest evidence i have seen since the greenspan era. they're willing to move above that 2% target and continue on their merry way towards however many more hikes this year. two, possibly three. >> do we have to say we don't really know what's going on in the labor market in the united states? >> it could be interpreted as, we don't really know what is going on. i think one of the things i w
. >> joining me is the chief global strategist for wheaton and company, the head of global strategy at td security, and the chief income strategist at jd montgomery. great to have you with me. there are no inflationary consequences, seemingly, in terms of wage growth. why not? >> productivity is keeping wage inflation low. until you see wage inflation, incomes are not growing. does the fed need to accelerate? there is no inflation pressure. let the economy heat up a bit. to the feds...
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May 6, 2018
05/18
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jonathan: joining me is the chief global strategist for wheaton and company, the head of global strategyt td security, and the chief income strategist at jd montgomery. great to have you with me. there are no inflationary consequences, seemingly, in terms of wage growth. why not? >> i think productivity is keeping wage inflation low. we have been seen very good numbers, but until you see rage -- wage inflation, incomes are not growing. does the fed need to accelerate? i think they can hike two times. there is no inflation pressure. let the economy heat up a bit. that is the question for the fed, do we really need to go more times? let inflation really pick up before they try and get to neutral. jonathan: looking at the statement this week from the federal reserve. did not sound like a fed that was in a hurry. >> that statement was one thing and that is symmetrical. two mentions of one word, the clearest evidence i have seen since the greenspan era. that said it is happy with the continued course of inflation, willing to move above that 2% target, and continue on their merry way towards h
jonathan: joining me is the chief global strategist for wheaton and company, the head of global strategyt td security, and the chief income strategist at jd montgomery. great to have you with me. there are no inflationary consequences, seemingly, in terms of wage growth. why not? >> i think productivity is keeping wage inflation low. we have been seen very good numbers, but until you see rage -- wage inflation, incomes are not growing. does the fed need to accelerate? i think they can...
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May 5, 2018
05/18
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jonathan: joining me is michael purves, the chief global strategist for wheaton and company, the head of global strategy at td security, and the chief income strategist at jd montgomery. great to have you with me. free handle on unemployment, yet there are no inflationary consequences, seemingly, in terms of wage growth. why not? >> productivity is keeping wage inflation low. we have been seeing very good payroll numbers, but until you see wage inflation, real wage incomes are not growing. does the fed need to accelerate? they can hike two times. i do not think they need to go three times necessarily, because there is no inflation pressure. let the economy heat up a bit. to the fed, do they really need to go two more times? let inflation really pick up before we tried to get to neutral. jonathan: the statement from the federal reserve did not sound like a fed that was in a hurry. >> that statement was one thing, and that is "symmetrical." two mentions of one word, the clearest evidence i have seen that the greenspan era said they are happy with the course of inflation, they are willin
jonathan: joining me is michael purves, the chief global strategist for wheaton and company, the head of global strategy at td security, and the chief income strategist at jd montgomery. great to have you with me. free handle on unemployment, yet there are no inflationary consequences, seemingly, in terms of wage growth. why not? >> productivity is keeping wage inflation low. we have been seeing very good payroll numbers, but until you see wage inflation, real wage incomes are not...
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May 16, 2018
05/18
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CNBC
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. >> first, let's look at early market action and bring in michael purves from wheaton & company.tocks fell about 193 points a significant move what was behind it. >> the big news yesterday was bond yields finding fresh highs. not just getting through 3%, before you gbu getting there with some vengeance. when you see that, that spills over into other asset classes, like the dollar. the dollar getting stronger and no equities as well. i think part of what's going on is that there's a regime change unfolding here, broadly speaking, one defined by monetary stimulus to one defined more by fiscal stimulus and normalization, return to good old-fashioned equity valuation, which is more earnings centric as opposed to, you know, fear of missing out and trying to compete with, you know, treasury yields >> michael, let's talk about this move. yes, we've seen peaks above 3% before this was a sharp and big move higher intraday to 3.09. does this now mean there are legitimate drivers for the price action in treasuries are yields justified where they are now? do they keep this trajectory higher
. >> first, let's look at early market action and bring in michael purves from wheaton & company.tocks fell about 193 points a significant move what was behind it. >> the big news yesterday was bond yields finding fresh highs. not just getting through 3%, before you gbu getting there with some vengeance. when you see that, that spills over into other asset classes, like the dollar. the dollar getting stronger and no equities as well. i think part of what's going on is that...
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May 2, 2018
05/18
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r and peace' gabrielle union: 'the color rple' allison williams: 'frankenstein' wil wheaton: 'ready playerwe've goona list of americe hundred best-loved novels, to and we need you help us pick number one. minga wen: 'the joy luck clu devon kennard: 'to kill a mockingbird' jenna bush: 'the book thief'nd leelvin: 'the martian' vo: is your favorite on the list? join me meredith vieira, and cast your vote in the great american rea it all begins tuesday, may 22nd at 8/7c. only on pbs. anikke: refugees flee their countries for many reasons. violence, abuse, health concerns, or the continuous cycle of poverty. but ny people outside of the situation don't understand t difficulty of life in refugee cps and what it's likeo live a life in limbo. in our first story, we meet writer inua ellams, who draws from the experiences of refugees to create stories that explore the struggles of children fleeing their homes andeeking safety in britain
r and peace' gabrielle union: 'the color rple' allison williams: 'frankenstein' wil wheaton: 'ready playerwe've goona list of americe hundred best-loved novels, to and we need you help us pick number one. minga wen: 'the joy luck clu devon kennard: 'to kill a mockingbird' jenna bush: 'the book thief'nd leelvin: 'the martian' vo: is your favorite on the list? join me meredith vieira, and cast your vote in the great american rea it all begins tuesday, may 22nd at 8/7c. only on pbs. anikke:...
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May 23, 2018
05/18
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CNBC
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giovanni: we have been working on acquiring natural pet market in wheaton, illinois.io has genuinely done a great job of getting feedback from his team before he makes decisions. giovanni: moment of truth. yes or no? woman: yes. giovanni: you want to go for it. nevine? nevine: yes. -giovanni: mark? -mark: yes. -giovanni: dan? -dan: yes, i do. man: absolutely. lisa: i think we got to double-check, make sure the name's involved. let's tighten up the numbers, but i'm good with the $285,000 as the final number. giovanni: we'll move forward. i'll take the next step. i'll set it up today. thanks, guys. nevine: thank you. ♪ lemonis: meanwhile, we've gotten the packaging settled for our best in show line, and the product is now in production. soon, we're going to have another high-margin item that will help us get our overall margins up. ♪ -team's on board. -giovanni: all right. we'll go in the back with tracy. lemonis: now that gio has met with the staff and he's gotten lisa on board, i want to head back to natural pet market and see the negotiation with tracy. but i want to
giovanni: we have been working on acquiring natural pet market in wheaton, illinois.io has genuinely done a great job of getting feedback from his team before he makes decisions. giovanni: moment of truth. yes or no? woman: yes. giovanni: you want to go for it. nevine? nevine: yes. -giovanni: mark? -mark: yes. -giovanni: dan? -dan: yes, i do. man: absolutely. lisa: i think we got to double-check, make sure the name's involved. let's tighten up the numbers, but i'm good with the $285,000 as the...
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May 14, 2018
05/18
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one thing i left out of your introduction, you spneent a year at georgetown before going to wheaton? two similar institutions in every way. >> [laughter] think is the you most significant development in terms of faith and the faithful and the gop? though shalt not commit sex with a porn star is an optional commitment among evangelicals, nowadays." that is a plus for a lot of people. the most pressing thing that struck me was how wrong i was. i wrotehe year 2010, where weman," populated that the model of the social engagement of the religious right was reaching xhaustion -- exhaustion. that something new and better was in the offing, that old leaders and old institutions were passe. i sasw issues of that when otherg on malaria or issues that seem to broaden the range of social concern. we saw something very different in 2015, different than what i expected. -- aaw a fairly a pop fairly apocalyptic tone from a lot of evangelicals. "if hillary clinton won, this would be one of the last elections for republicans." you got the sense this was an important cultural turning point. that hilla
one thing i left out of your introduction, you spneent a year at georgetown before going to wheaton? two similar institutions in every way. >> [laughter] think is the you most significant development in terms of faith and the faithful and the gop? though shalt not commit sex with a porn star is an optional commitment among evangelicals, nowadays." that is a plus for a lot of people. the most pressing thing that struck me was how wrong i was. i wrotehe year 2010, where weman,"...
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May 19, 2018
05/18
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one thing i left out of your introduction, you spent a year at georgetown before going to wheaton? two similar institutions in every way. [laughter] john: over coffee, maybe we could talk about that. what do you think is the most significant development in terms of faith and the faithful and the gop? >> clearly, the most surprising is "though shalt not commit sex with a porn star is an optional -- with a porn star" is an optional commitment among evangelicals, nowadays. that is a plus for a lot of people. the most surprising thing that really struck me was how wrong i was. around the year 2010, i wrote a book called "city of man," where we postulated that the model of the social engagement of the religious right was reaching its exhaust -- reaching exhaustion. that something new and better was in the offing, that old leaders and old institutions were passe. -- passing. i had seen some evidence of that when working with religious groups on issues like malaria or other issues that seem to broaden the range of social concern. but i think we saw something very different in 2016, differ
one thing i left out of your introduction, you spent a year at georgetown before going to wheaton? two similar institutions in every way. [laughter] john: over coffee, maybe we could talk about that. what do you think is the most significant development in terms of faith and the faithful and the gop? >> clearly, the most surprising is "though shalt not commit sex with a porn star is an optional -- with a porn star" is an optional commitment among evangelicals, nowadays. that is...
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May 21, 2018
05/18
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CSPAN2
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of your introduction, which i want to add as you have spent a year at georgetown before going to wheaton. two very similar institutions in every way. over coffee, maybe we could talk about that. what you think is the most significant development in terms of faith in the faithful in the gop? >> clearly the most surprising as thou shalt not commit sex with a star is an optional commitment evangelicals now. and that is a plus for a lot of people. i would say the most surprising thing that struck me was how wrong i was. around the year 2010, i wrote a book that postulated that social engagement is the religious right is reaching its exhaust. the old leaders in old institutions were passed. i had seen some evidence of that when working with religious groups on issues like malaria or other issues that broaden the lane to concern and what i expected a lot of evangelicals are fairly new town. pat robertson said if hillary clinton won, this would be one of the last elections for republicans. a lot of evangelicals were convinced this was an important cultural turning point moment and that the bina
of your introduction, which i want to add as you have spent a year at georgetown before going to wheaton. two very similar institutions in every way. over coffee, maybe we could talk about that. what you think is the most significant development in terms of faith in the faithful in the gop? >> clearly the most surprising as thou shalt not commit sex with a star is an optional commitment evangelicals now. and that is a plus for a lot of people. i would say the most surprising thing that...