Detecting language using up to the first 30 seconds. Use `--language` to specify the language Detected language: English [00:00.000 --> 00:01.840] caucuses in Nevada, that's next. [00:01.840 --> 00:02.880] Don't say the word caucus. [00:02.880 --> 00:03.920] And then South Carolina. [00:03.920 --> 00:04.920] After Iowa. [00:04.920 --> 00:06.600] February 29th, South Carolina. [00:06.600 --> 00:08.280] Biden's in or out, I think, after South Carolina. [00:08.280 --> 00:09.440] Oh, I think he's dead right there. [00:09.440 --> 00:12.160] All right, five seconds to go, and I'm done. [00:12.160 --> 00:14.520] Three, two, one, Neil, it's yours. [00:14.520 --> 00:15.880] All right, Stuart, thank you very, very much. [00:15.880 --> 00:18.160] We have all the major market averages now at record highs. [00:18.160 --> 00:21.040] That includes the Dow, the SB500, and the NASDAQ. [00:21.040 --> 00:23.160] A lot of this has nothing to do with what happened [00:23.160 --> 00:24.720] in New Hampshire last night. [00:24.720 --> 00:27.360] Everything with the coronavirus and concern [00:27.360 --> 00:29.000] of that is easing a little bit. [00:29.000 --> 00:31.120] It kind of goes day by day. [00:31.120 --> 00:32.960] Now, the other story that you just [00:32.960 --> 00:35.680] heard from Lauren on this health care stack revival, [00:35.680 --> 00:37.320] or stocks revival here, and the notion [00:37.320 --> 00:39.640] that since Bernie Sanders didn't win as big [00:39.640 --> 00:42.200] as some thought he could in New Hampshire, [00:42.200 --> 00:44.120] his prospects may be a dimmer. [00:44.120 --> 00:45.560] That might be a bit of a leap here. [00:45.560 --> 00:47.840] Some of the firms that have been espousing that [00:47.840 --> 00:50.120] have not exactly had the best record [00:50.120 --> 00:52.560] when it comes to predicting how the political currents go, [00:52.560 --> 00:54.160] but that's what it is today. [00:54.160 --> 00:56.200] Meanwhile, the road to Super Tuesday, [00:56.200 --> 01:00.200] that's the biggie of the biggies, 1,357 delegates [01:00.200 --> 01:01.720] at stake come March 3. [01:01.720 --> 01:03.880] Now, for the time being here, the focus [01:03.880 --> 01:08.200] seems to be on Pete Buttigieg and, of course, Amy Klobuchar. [01:08.200 --> 01:10.280] They, meanwhile, have been increasing in some [01:10.280 --> 01:13.800] of the battlegrounds ahead of Super Tuesday, including Nevada. [01:13.800 --> 01:17.160] Joe Biden himself is asking donors to think of me [01:17.160 --> 01:18.520] and not give up on me. [01:18.520 --> 01:21.640] Elizabeth Warren, Amy, she's rethinking it all. [01:21.640 --> 01:23.680] Take a look. [01:23.680 --> 01:25.600] We're going to South Carolina. [01:25.600 --> 01:26.920] We're going to win those states. [01:26.920 --> 01:31.400] Now our campaign moves on to Nevada, to South Carolina, [01:31.400 --> 01:33.880] to communities across our country. [01:33.880 --> 01:39.040] We are going to South Carolina. [01:39.040 --> 01:41.120] We need to hear from Nevada and South Carolina [01:41.120 --> 01:43.080] and Super Tuesday states and beyond. [01:43.080 --> 01:47.320] The fight we're in, the fight to save our democracy, [01:47.320 --> 01:49.400] is an uphill battle. [01:49.400 --> 01:55.120] But our campaign is built for the long haul. [01:55.120 --> 01:57.520] All right, so where that long haul leads, [01:57.520 --> 01:59.200] any of these candidates, anyone's guess, [01:59.200 --> 02:00.560] we are down to nine right now. [02:00.560 --> 02:02.760] Remember when we had close to two dozen? [02:02.760 --> 02:03.320] That was then. [02:03.320 --> 02:04.640] This is the reality now. [02:04.640 --> 02:07.240] And we could see it further when it went up the field. [02:07.240 --> 02:09.480] Let's get to read from Hillary Vaughn in New Hampshire. [02:09.480 --> 02:11.800] Hey, Hillary. [02:11.800 --> 02:13.960] Hey, Neil, well, the race for the Democratic nomination [02:13.960 --> 02:17.200] really is shaping up to be a battle between one socialist [02:17.200 --> 02:19.280] senator and one moderate mayor. [02:19.280 --> 02:21.080] Because for the second state in a row, [02:21.080 --> 02:23.400] Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Senator Bernie Sanders [02:23.400 --> 02:28.360] finished neck and neck, Sanders with over 25% of the vote. [02:28.360 --> 02:32.040] But Pete Buttigieg's trailing him just one percentage [02:32.040 --> 02:34.600] point behind. [02:34.600 --> 02:37.840] We are taking on billionaires, and we're [02:37.840 --> 02:41.520] taking on candidates funded by billionaires. [02:41.520 --> 02:44.560] I admired Senator Sanders when I was a high school student. [02:44.560 --> 02:47.520] The politics of my way or the highway [02:47.520 --> 02:51.720] is a road to re-electing Donald Trump. [02:51.720 --> 02:54.240] Now the focus shifts to Nevada and South Carolina, [02:54.240 --> 02:57.440] where candidates are dumping dollars in ad buys. [02:57.440 --> 02:59.440] Buttigieg up with new ads in Nevada [02:59.440 --> 03:03.120] and also doubling his ground game in the state to 100 [03:03.120 --> 03:04.080] staffers. [03:04.080 --> 03:06.320] Senator Abie Klobuchar is doing the same [03:06.320 --> 03:09.400] to capitalize on what her campaign is now calling [03:09.400 --> 03:12.040] clomentum after she surged to the top tier [03:12.040 --> 03:15.360] with a surprise third place finish in the granite state. [03:15.360 --> 03:18.480] She's dropping over $1 million on an ad placement in Nevada [03:18.480 --> 03:21.840] today and will have 50 boots on the ground there this week. [03:21.840 --> 03:24.480] That's kind of the strategy that Joe Biden used yesterday [03:24.480 --> 03:28.080] to explain why he fled New Hampshire before polls closed [03:28.080 --> 03:30.240] to talk to voters in South Carolina [03:30.240 --> 03:33.720] and convince them that a fifth place finish here [03:33.720 --> 03:37.120] did not mean his campaign was finished. [03:37.120 --> 03:41.240] We just heard from the first two of 50 states. [03:41.240 --> 03:45.720] Two of them, not all the nation, not half the nation, [03:45.720 --> 03:48.360] not a quarter of the nation, not 10%. [03:48.360 --> 03:49.040] That's true. [03:49.040 --> 03:52.280] Right comes from that's the opening bell. [03:52.280 --> 03:55.440] Not the closing bell. [03:55.440 --> 03:58.240] Biden isn't the only one betting big on the minority vote. [03:58.240 --> 04:00.920] Tom Steyer has been devoting most of his resources [04:00.920 --> 04:02.200] in South Carolina. [04:02.200 --> 04:05.480] And Mayor Michael Bloomberg has invested millions [04:05.480 --> 04:06.800] in the Super Tuesday state. [04:06.800 --> 04:10.160] So Neil, this campaign and this cycle [04:10.160 --> 04:12.200] is getting more crowded, not less. [04:12.200 --> 04:12.840] Neil? [04:12.840 --> 04:14.320] All right, Hillary, thank you very much. [04:14.320 --> 04:16.320] Well, Michael Bloomberg, despite the controversy [04:16.320 --> 04:18.720] around that tape that's out, is gearing up for a super [04:18.720 --> 04:21.360] spending spree, particularly come Super Tuesday. [04:21.360 --> 04:23.920] Jackie DeAngelo has the details on what the mayor might [04:23.920 --> 04:24.920] be planning. [04:24.920 --> 04:25.600] Jackie? [04:25.600 --> 04:26.560] Good afternoon, Neil. [04:26.560 --> 04:28.200] Well, here's what we know so far. [04:28.200 --> 04:30.280] The numbers really are staggering. [04:30.280 --> 04:33.920] Bloomberg has spent more than $90 million [04:33.920 --> 04:35.560] in Super Tuesday states. [04:35.560 --> 04:39.640] That is four times what Steyer has spent, roughly 23 million, [04:39.640 --> 04:43.440] and more than 13 times what the rest of the candidates [04:43.440 --> 04:44.880] have spent combined. [04:44.880 --> 04:45.920] So that gives you a sense. [04:45.920 --> 04:48.240] Now, since Bloomberg joined the race in mid-November, [04:48.240 --> 04:52.040] he spent more than $344 million overall on ads, [04:52.040 --> 04:55.160] with the majority being TV, about $282 million. [04:55.160 --> 04:58.160] But about $57 million, that goes to Facebook and Google. [04:58.160 --> 05:00.080] He wanted to make sure he had a presence there. [05:00.080 --> 05:03.600] Just to compare, Senator Sanders has spent less than $26 [05:03.600 --> 05:05.200] million in that same period. [05:05.200 --> 05:08.800] Yet he seems to be first in terms of popularity right now. [05:08.800 --> 05:11.480] For Super Tuesday, Bloomberg is setting his sights [05:11.480 --> 05:12.480] on California. [05:12.480 --> 05:16.160] He has 800 staffers there and has spent about $36 million [05:16.160 --> 05:17.720] on ads in the state. [05:17.720 --> 05:21.960] He wants those 415 delegates that that state has to offer. [05:21.960 --> 05:24.800] Now, Mike Bloomberg holding his first rally today [05:24.800 --> 05:27.640] in Chattanooga, Tennessee, another Super Tuesday state. [05:27.640 --> 05:30.120] Meanwhile, the Trump campaign strategy in 2016 [05:30.120 --> 05:32.680] of harnessing this power of social media [05:32.680 --> 05:36.560] with such success has the Democrats trying to keep up. [05:36.560 --> 05:39.440] But if the investment in technology in the Iowa caucus, [05:39.440 --> 05:42.400] for example, is any indication, they're just not executing [05:42.400 --> 05:44.280] as well, so we shall see. [05:44.280 --> 05:46.000] All right, it is still early, all right. [05:46.000 --> 05:47.280] Jackie, thank you very, very much. [05:47.280 --> 05:48.520] You know, to put this in perspective, [05:48.520 --> 05:50.960] a lot of people are focusing one race at a time. [05:50.960 --> 05:53.640] We're only 2% of the way into the delegates [05:53.640 --> 05:56.960] that are required to ultimately get nominated [05:56.960 --> 05:59.360] for the Democratic presidential ticket. [05:59.360 --> 06:02.240] So putting that in perspective, the candidates [06:02.240 --> 06:04.960] we have right now, if you're keeping track at home, [06:04.960 --> 06:07.600] and if you're not, it's okay because I am, [06:07.600 --> 06:09.040] here's where we stand. [06:09.040 --> 06:14.040] You have, right now, Pete would have judged with 23 delegates. [06:15.440 --> 06:18.320] All right, you have Bernie Sanders with about 21. [06:18.320 --> 06:19.880] You have Elizabeth Warren with eight, [06:19.880 --> 06:23.200] Amy Klobuchar with seven, Joe Biden with six. [06:23.200 --> 06:25.320] That's the number on the screen you need [06:25.320 --> 06:29.240] to get the Democratic nomination, 1,990. [06:29.240 --> 06:31.880] All right, so the closest to that right now, [06:31.880 --> 06:36.880] Pete would have judged at 23, 23, 1,990. [06:36.880 --> 06:38.800] That's why we don't want to leap to conclusions [06:38.800 --> 06:41.600] or make some final statements on this race [06:41.600 --> 06:42.880] when we're only two primaries. [06:42.880 --> 06:44.880] Well, actually a primary and a caucus state into it. [06:44.880 --> 06:46.880] Let's get the read from former Democratic Tennessee [06:46.880 --> 06:49.480] congressman, Harold Ford Jr., New York Post, [06:49.480 --> 06:51.800] Colinus, Michael Goodwin, and Charlie Gastrina. [06:51.800 --> 06:52.640] Welcome to all. [06:52.640 --> 06:53.480] Thank you. [06:53.480 --> 06:54.600] Harold, we forget that only. [06:54.600 --> 06:56.000] I mean, there's a long way to go here. [06:56.000 --> 07:00.080] 1,357 to California number, 415 delegates. [07:00.080 --> 07:01.480] You have Texas and North Carolina, [07:01.480 --> 07:03.600] Texas with 228 delegates. [07:03.600 --> 07:05.280] It's crazy as some may have thought, [07:05.280 --> 07:06.920] Mayor Bloomberg's thoughts were, [07:06.920 --> 07:08.880] or his strategy about going after super twos [07:08.880 --> 07:10.120] and ignoring the first four states [07:10.120 --> 07:12.880] were only about 140 delegates are decided. [07:12.880 --> 07:16.880] 23 for Buttigieg right now, 21 for Sanders. [07:16.880 --> 07:19.280] The strategy may make a lot of sense. [07:19.280 --> 07:20.880] Last night, Clobeture benefited more [07:20.880 --> 07:23.280] from the New York Times endorsement than Warren did. [07:23.280 --> 07:25.680] She's in deep trouble as obviously has been stated. [07:25.680 --> 07:28.480] And unless Joe Biden wins South Carolina [07:28.480 --> 07:31.280] by 10 to 12 points, which means he's got to probably score [07:31.280 --> 07:34.280] 70 to 80% of the African-American vote, [07:34.280 --> 07:36.520] his campaign is probably, it's possible, [07:36.520 --> 07:39.280] but it's probably not likely, but it's possible. [07:39.280 --> 07:40.880] You've been talking to the Biden folks. [07:40.880 --> 07:44.080] And one of the thing you always hear when we're fixate [07:44.080 --> 07:46.480] on these first two states is it's all about [07:46.480 --> 07:47.680] a weeding out process. [07:47.680 --> 07:49.880] We're down to nine candidates right now. [07:49.880 --> 07:50.880] And it's early. [07:50.880 --> 07:51.880] It's still early. [07:51.880 --> 07:52.880] Right. [07:52.880 --> 07:57.880] And that notion that it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy [07:57.880 --> 07:59.280] in a way, not all the time, what do you think? [07:59.280 --> 08:02.080] He has two fundraisers, I think, this week. [08:02.080 --> 08:04.480] I think tomorrow, it's like back-to-back. [08:04.480 --> 08:05.480] They're apparently sold out. [08:05.480 --> 08:08.480] Now, they were sold out prior to Iowa, just so you know. [08:08.480 --> 08:09.480] So that's what they're touting. [08:09.480 --> 08:11.480] Here's how you know Biden's in trouble. [08:11.480 --> 08:16.680] And you get this from the way his supporters are defending him. [08:16.680 --> 08:19.680] Okay, they're saying, listen, it ain't over. [08:19.680 --> 08:23.080] They give the delegate counts like you gave. [08:23.080 --> 08:27.080] And then they say, but he has to kill it in South Carolina, [08:27.080 --> 08:29.480] do well in Nevada and Super Tuesday. [08:29.480 --> 08:33.480] And that butt is interesting because it's one of those big butts. [08:33.480 --> 08:36.480] It's not like butt, but it's butt. [08:36.480 --> 08:41.480] And they are conceding that this thing is starting to get out of control. [08:41.480 --> 08:45.480] The fascinating thing I find with Biden is that for months and months, [08:45.480 --> 08:47.480] he's been downplaying Iowa. [08:47.480 --> 08:48.480] Right. [08:48.480 --> 08:49.480] We broke it out here. [08:49.480 --> 08:50.480] They were giving up. [08:50.480 --> 08:51.480] They said they couldn't win. [08:51.480 --> 08:53.480] And he still lost the media narrative. [08:53.480 --> 08:56.480] So what we have is a campaign that is lost in the air. [08:56.480 --> 08:57.480] Well, that's because he dove back in. [08:57.480 --> 08:59.480] He was emboldened by polls, right? [08:59.480 --> 09:00.480] Briefly. [09:00.480 --> 09:01.480] Yeah. [09:01.480 --> 09:02.480] National polls in particular. [09:02.480 --> 09:03.480] Right. [09:03.480 --> 09:04.480] And I think that could be risked. [09:04.480 --> 09:05.480] And it backfired him. [09:05.480 --> 09:08.480] And as Harold said, it looks like Bloomberg played it perfectly. [09:08.480 --> 09:12.480] And by the way, he's spending, he's got 300 million he's spending so far. [09:12.480 --> 09:14.480] He's going to spend 2 billion. [09:14.480 --> 09:16.480] He's like, if you think about it, he's almost there. [09:16.480 --> 09:17.480] Well, you know what? [09:17.480 --> 09:20.480] Let's talk about Bloomberg for a while because you could make an argument [09:20.480 --> 09:21.480] the release of this tape. [09:21.480 --> 09:23.480] We haven't seen any new polls post that. [09:23.480 --> 09:24.480] Maybe he overcomes it. [09:24.480 --> 09:26.480] He's apologized yet again. [09:26.480 --> 09:31.480] But the whole stop and first thing is relationship with African-American voters. [09:31.480 --> 09:33.480] Is he really in the clear? [09:33.480 --> 09:38.480] I mean, did the performance last night of Mayor Pete and Senator Klobuchar [09:38.480 --> 09:42.480] provide enough alternative wiggle room for party types [09:42.480 --> 09:46.480] who are worried about the hard left charge of the Democratic Party? [09:46.480 --> 09:50.480] I think Klobuchar and Buttigieg do complicate Bloomberg's strategy [09:50.480 --> 09:56.480] in the sense that I think what he wants is to be the one facing off against Bernie Sanders. [09:56.480 --> 10:01.480] And the problem is, as they begin to rack up delegates through these states, [10:01.480 --> 10:03.480] it becomes very hard to distinguish yourself. [10:03.480 --> 10:06.480] And then to Harold's point about the delegate count, [10:06.480 --> 10:11.480] when the further you get into this and more people getting more delegates, [10:11.480 --> 10:14.480] because of the rules, there's no winner take all. [10:14.480 --> 10:16.480] You get 15%, you get delegates. [10:16.480 --> 10:21.480] It's going to be very hard, I think, for anybody to get a majority pre-convention [10:21.480 --> 10:25.480] if this pattern continues of multiple people staying in [10:25.480 --> 10:27.480] and getting delegates in each and every state. [10:27.480 --> 10:32.480] By the way, there's one last player in the race from 9 to 8. [10:32.480 --> 10:35.480] Deval Patrikus suspended his campaign. [10:35.480 --> 10:36.480] And Yang is the youngest. [10:36.480 --> 10:37.480] So we're down to 8. [10:37.480 --> 10:39.480] Well, Yang, yeah, last night. [10:39.480 --> 10:40.480] So we're down to 8. [10:40.480 --> 10:45.480] Harold is still 8 individuals battling for proportional share of delegates [10:45.480 --> 10:46.480] through every contest. [10:46.480 --> 10:48.480] I think you need 15% to get a share of that. [10:48.480 --> 10:50.480] How do you think that goes? [10:50.480 --> 10:55.480] Look, Democrats foolishly switched the rules to this 15% to get a delegate thing. [10:55.480 --> 10:59.480] It should at least be 20 or 22, 23% before you get a delegate. [10:59.480 --> 11:00.480] But those are the rules. [11:00.480 --> 11:04.480] And they did that in response to the Bernie outcry, right? [11:04.480 --> 11:06.480] But this, we're choosing a president here. [11:06.480 --> 11:09.480] There was a great piece written in the journal yesterday by Jim Dahl, [11:09.480 --> 11:11.480] where he said, by Governor Jolley, he said, we're not choosing a prophet. [11:11.480 --> 11:13.480] We're choosing a president. [11:13.480 --> 11:16.480] And Democrats have to awaken to that reality. [11:16.480 --> 11:20.480] You consider that Bloomberg is the only person on the ground in these seven or eight states here, [11:20.480 --> 11:23.480] of the states that really had big delegate numbers on March 3rd. [11:23.480 --> 11:25.480] He could find himself coming out of March 3rd. [11:25.480 --> 11:28.480] And three weeks from now, we will have a much clearer sense of this. [11:28.480 --> 11:30.480] And then you have a little later in the month. [11:30.480 --> 11:32.480] So you think he's got a shot, obviously. [11:32.480 --> 11:33.480] Well, I think he has a real shot. [11:33.480 --> 11:36.480] Because as much as Klobuchar and Buttigieg are complicating things, [11:36.480 --> 11:38.480] where are they going to find the resources? [11:38.480 --> 11:39.480] Let me just make this point. [11:39.480 --> 11:43.480] Now, the worry I have is Warren, for Bloomberg, because if Warren gets out, [11:43.480 --> 11:46.480] sooner rather than looking for any supporters. [11:46.480 --> 11:47.480] But they don't get 50%. [11:47.480 --> 11:49.480] But if he's able to jump to 40, then you get a big fight. [11:49.480 --> 11:50.480] How old is Bloomberg? [11:50.480 --> 11:51.480] You know this party better than I do. [11:51.480 --> 11:53.480] Last night, I spoke with a guy that you know. [11:53.480 --> 11:55.480] He's a prominent Wall Street Democrat. [11:55.480 --> 11:56.480] I'm not going to say his name. [11:56.480 --> 11:58.480] And he basically said this. [11:58.480 --> 11:59.480] He supports Biden. [11:59.480 --> 12:02.480] He said, listen, I love Mike Bloomberg to buy this election. [12:02.480 --> 12:05.480] I have no problem with Mike Bloomberg buying the election. [12:05.480 --> 12:10.480] But if he buys this election, there will be civil war in Milwaukee. [12:10.480 --> 12:12.480] The base won't allow it. [12:12.480 --> 12:16.480] I'm just saying, just think of what the scene, remember Chicago? [12:16.480 --> 12:18.480] Kind of, remember, Chicago in 1968. [12:18.480 --> 12:23.480] What will the scene be like in Milwaukee if Mike Bloomberg is able to buy [12:23.480 --> 12:26.480] the Democratic nomination above any progressive? [12:26.480 --> 12:27.480] I'm just saying. [12:27.480 --> 12:31.480] Well, one of that progressive is way, way, way off the delegates needed. [12:31.480 --> 12:32.480] It's another bad side. [12:32.480 --> 12:33.480] That's right. [12:33.480 --> 12:35.480] That's right. [12:35.480 --> 12:38.480] I mean, I think whoever goes to the convention with the most delegates, [12:38.480 --> 12:41.480] if that's Bernie and he is not the nominee, then you're right. [12:41.480 --> 12:46.480] I think it's going to be very difficult to give the nomination to somebody [12:46.480 --> 12:48.480] who doesn't finish first or even a close second. [12:48.480 --> 12:50.480] You know what I found fascinating, you guys probably know this, [12:50.480 --> 12:54.480] that most conventions don't have someone entering the convention, [12:54.480 --> 12:58.480] entering with all the delegates necessary for the nomination. [12:58.480 --> 13:03.480] Players who've had the most from Barack Obama all the way back to JFK, [13:03.480 --> 13:06.480] they end up winning, but it's not ironclad, you know? [13:06.480 --> 13:07.480] I mean, they don't... [13:07.480 --> 13:09.480] Well, the super delegates were voting then. [13:09.480 --> 13:10.480] Well, right. [13:10.480 --> 13:12.480] I mean, that could be a big, that could be a big game changer. [13:12.480 --> 13:15.480] They hope Harold would be in a second ballot, right? [13:15.480 --> 13:16.480] In a second ballot, yeah. [13:16.480 --> 13:17.480] And how do you expect they go? [13:17.480 --> 13:19.480] Look, let's let this thing play out. [13:19.480 --> 13:20.480] I don't think there's... [13:20.480 --> 13:22.480] It's going to be hard for someone to get to those numbers, [13:22.480 --> 13:24.480] and I don't doubt the fight between the two will be severe. [13:24.480 --> 13:28.480] But I will remind you, four years ago, around this time, perhaps on this very set, [13:28.480 --> 13:32.480] maybe this set wasn't ready yet, but around this building, [13:32.480 --> 13:34.480] there were people wondering what's going to happen [13:34.480 --> 13:36.480] at the Republican convention when Trump gets there. [13:36.480 --> 13:37.480] You're absolutely right. [13:37.480 --> 13:38.480] And how are the Bush people going to react? [13:38.480 --> 13:42.480] And everybody around, Democrats, the dislike for Trump amongst Democrats is strong. [13:42.480 --> 13:44.480] You're strong among Republicans. [13:44.480 --> 13:45.480] Exactly. [13:45.480 --> 13:47.480] Yang said a very smart thing when he got out. [13:47.480 --> 13:48.480] I not agree with him. [13:48.480 --> 13:49.480] Democrats ought to pay attention. [13:49.480 --> 13:51.480] He said, beating Trump alone won't solve all of our problems. [13:51.480 --> 13:52.480] We have to have a vision. [13:52.480 --> 13:57.480] So Sanders and Bloomberg, at this point, seem to have the most defined, robust visions [13:57.480 --> 13:59.480] of where the country should go. [13:59.480 --> 14:00.480] That doesn't ignore what you said, Troy. [14:00.480 --> 14:01.480] That's where the fight's going to be. [14:01.480 --> 14:02.480] I think the... [14:02.480 --> 14:04.480] And one of those guys will get inside the other two. [14:04.480 --> 14:05.480] I agree. [14:05.480 --> 14:06.480] But my point is this. [14:06.480 --> 14:10.480] People's mainstream media focuses a lot on the Republican party, [14:10.480 --> 14:12.480] and never Trumpers versus Trumpers and all that. [14:12.480 --> 14:16.480] There is really a civil war going on inside the Democratic party. [14:16.480 --> 14:17.480] It is nasty. [14:17.480 --> 14:18.480] Oh, yeah. [14:18.480 --> 14:23.480] I get it because I actually report the other side, report both sides here, [14:23.480 --> 14:24.480] probably against the Democrats. [14:24.480 --> 14:25.480] And both sides hate you. [14:25.480 --> 14:26.480] So what's the point? [14:26.480 --> 14:27.480] Which is perfect. [14:27.480 --> 14:28.480] It's fine with me. [14:28.480 --> 14:35.480] But I'm just saying, Neil, this party is not ready for a billionaire to buy the election. [14:35.480 --> 14:36.480] I'm just telling you. [14:36.480 --> 14:37.480] Well, no, you can see it in the coverage. [14:37.480 --> 14:41.480] I mean, it's sort of Bernie against everybody else, in a way. [14:41.480 --> 14:43.480] I mean, it's the Bernie's who feel... [14:43.480 --> 14:49.480] They were cheating a victim, and they robbed him of votes, but even with superdelegates. [14:49.480 --> 14:52.480] Hillary Clinton, say what you will, over one Farron Square. [14:52.480 --> 14:53.480] Yeah, sure. [14:53.480 --> 14:54.480] So that was down to the same... [14:54.480 --> 14:56.480] The black voters are the base of this party. [14:56.480 --> 14:58.480] If he gets near the end of this thing, Bloomberg, [14:58.480 --> 15:00.480] and he's polling higher than anybody with black voters... [15:00.480 --> 15:02.480] You think that's going to happen after the stop and frist? [15:02.480 --> 15:03.480] He's now number two. [15:03.480 --> 15:04.480] Stop and frist. [15:04.480 --> 15:06.480] Black voters are the most mature and thoughtful voters in the base. [15:06.480 --> 15:09.480] They don't put people in the pill in the box forever. [15:09.480 --> 15:10.480] For some... [15:10.480 --> 15:11.480] He's going to point to it. [15:11.480 --> 15:14.480] They're not like Italian-American votes, right? [15:14.480 --> 15:16.480] You've heard of Italian-American votes. [15:16.480 --> 15:17.480] You've heard of Italian-American votes. [15:17.480 --> 15:18.480] All right, all right. [15:18.480 --> 15:20.480] You were all great. [15:20.480 --> 15:23.480] I just wanted to be politically correct here. [15:23.480 --> 15:25.480] Letting you know we had developed by the former Massachusetts governors [15:25.480 --> 15:26.480] dropped out of the race. [15:26.480 --> 15:28.480] That means a little more than a week. [15:28.480 --> 15:31.480] These two last night, Senator Michael Bennett, he dropped out. [15:31.480 --> 15:33.480] Andrew Yang, he dropped out. [15:33.480 --> 15:35.480] A week prior to that, John Delaney dropped out. [15:35.480 --> 15:39.480] We are left now with eight candidates still in this race. [15:39.480 --> 15:42.480] And a couple of those, a little dicey. [15:42.480 --> 16:11.480] Let's get a little more to this. [16:12.480 --> 16:14.480] Let's get a little more to this. [16:42.480 --> 16:44.480] Happy Noses Everywhere. 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[18:23.480 --> 18:25.480] The bath fills and drains quickly, [18:25.480 --> 18:27.480] while the heated seat soothes your back, neck, and shoulders. [18:27.480 --> 18:29.480] Kohler is an expert in bathing, [18:29.480 --> 18:31.480] so you can count on a deep soaking experience. [18:31.480 --> 18:32.480] Are you seeing this? [18:32.480 --> 18:34.480] The Kohler walk-in bath comes with fully adjustable [18:34.480 --> 18:37.480] hydrotherapy jets and our exclusive bubble massage. [18:37.480 --> 18:39.480] Everything is installed in as little as a day [18:39.480 --> 18:41.480] by a Kohler certified installer. [18:41.480 --> 18:43.480] And it's made by Kohler, America's leading plumbing brand. [18:43.480 --> 18:44.480] We need this bath. [18:44.480 --> 18:45.480] Yes. [18:45.480 --> 18:46.480] Yes, you do. [18:46.480 --> 18:48.480] A Kohler walk-in bath provides independence [18:48.480 --> 18:49.480] with peace of mind. [18:49.480 --> 18:51.480] Call 1-800-698-1274 [18:51.480 --> 18:53.480] and ask about $1,500 off a walk-in bath, [18:53.480 --> 18:55.480] plus nightlight toilet seat with in-home quote. [18:55.480 --> 18:58.480] Or visit KohlerWalkinBath.com for more information. [19:01.480 --> 19:03.480] The World Health Organization is giving the coronavirus [19:03.480 --> 19:06.480] the official name of COVID-19, [19:06.480 --> 19:08.480] about 200 Georgia residents [19:08.480 --> 19:11.480] forced into self-isolation in the middle of all that. [19:11.480 --> 19:14.480] Fox News correspondent Jonathan Sarri has the very latest. [19:14.480 --> 19:16.480] Hey, Jonathan, what are we looking at? [19:16.480 --> 19:21.480] Yeah, well, COVID-19 is short for coronavirus disease 2019. [19:21.480 --> 19:25.480] 2019, of course, is when the virus was discovered [19:25.480 --> 19:26.480] back in December. [19:26.480 --> 19:29.480] The WHO is hosting a second day of meetings in Geneva [19:29.480 --> 19:33.480] with more than 400 scientists and independent experts [19:33.480 --> 19:35.480] trying to coordinate international research [19:35.480 --> 19:37.480] and strategy for fighting the outbreak. [19:37.480 --> 19:40.480] Here in the U.S., federal health officials say [19:40.480 --> 19:45.480] a mislabeled sample taken from a patient infected with COVID-19 [19:45.480 --> 19:49.480] led to her premature release from a San Diego hospital. [19:49.480 --> 19:51.480] She was taken back to her quarantine site [19:51.480 --> 19:53.480] at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar [19:53.480 --> 19:56.480] before officials discovered the woman was not among [19:56.480 --> 19:59.480] a large group of American evacuees from China [19:59.480 --> 20:03.480] who had tested negative for the coronavirus. [20:03.480 --> 20:06.480] There was no fault of the test itself. [20:06.480 --> 20:08.480] The test itself was accurate. [20:08.480 --> 20:12.480] The issue was that the test wasn't run [20:12.480 --> 20:14.480] when we thought it had been. [20:14.480 --> 20:17.480] State Department employees and family members evacuated [20:17.480 --> 20:19.480] on an earlier flight were released from quarantine [20:19.480 --> 20:22.480] at another California military base yesterday. [20:22.480 --> 20:26.480] After all, 195 received a clean bill of health. [20:26.480 --> 20:29.480] One local official expressed frustration, though, [20:29.480 --> 20:33.480] with rumors and snark circulating on social media. [20:33.480 --> 20:37.480] I don't want somebody to be attacked or ostracized or outed [20:37.480 --> 20:39.480] for having been part of this quarantine group. [20:39.480 --> 20:41.480] They don't need additional testing. [20:41.480 --> 20:43.480] They don't need to be shunned. [20:43.480 --> 20:45.480] They don't have novel coronavirus. [20:45.480 --> 20:47.480] That was the whole reason for this quarantine, [20:47.480 --> 20:49.480] and that quarantine has now run. [20:49.480 --> 20:51.480] And Neil, the Atlanta Journal of Constitution [20:51.480 --> 20:53.480] and other local media outlets are reporting [20:53.480 --> 20:55.480] that the Georgia Department of Public Health [20:55.480 --> 20:59.480] is helping approximately 200 Georgia travelers [20:59.480 --> 21:03.480] returning from China self-monitor and isolate themselves. [21:03.480 --> 21:08.480] None of the travelers visited Hubei province [21:08.480 --> 21:10.480] at the center of the outbreak, [21:10.480 --> 21:12.480] but they did visit other parts of China, [21:12.480 --> 21:15.480] and as a precaution, they're voluntarily remaining [21:15.480 --> 21:17.480] in isolation so far. [21:17.480 --> 21:19.480] None of the travelers has gotten sick. [21:19.480 --> 21:20.480] Neil. [21:20.480 --> 21:21.480] And hopefully it stays that way. [21:21.480 --> 21:22.480] Jonathan, thank you. [21:22.480 --> 21:24.480] In the meantime, a lot of companies certainly [21:24.480 --> 21:26.480] are vulnerable to delayed production. [21:26.480 --> 21:28.480] We heard from the likes of Mattel and Hasbro [21:28.480 --> 21:29.480] and Under Armour. [21:29.480 --> 21:32.480] The fact of the matter is the markets keep hitting highs [21:32.480 --> 21:35.480] because this seems contained, at least to the markets, [21:35.480 --> 21:37.480] and isn't as out of control as it is. [21:37.480 --> 21:39.480] And they look at it, stepping back, [21:39.480 --> 21:41.480] and things could be a lot worse. [21:41.480 --> 21:44.480] Now, oil is losing its appeal on the fear course [21:44.480 --> 21:46.480] that this will lead to a global slowdown. [21:46.480 --> 21:48.480] It's been a bumpy ride, but the consistent ride [21:48.480 --> 21:51.480] is that oil could well stay in a bare market here. [21:51.480 --> 21:53.480] Price Futures Group's senior strategist, [21:53.480 --> 21:55.480] Fox News contributor Phil Flynn, on that. [21:55.480 --> 21:56.480] Phil, help me with this. [21:56.480 --> 21:59.480] I guess that is the prevailing view, right? [21:59.480 --> 22:02.480] At the very least, things slow down, not recessionary, [22:02.480 --> 22:03.480] but they slow down. [22:03.480 --> 22:06.480] Demand for oil, demand for energy supplies, [22:06.480 --> 22:08.480] demand, I guess, for commodities in general, eases. [22:08.480 --> 22:10.480] Is that your sentiment? [22:10.480 --> 22:12.480] That is actually correct. [22:12.480 --> 22:15.480] And what we've seen here over the last couple of weeks [22:15.480 --> 22:18.480] is demand destruction on a historic scale. [22:18.480 --> 22:21.480] I mean, you had cities shutting down, factories shutting down, [22:21.480 --> 22:23.480] people not going anywhere. [22:23.480 --> 22:27.480] And that took a historic hit on demand destruction. [22:27.480 --> 22:30.480] Probably the biggest deal since 2008. [22:30.480 --> 22:32.480] A lot of these companies that are producing in China, [22:32.480 --> 22:34.480] they're going to have trouble. [22:34.480 --> 22:37.480] There's going to be ramifications going for some time. [22:37.480 --> 22:40.480] But interestingly enough, it's amazing how resilient [22:40.480 --> 22:42.480] the markets can be sometime. [22:42.480 --> 22:44.480] We're seeing that in the stock market, right? [22:44.480 --> 22:47.480] Despite the concerns of a lot of these companies right now, [22:47.480 --> 22:49.480] having trouble on the supply chain, [22:49.480 --> 22:51.480] not being able to get product, [22:51.480 --> 22:53.480] the stocks are rebounding because they're able to look [22:53.480 --> 22:55.480] beyond the virus. [22:55.480 --> 22:58.480] And even in this bear market on oil, [22:58.480 --> 23:01.480] we're starting to see signs that maybe the worst could be over. [23:01.480 --> 23:03.480] I'll give you a perfect example. [23:03.480 --> 23:05.480] We had a very bearish crude oil report today. [23:05.480 --> 23:07.480] Supplies up 7 million barrels. [23:07.480 --> 23:10.480] You would expect that oil prices would collapse. [23:10.480 --> 23:11.480] Not so. [23:11.480 --> 23:13.480] The price of oil is up very strong today. [23:13.480 --> 23:16.480] Part of that is because what we heard from OPEC. [23:16.480 --> 23:18.480] OPEC today put out a report. [23:18.480 --> 23:20.480] They said, hey, the demand destruction is bad, [23:20.480 --> 23:24.480] but maybe it's only going to impact us by 400,000 barrels a day. [23:24.480 --> 23:27.480] That's an estimate that was lower than initially feared. [23:27.480 --> 23:30.480] So all of a sudden, you know, we start to come back. [23:30.480 --> 23:32.480] Now, if we do contain this virus, [23:32.480 --> 23:34.480] we have this stuff called pent-up demand. [23:34.480 --> 23:37.480] All these factories have got to make up for lost time. [23:37.480 --> 23:40.480] So they're going to be working double time using more energy, [23:40.480 --> 23:42.480] you know, than they normally would have. [23:42.480 --> 23:44.480] So, you know, once you get through this, [23:44.480 --> 23:48.480] you can actually see a bounce not only in the price of oil, [23:48.480 --> 23:50.480] but in economic growth as well. [23:50.480 --> 23:52.480] So we could see a nice bounce back. [23:52.480 --> 23:54.480] Phil, you make it sound easy. [23:54.480 --> 23:56.480] I actually understood a lot. [23:56.480 --> 23:58.480] Thank you, my friend Phil Flynn in Chicago. [23:58.480 --> 24:00.480] By the way, the Dow, is that a record? [24:00.480 --> 24:01.480] So no worries there. [24:01.480 --> 24:03.480] SMB, NASDAQ, they're all in records. 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[26:52.480 --> 26:55.480] Annuities are like building your retirement on QuickSand. [26:55.480 --> 26:56.480] Don't do it. [26:56.480 --> 27:00.480] If your portfolio is $500,000 or more, call us. [27:00.480 --> 27:01.480] It's your retirement. [27:01.480 --> 27:03.480] You want the best advice you can get. [27:03.480 --> 27:10.480] Call 1-800-606-6699. [27:10.480 --> 27:13.480] You know, when it comes to the big Chinese telecom concern, [27:13.480 --> 27:16.480] Huawei, we've always been suspicious that they spy on us. [27:16.480 --> 27:17.480] We've dug up proof in the past. [27:17.480 --> 27:20.480] But now we have some really disturbing proof [27:20.480 --> 27:22.480] that they've been doing this and gaining access [27:22.480 --> 27:24.480] to our own mobile networks. [27:24.480 --> 27:26.480] Try for over a decade. [27:26.480 --> 27:27.480] Dider Bolton has much more. [27:27.480 --> 27:28.480] Dider. [27:28.480 --> 27:30.480] Yeah, Neil, this is the first time that the U.S. [27:30.480 --> 27:33.480] has given details about how it thinks [27:33.480 --> 27:37.480] that the Chinese government is using Huawei to spy on the U.S. [27:37.480 --> 27:39.480] Now, our colleagues at the Wall Street Journal, [27:39.480 --> 27:40.480] they broke this story. [27:40.480 --> 27:42.480] They talked about spying through these back doors [27:42.480 --> 27:44.480] as you just alluded to. [27:44.480 --> 27:46.480] Specifically, American officials say that Huawei [27:46.480 --> 27:49.480] has built equipment that allows it to tap into telecoms [27:49.480 --> 27:52.480] without alerting the carriers. [27:52.480 --> 27:54.480] So the U.S. supposedly kept this information [27:54.480 --> 27:56.480] highly classified until late last year. [27:56.480 --> 27:58.480] It started sharing it with allies, [27:58.480 --> 28:00.480] including Germany and the U.K., [28:00.480 --> 28:03.480] with the idea of getting them to freeze out Huawei [28:03.480 --> 28:05.480] from building their 5G networks. [28:05.480 --> 28:06.480] But both the U.K. and Germany, [28:06.480 --> 28:08.480] they're going forward with their contracts with Huawei. [28:08.480 --> 28:11.480] The U.K. even saying last month it would allow Huawei [28:11.480 --> 28:16.480] to build a limited amount of a non-core 5G infrastructure. [28:16.480 --> 28:19.480] For the record, Huawei strongly denies [28:19.480 --> 28:21.480] the U.S. government's allegation here [28:21.480 --> 28:23.480] as just part of the company's statement. [28:23.480 --> 28:24.480] I won't read it verbatim, [28:24.480 --> 28:26.480] but you will see words like a smoke screen [28:26.480 --> 28:30.480] that essentially the U.S. allegations defy accepted logic. [28:30.480 --> 28:32.480] They say that basically the Wall Street Journal [28:32.480 --> 28:37.480] is repeating the lies being spread by U.S. officials. [28:37.480 --> 28:38.480] Now, oddly enough, this tension [28:38.480 --> 28:40.480] between the U.S. government and Huawei, [28:40.480 --> 28:42.480] or China, however you want to see it, [28:42.480 --> 28:45.480] somewhat vindicates Apple's and Facebook's stance [28:45.480 --> 28:47.480] because for years, the U.S. government [28:47.480 --> 28:50.480] has been pressure law enforcement to circumvent [28:50.480 --> 28:52.480] arguing against that, [28:52.480 --> 28:55.480] saying malicious actors would be able [28:55.480 --> 28:57.480] to exploit these so-called backdoors. [28:57.480 --> 29:00.480] So, Neil, privacy, data, security, [29:00.480 --> 29:02.480] all of this front and center, back to you. [29:02.480 --> 29:04.480] All right, thank you very much, Deeter. [29:04.480 --> 29:06.480] Meanwhile, most of our could say they're better off now [29:06.480 --> 29:10.480] than they were certainly three, four years ago. [29:10.480 --> 29:14.480] So, why is the guy who's helping provide that environment [29:14.480 --> 29:17.480] tight in the polls after this? [29:17.480 --> 29:24.480] I go way beyond the headlines. [29:24.480 --> 29:26.480] I dig it very, very deep, [29:26.480 --> 29:28.480] and I'm looking for those kernels of information [29:28.480 --> 29:31.480] that often go unreported but mean everything for the viewer. [29:31.480 --> 29:33.480] It's all about investing in your future, [29:33.480 --> 29:35.480] your American dream. [29:35.480 --> 29:38.480] Fox Business, invested in you. [29:38.480 --> 29:48.480] Acura in two words. [29:53.480 --> 29:55.480] Beat that. [29:55.480 --> 30:00.480] I'm on it. Beat two. Beat that. [30:00.480 --> 30:09.480] Well, that about sums it up. [30:30.480 --> 30:32.480] It's the Valentine's Day sale. 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[32:57.480 --> 32:59.480] The New York Governor Andrew Cuomo meeting [32:59.480 --> 33:01.480] with the President of the United States tomorrow, [33:01.480 --> 33:03.480] they're going to try to hammer out some sort of a compromise [33:03.480 --> 33:05.480] in this global entry access. [33:05.480 --> 33:07.480] The Governor wants it back for New Yorkers. [33:07.480 --> 33:10.480] The President wants some other things from that. [33:10.480 --> 33:12.480] Blake Berman at the White House with the very latest. Blake. [33:12.480 --> 33:13.480] Hi there, Neil. [33:13.480 --> 33:15.480] At the heart of this meeting that is set to take place [33:15.480 --> 33:16.480] here tomorrow at the White House, [33:16.480 --> 33:19.480] between President Trump and New York's Governor Andrew Cuomo [33:19.480 --> 33:21.480] is the President and the Trump administration's desire [33:21.480 --> 33:24.480] to crack down on what it sees as sanctuary cities [33:24.480 --> 33:26.480] and sanctuary policies. [33:26.480 --> 33:29.480] At issue here happens to be the global entry [33:29.480 --> 33:31.480] and trusted traveler programs, [33:31.480 --> 33:34.480] which allows for expedited reentry back into the country. [33:34.480 --> 33:36.480] Now, the Department of Homeland Security [33:36.480 --> 33:38.480] stripped away that benefit from New Yorkers, [33:38.480 --> 33:42.480] saying it cannot access New York's DMV database [33:42.480 --> 33:46.480] to see if potential participants meet all requirements. [33:46.480 --> 33:49.480] Cuomo says this all has to do with one thing [33:49.480 --> 33:52.480] and one thing alone, politics. [33:52.480 --> 33:54.480] See New Yorkers a democratic state. [33:54.480 --> 33:58.480] So I believe the Republican administration thinks [33:58.480 --> 34:02.480] there's no value to them in helping New York. [34:02.480 --> 34:06.480] That's putting politics above basic public service [34:06.480 --> 34:09.480] and I just think it's terrible. [34:09.480 --> 34:12.480] Now Cuomo says he is willing to let the database [34:12.480 --> 34:15.480] be accessed in a case by case basis [34:15.480 --> 34:17.480] for those who want to use the program. [34:17.480 --> 34:19.480] Earlier this morning I asked the Deputy Press Secretary [34:19.480 --> 34:22.480] Hogan Gidley if that would satisfy the President, [34:22.480 --> 34:25.480] Gidley would not say, but he did make the argument [34:25.480 --> 34:28.480] that this is about something completely different. [34:28.480 --> 34:29.480] Safety. [34:29.480 --> 34:32.480] The people of New York City especially understand [34:32.480 --> 34:35.480] what it means to have people come into this country [34:35.480 --> 34:38.480] without the proper documentation after 9-11 [34:38.480 --> 34:42.480] and so I hope that Governor Cuomo can work with the President [34:42.480 --> 34:44.480] to come forward with some type of solution [34:44.480 --> 34:47.480] that allows the federal government to do its main function, [34:47.480 --> 34:51.480] which is protect all Americans and their families. [34:51.480 --> 34:53.480] Neil, you'll remember earlier this week over here [34:53.480 --> 34:55.480] at the White House, President Trump hosted [34:55.480 --> 34:57.480] the nation's governors, about two-thirds of them. [34:57.480 --> 35:00.480] We're over here for a dinner Sunday evening [35:00.480 --> 35:03.480] and then a meeting with the President on Monday as well. [35:03.480 --> 35:06.480] This will be a bit different, a bit more intimate. [35:06.480 --> 35:08.480] I guess if you want to describe it that way [35:08.480 --> 35:10.480] as this is going to be a face-to-face setting [35:10.480 --> 35:14.480] to try to hash out maybe even swap proposals [35:14.480 --> 35:16.480] about what to do going forward with New York [35:16.480 --> 35:19.480] and this benefit that the New York Governor wants to see [35:19.480 --> 35:21.480] for many in his state. [35:21.480 --> 35:23.480] This invites that line, that famous cliche, [35:23.480 --> 35:27.480] to be a fly on the wall as if the fly understood English. [35:27.480 --> 35:30.480] We have those once a week around here. [35:30.480 --> 35:32.480] All right, thank you very much, my friend. [35:32.480 --> 35:35.480] It never gets old for me. Believe me, it gets old for the crew here. [35:35.480 --> 35:37.480] All right, American Optimism is surging. [35:37.480 --> 35:40.480] 61% Americans say they are indeed better off [35:40.480 --> 35:42.480] compared to a little over three years ago, [35:42.480 --> 35:45.480] which coordinates well with the President's inauguration. [35:45.480 --> 35:48.480] Higher percentage than in prior elections we've seen, [35:48.480 --> 35:50.480] certainly for an incumbent President, [35:50.480 --> 35:53.480] to form a Reagan economic advisor, Art Laffer. [35:53.480 --> 35:55.480] Art, you know, it's interesting. [35:55.480 --> 35:58.480] The line that Ronald Reagan famously used [35:58.480 --> 36:00.480] both to beat Jimmy Carter and then to get reelected [36:00.480 --> 36:02.480] when he was up against Walter Mondale [36:02.480 --> 36:05.480] is, are you better off than you were? [36:05.480 --> 36:09.480] You know, people doubted it in 1980. [36:09.480 --> 36:11.480] They were convinced of it in 1984. [36:11.480 --> 36:16.480] How important are surveys like this? [36:16.480 --> 36:19.480] I think this Gallup survey is very, very important. [36:19.480 --> 36:22.480] I used that in my paper in 2016, Neil. [36:22.480 --> 36:25.480] I used a precise one there to really estimate [36:25.480 --> 36:29.480] that I thought Trump was going to win the election in 2016. [36:29.480 --> 36:31.480] I went through all the back data, [36:31.480 --> 36:34.480] but this is one key element I used in 2016 [36:34.480 --> 36:36.480] and I think it's really strong now. [36:36.480 --> 36:39.480] And I think it reflects very well on the President. [36:39.480 --> 36:41.480] I think his chances looking at these numbers [36:41.480 --> 36:44.480] are being reflected in those numbers. [36:44.480 --> 36:47.480] You know, one of the things I got traveling to Iowa [36:47.480 --> 36:49.480] and New Hampshire art is this notion, [36:49.480 --> 36:53.480] I guess for Democrats, if the issues are kind of giving you [36:53.480 --> 36:55.480] lemons, make a different lemonade. [36:55.480 --> 36:57.480] So they won't focus so much on the aggregate economy [36:57.480 --> 36:59.480] that is doing better. [36:59.480 --> 37:01.480] There's just no way you can quibble with it. [37:01.480 --> 37:04.480] And I wouldn't call them wedge issues, [37:04.480 --> 37:07.480] but they're focusing on things like healthcare [37:07.480 --> 37:10.480] and issues that won them back the house [37:10.480 --> 37:13.480] and that that strategy, they're convinced, [37:13.480 --> 37:14.480] they're going to fail off. [37:14.480 --> 37:16.480] What do you think? [37:16.480 --> 37:17.480] I don't think so. [37:17.480 --> 37:19.480] I mean, they've got to go for something. [37:19.480 --> 37:20.480] They can't go for the economy. [37:20.480 --> 37:22.480] They can't go for the impeachment. [37:22.480 --> 37:24.480] They're all these major issues they just can't do [37:24.480 --> 37:26.480] because they're not there. [37:26.480 --> 37:28.480] So they try to find something that is there [37:28.480 --> 37:30.480] and they get down to little bit of tiny wedge issues. [37:30.480 --> 37:32.480] I think they're in desperate shape to be honest with you. [37:32.480 --> 37:35.480] When you look at the turnout that's going on there [37:35.480 --> 37:38.480] and Trump's turnout in New Hampshire was huge [37:38.480 --> 37:40.480] compared to all the previous turnouts [37:40.480 --> 37:42.480] of second term presidents as well. [37:42.480 --> 37:45.480] So, you know, all of these major indicators [37:45.480 --> 37:48.480] of reelection of favorability for Trump, et cetera, [37:48.480 --> 37:52.480] are all pointing very much right now towards reelection. [37:52.480 --> 37:54.480] We've got a lot of other stuff coming on. [37:54.480 --> 37:57.480] So I don't want to jump to conclusions on that. [37:57.480 --> 37:59.480] But when you look at it, a lot of it's turned out [37:59.480 --> 38:00.480] and Trump's just turning them out. [38:00.480 --> 38:03.480] I mean, look at those rallies that he does. [38:03.480 --> 38:05.480] Can you imagine doing that, Neil, [38:05.480 --> 38:07.480] standing in front of all those people [38:07.480 --> 38:09.480] with a microphone for three hours [38:09.480 --> 38:11.480] and keeping them entertained beyond belief? [38:11.480 --> 38:12.480] How does he do it? [38:12.480 --> 38:14.480] I mean, it's just amazing what he's done. [38:14.480 --> 38:16.480] So let me ask you about the rationale, though, on this art [38:16.480 --> 38:19.480] is that the only thing that could lose this election [38:19.480 --> 38:21.480] for Donald Trump is Donald Trump. [38:21.480 --> 38:24.480] If he does something that just gets off message [38:24.480 --> 38:27.480] on the economy of some of this, do you buy that? [38:27.480 --> 38:29.480] Sure. [38:29.480 --> 38:31.480] I don't really think, I mean, I really don't buy it. [38:31.480 --> 38:32.480] Of course, it's true. [38:32.480 --> 38:34.480] I mean, if he did something really horrible, [38:34.480 --> 38:35.480] maybe that would be true. [38:35.480 --> 38:37.480] But I don't expect anything to come. [38:37.480 --> 38:38.480] I don't think Trump was a wild man. [38:38.480 --> 38:40.480] I don't think he's crazy. [38:40.480 --> 38:42.480] He speaks just like a normal person, [38:42.480 --> 38:44.480] not like a lawyer, not like a politician. [38:44.480 --> 38:45.480] He sounds very real. [38:45.480 --> 38:48.480] And I don't think there's a chance that'll happen. [38:48.480 --> 38:50.480] I mean, if you look at this election, [38:50.480 --> 38:53.480] the only thing I think that can really hurt him is the economy. [38:53.480 --> 38:56.480] And if you look at the stock market as a forecaster [38:56.480 --> 38:59.480] of what will be, let's say five months out, [38:59.480 --> 39:02.480] it's getting beyond the point where really much can happen [39:02.480 --> 39:04.480] that would really hurt him in November. [39:04.480 --> 39:06.480] I mean, we're already at the end of February [39:06.480 --> 39:08.480] and look at that stock market where it is. [39:08.480 --> 39:11.480] If you look five months out, that means the end of July. [39:11.480 --> 39:14.480] So by the end of July, if we have a few more months [39:14.480 --> 39:17.480] of good markets, good reports, good evidence coming in, [39:17.480 --> 39:19.480] I just don't see how he loses. [39:19.480 --> 39:20.480] I just don't see how. [39:20.480 --> 39:22.480] Now, obviously there are things that could happen, [39:22.480 --> 39:24.480] but I just don't see it. [39:24.480 --> 39:25.480] All right. [39:25.480 --> 39:26.480] We'll watch it closely. [39:26.480 --> 39:27.480] Thank you, my friend. [39:27.480 --> 39:28.480] Good seeing you. [39:28.480 --> 39:29.480] Well, don't you... [39:29.480 --> 39:30.480] Yeah, it was fun. [39:30.480 --> 39:31.480] I watched you all last night, Neil, [39:31.480 --> 39:32.480] all the time. [39:32.480 --> 39:33.480] I had to go to bed before it was called [39:33.480 --> 39:34.480] because I'm an old man. [39:34.480 --> 39:35.480] Go to bed early. [39:35.480 --> 39:36.480] You are hardly an old man. [39:36.480 --> 39:37.480] But I enjoyed your show last night very much. [39:37.480 --> 39:38.480] And historic figure. [39:38.480 --> 39:41.480] We appreciate boys having you on. [39:41.480 --> 39:42.480] Thank you, my friend. [39:42.480 --> 39:43.480] Art Laffer. [39:43.480 --> 39:46.480] By the way, Joe Biden, it's not the economy. [39:46.480 --> 39:48.480] It's his own race, stupid. 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[43:04.480 --> 43:07.480] Joe Biden is hoping for a comeback in South Carolina. [43:07.480 --> 43:09.480] He desperately needs it. [43:09.480 --> 43:12.480] He's urging his supporters and donors to dig deep. [43:12.480 --> 43:15.480] South Carolina ETV host and reporter Gavin Jackson says that [43:15.480 --> 43:19.480] South Carolina is where Tom Steyer has been eating into [43:19.480 --> 43:22.480] Biden's lead and a lot of that African-American support. [43:22.480 --> 43:24.480] That's very interesting. [43:24.480 --> 43:26.480] Gavin, thank you for joining us. [43:26.480 --> 43:32.480] It's not a sure thing for him in South Carolina, then, is it? [43:32.480 --> 43:35.480] I mean, the polls still have Joe Biden in the lead. [43:35.480 --> 43:37.480] And again, South Carolina, Joe Biden has been leading the [43:37.480 --> 43:39.480] polls since day one, all of last year. [43:39.480 --> 43:43.480] But what we are seeing right now is that Tom Steyer is kind of [43:43.480 --> 43:46.480] creeping in there, especially with the black vote, [43:46.480 --> 43:48.480] which is so critical to winning South Carolina, [43:48.480 --> 43:51.480] because it makes up 60% of our Democratic electorate. [43:51.480 --> 43:55.480] When we cast ballots on February 29th in the primary. [43:55.480 --> 43:57.480] But we saw Joe Biden come to town last night. [43:57.480 --> 43:59.480] He kind of got a good shot in the arm, [43:59.480 --> 44:02.480] especially after the results out of Iowa and New Hampshire [44:02.480 --> 44:04.480] with fifth and fourth place finishes. [44:04.480 --> 44:06.480] But again, when you see those finishes, [44:06.480 --> 44:08.480] those are things that his campaign were, [44:08.480 --> 44:10.480] they were expecting those numbers again, [44:10.480 --> 44:12.480] maybe not to that extent, that low, [44:12.480 --> 44:14.480] but at the same time, they were preparing for that [44:14.480 --> 44:16.480] and really putting all their weight on South Carolina. [44:16.480 --> 44:19.480] But again, I think what we're seeing right now is Joe Biden needs [44:19.480 --> 44:22.480] to really, really do something magical here in South Carolina. [44:22.480 --> 44:24.480] We're going to try and see what that momentum will look like, [44:24.480 --> 44:27.480] because if he doesn't, and if Tom Steyer does kind of keep [44:27.480 --> 44:30.480] holding that lead on him and making inroads with his voters [44:30.480 --> 44:31.480] and the people of South Carolina, [44:31.480 --> 44:33.480] which we've been seeing in poll after poll, [44:33.480 --> 44:35.480] it will be difficult for Joe Biden going forward from here. [44:35.480 --> 44:38.480] You know, it's always about expectations, I guess. [44:38.480 --> 44:42.480] And one of the things that took some of the thunder out of [44:42.480 --> 44:45.480] Bernie Sanders' performance even in New Hampshire [44:45.480 --> 44:48.480] is that he didn't stay at 30%. [44:48.480 --> 44:49.480] He was under that. [44:49.480 --> 44:50.480] He still won. [44:50.480 --> 44:51.480] I'm not taking anything away from that. [44:51.480 --> 44:53.480] But the expectations are, and to your point, [44:53.480 --> 44:56.480] looking at, you know, some of the early polling numbers, [44:56.480 --> 45:01.480] that, you know, Bloomberg doesn't just win in South Carolina, [45:01.480 --> 45:03.480] but at least win with 30%. [45:03.480 --> 45:07.480] How likely is that if they're so annoying at it, [45:07.480 --> 45:10.480] particularly Steyer? [45:10.480 --> 45:12.480] You're talking about Biden winning 30% [45:12.480 --> 45:13.480] that he said Bloomberg. [45:13.480 --> 45:14.480] Yeah, and that's the thing, [45:14.480 --> 45:16.480] that's what we're all going to be looking for, really, [45:16.480 --> 45:18.480] is just what it looks like coming out of South Carolina, [45:18.480 --> 45:20.480] because when we talk about Steyer and his influence [45:20.480 --> 45:22.480] on this campaign in South Carolina and in Nevada, [45:22.480 --> 45:25.480] where he's also really making some moves, [45:25.480 --> 45:27.480] is it kind of almost like what we're going to see [45:27.480 --> 45:30.480] on Super Tuesday with what Mike Bloomberg will be doing, [45:30.480 --> 45:32.480] essentially, is Steyer kind of the warm-up act [45:32.480 --> 45:35.480] for Super Tuesday, because he has been bombarding [45:35.480 --> 45:37.480] the airwaves here more so than anyone else, [45:37.480 --> 45:38.480] and that's really what we're seeing, [45:38.480 --> 45:40.480] and move up in the polls and make such a dent here, [45:40.480 --> 45:42.480] because no one else has really been on the air down here. [45:42.480 --> 45:44.480] They've all been in Iowa and New Hampshire, [45:44.480 --> 45:46.480] and then all of a sudden people are realizing, [45:46.480 --> 45:48.480] hey, there's some more ground game going on here [45:48.480 --> 45:49.480] in these other states, [45:49.480 --> 45:51.480] and people have kind of been eating their lunch there, [45:51.480 --> 45:53.480] so I don't know what happens if he doesn't make 30%, [45:53.480 --> 45:55.480] but if everyone's bunched up like they are right now, [45:55.480 --> 45:57.480] it's not going to look good. [45:57.480 --> 46:00.480] How is Sanders doing? [46:00.480 --> 46:01.480] How's he doing? [46:01.480 --> 46:03.480] Well, he's been jostling between second and third place [46:03.480 --> 46:05.480] in South Carolina between him and Warren. [46:05.480 --> 46:07.480] For the past year, that was always kind of the narrative, [46:07.480 --> 46:09.480] and then, of course, Tom Steyer showed up, [46:09.480 --> 46:11.480] and that, again, has changed the narrative here, [46:11.480 --> 46:13.480] but we've seen Senator Sanders here a good bit. [46:13.480 --> 46:15.480] He has a good ground game here. [46:15.480 --> 46:17.480] He has organization here, [46:17.480 --> 46:19.480] so much so that he's going to be not in South Carolina [46:19.480 --> 46:21.480] this weekend, this Friday, [46:21.480 --> 46:23.480] but he'll be in North Carolina, [46:23.480 --> 46:25.480] hitting the trail in North Carolina, [46:25.480 --> 46:27.480] and Charlotte and Durham holding rallies there, [46:27.480 --> 46:29.480] so kind of taking that tact. [46:29.480 --> 46:31.480] Since North Carolina is a Super Tuesday State, [46:31.480 --> 46:33.480] with 110 delegates, that's double South Carolina, [46:33.480 --> 46:35.480] and that's something we'll be seeing more and more of happening, [46:35.480 --> 46:37.480] but we saw Bernie Sanders here [46:37.480 --> 46:39.480] from Martin Luther King Day weekend. [46:39.480 --> 46:41.480] That was a big one with a lot of candidates, [46:41.480 --> 46:43.480] but we haven't seen him since. [46:43.480 --> 46:45.480] Obviously, they had the impeachment trial. [46:45.480 --> 46:47.480] They had Iowa and New Hampshire, [46:47.480 --> 46:49.480] but Bernie has a base here, [46:49.480 --> 46:51.480] and he's hoping to capitalize on that, [46:51.480 --> 46:53.480] which is, you know, you can't say of that [46:53.480 --> 46:55.480] about a lot of other campaigns besides Biden and Steyer, [46:55.480 --> 46:57.480] because a lot of other people have some campaign [46:57.480 --> 46:59.480] ground teams here, [46:59.480 --> 47:01.480] but when you talk about Amy Klobuchar, [47:01.480 --> 47:03.480] that's really nonexistent in South Carolina. [47:03.480 --> 47:05.480] Yeah, you never know. [47:05.480 --> 47:07.480] Millennium can be stopped there very quickly. [47:07.480 --> 47:09.480] We'll watch it very closely. [47:09.480 --> 47:11.480] Thank you very much, Gavin Jackson. [47:11.480 --> 47:13.480] All right, then there's what's going on [47:13.480 --> 47:15.480] in shopping malls. [47:15.480 --> 47:17.480] Jeff Locke on the Pet Friendly Move. [47:17.480 --> 47:19.480] Jeff. [47:19.480 --> 47:21.480] You know, when they say the mall is going [47:21.480 --> 47:23.480] to the dogs, that's usually a bad thing, [47:23.480 --> 47:25.480] but I don't know. [47:25.480 --> 47:27.480] It's actually the latest craze. [47:27.480 --> 47:29.480] Hey, Callie. Hey, oh, I woke her up. [47:29.480 --> 47:31.480] Sorry. The full story, though, [47:31.480 --> 47:41.480] when we come back in just a moment. [47:41.480 --> 47:43.480] Imagine traveling hassle free with your golf clubs. [47:43.480 --> 47:45.480] Now you can with ShipSticks.com. [47:45.480 --> 47:47.480] No more lugging your clubs through the airport [47:47.480 --> 47:49.480] or risk having your clubs lost or damaged [47:49.480 --> 47:51.480] by the airlines. 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[50:41.480 --> 50:43.480] And now, during the ultimate Sleep Number event, [50:43.480 --> 50:45.480] save 50% on the Sleep Number 360 Limited Edition Smart Bed [50:45.480 --> 50:47.480] plus 0% interest for 24 months [50:47.480 --> 50:49.480] and 1-800-217-3217 [50:49.480 --> 50:51.480] All right, despite all this talk [50:51.480 --> 50:53.480] about the death of malls, [50:53.480 --> 50:55.480] maybe all it takes is [50:55.480 --> 50:57.480] some dogs to, well, [50:57.480 --> 50:59.480] prove that they're not going to the dogs. [50:59.480 --> 51:01.480] Jeff Floch has the details. Hey, Jeff. [51:01.480 --> 51:03.480] They're being very creative, [51:03.480 --> 51:05.480] Neil, these days. The malls are [51:05.480 --> 51:07.480] to kind of make sure that they got enough traffic [51:07.480 --> 51:09.480] out there, and I'll tell you one of the ways, [51:09.480 --> 51:11.480] believe it or not, we are in something [51:11.480 --> 51:13.480] called Yorktown Center. This is outside [51:13.480 --> 51:15.480] Chicago, and this has been [51:15.480 --> 51:17.480] named by the website Bring Fido [51:17.480 --> 51:19.480] as the most dog-friendly mall [51:19.480 --> 51:21.480] in the country. [51:21.480 --> 51:23.480] They allow dogs to come in here. [51:23.480 --> 51:25.480] This is Callie, I think. [51:25.480 --> 51:27.480] And then this might be Luis [51:27.480 --> 51:29.480] over here, and this is Jersey, I think, [51:29.480 --> 51:31.480] but I'm competing with a food. [51:31.480 --> 51:33.480] You came here specifically because [51:33.480 --> 51:35.480] of the policy the mall has. [51:35.480 --> 51:37.480] Yes, I have. You know, this is a really good [51:37.480 --> 51:39.480] outlining mall. I came here [51:39.480 --> 51:41.480] when I was back in high school. They didn't allow this. [51:41.480 --> 51:43.480] And, you know, I really think it's really good [51:43.480 --> 51:45.480] to have this, to be able to [51:45.480 --> 51:47.480] have dogs come to a mall just [51:47.480 --> 51:49.480] for, you know, senior citizens, you know, [51:49.480 --> 51:51.480] they'll be able to have their dogs and exercise [51:51.480 --> 51:53.480] the dogs so the dogs can have the long-term [51:53.480 --> 51:55.480] life that they need to have. [51:55.480 --> 51:57.480] Yeah, you know, I mean, we make a lot of, [51:57.480 --> 51:59.480] you know, the death of shopping malls. [51:59.480 --> 52:01.480] But if you take a look, you know, talk about [52:01.480 --> 52:03.480] online retail, online is killing it. Well, [52:03.480 --> 52:05.480] you know, take a look at these numbers, Neil. [52:05.480 --> 52:07.480] This is Q3, Commerce Department [52:07.480 --> 52:09.480] numbers. You look at retail in general [52:09.480 --> 52:11.480] compared to online retail. [52:11.480 --> 52:13.480] Online is still a pretty small [52:13.480 --> 52:15.480] percentage of it, growing like crazy [52:15.480 --> 52:17.480] but still a pretty big percentage. [52:17.480 --> 52:19.480] Pretty [52:19.480 --> 52:21.480] small percentage in terms of online. [52:21.480 --> 52:23.480] And so anything that malls [52:23.480 --> 52:25.480] can do to become more vibrant and [52:25.480 --> 52:27.480] bring their dogs along, [52:27.480 --> 52:29.480] I don't know. This is [52:29.480 --> 52:31.480] something that kind of is, [52:31.480 --> 52:33.480] I mean, you came here especially too because you [52:33.480 --> 52:35.480] I think it's great that they're doing this [52:35.480 --> 52:37.480] in the wintertime for us here and the dogs [52:37.480 --> 52:39.480] can meet up and have a nice walk. [52:39.480 --> 52:41.480] Did you actually buy anything at the mall? [52:41.480 --> 52:43.480] I do, but not today, obviously. [52:45.480 --> 52:47.480] Gotcha. They just started also too, [52:47.480 --> 52:49.480] Neil, as a dog lounge [52:49.480 --> 52:51.480] that they're building out. [52:51.480 --> 52:53.480] And so the dogs will be able to lounge [52:53.480 --> 52:55.480] in here. There are even dogs in the [52:55.480 --> 52:57.480] window when they sell stuff. [52:57.480 --> 52:59.480] So go into the dogs [52:59.480 --> 53:01.480] a whole new meaning. [53:01.480 --> 53:03.480] Well, let's hope it's not all bark [53:03.480 --> 53:05.480] and no buys. [53:05.480 --> 53:07.480] Oh, bark. [53:07.480 --> 53:09.480] Okay, got it. [53:09.480 --> 53:11.480] All right, I'm just trying to [53:11.480 --> 53:13.480] do my best. [53:13.480 --> 53:15.480] Thank you, my friend. Great job. [53:15.480 --> 53:17.480] In the meantime, big tech, not too phased [53:17.480 --> 53:19.480] in the face of a big government [53:19.480 --> 53:21.480] investigation on deals that go back [53:21.480 --> 53:23.480] up to a decade. Microsoft, Amazon, [53:23.480 --> 53:25.480] Google, Apple accounting for about [53:25.480 --> 53:27.480] 70% of the S&P 500's gains [53:27.480 --> 53:29.480] so far this year to Fox News [53:29.480 --> 53:31.480] contributor capitalist, pig, hedge [53:31.480 --> 53:33.480] fund manager, Jonathan Honig. [53:33.480 --> 53:35.480] They're looking into a lot of deals [53:35.480 --> 53:37.480] that go back a lot of years [53:37.480 --> 53:39.480] and that fishing expedition alone would [53:39.480 --> 53:41.480] normally weigh on the stocks. [53:41.480 --> 53:43.480] It's had not nearly the impact you would think. [53:43.480 --> 53:45.480] What's going on? No, Neil, not yet. [53:45.480 --> 53:47.480] I think the market is finally starting [53:47.480 --> 53:49.480] to realize that, look, big tech [53:49.480 --> 53:51.480] under both administrations, [53:51.480 --> 53:53.480] they're public enemy number one. [53:53.480 --> 53:55.480] It was a big tobacco in the 2000s. [53:55.480 --> 53:57.480] It was big oil before that in the 90s. [53:57.480 --> 53:59.480] It was Walmart in the 1980s, big retail [53:59.480 --> 54:01.480] and even back in the 1950s, it was [54:01.480 --> 54:03.480] big steel. They were the public enemies [54:03.480 --> 54:05.480] that, in fact, government force [54:05.480 --> 54:07.480] was going to go against. And, of course, big tech [54:07.480 --> 54:09.480] these days, it's like they're responsible [54:09.480 --> 54:11.480] for every social ill and responsible [54:11.480 --> 54:13.480] for every social cost. So these legislators, [54:13.480 --> 54:15.480] these elected officials, [54:15.480 --> 54:17.480] they're going to find something wrong [54:17.480 --> 54:19.480] and I can't imagine, Neil, that it doesn't [54:19.480 --> 54:21.480] impact the stocks. They've become punching bags [54:21.480 --> 54:23.480] for the left and the right that [54:23.480 --> 54:25.480] weighs on their profitability moving forward. [54:25.480 --> 54:27.480] Why go back that many years, again, [54:27.480 --> 54:29.480] up to 2010 or back to [54:29.480 --> 54:31.480] 2010 to revisit deals [54:31.480 --> 54:33.480] that were consummated, in most cases, approved [54:33.480 --> 54:35.480] by the government anyway. Are they saying [54:35.480 --> 54:37.480] that the government was misled or that they [54:37.480 --> 54:39.480] want to undo these deals? What? [54:39.480 --> 54:41.480] Well, they're going to, you know, when there's [54:41.480 --> 54:43.480] no crime committed, Neil, government often will [54:43.480 --> 54:45.480] invent one. That's what [54:45.480 --> 54:47.480] antitrust is more often than not. And you [54:47.480 --> 54:49.480] think, for example, of how many airline [54:49.480 --> 54:51.480] mergers weren't able to be competed. How many [54:51.480 --> 54:53.480] airlines went bankrupt because of antitrust. [54:53.480 --> 54:55.480] You're seeing the same thing again. [54:55.480 --> 54:57.480] And I think people say, oh, well, you know, Microsoft, [54:57.480 --> 54:59.480] they can afford the regulation or Amazon, [54:59.480 --> 55:01.480] they can afford the regulation. The real [55:01.480 --> 55:03.480] risk here, Neil, is to all of us in the economy. [55:03.480 --> 55:05.480] Microsoft was dead money [55:05.480 --> 55:07.480] last time in 2000 when the antitrust [55:07.480 --> 55:09.480] department, the justice department, went [55:09.480 --> 55:11.480] after it now. And now it's open season on [55:11.480 --> 55:13.480] all these productive companies. And you might [55:13.480 --> 55:15.480] say, well, you know, what's the big deal? But [55:15.480 --> 55:17.480] I think, in fact, it's already having effect. [55:17.480 --> 55:19.480] Microsoft's up about 70% in [55:19.480 --> 55:21.480] just the last year. Amazon, which [55:21.480 --> 55:23.480] we know has been kind of on the president's [55:23.480 --> 55:25.480] you-know-what list, it's been the target of [55:25.480 --> 55:27.480] that's only up by about 30%. So these [55:27.480 --> 55:29.480] regulators, Neil, to the extent that they [55:29.480 --> 55:31.480] regulate the market and regulate technology, [55:31.480 --> 55:33.480] technology is going to become more like, [55:33.480 --> 55:35.480] you know, the post office and [55:35.480 --> 55:37.480] the public schools. It's a real risk for the market [55:37.480 --> 55:39.480] and the economy. We'll watch it closely. [55:39.480 --> 55:41.480] Thank you, John. I've been very, very much. John [55:41.480 --> 55:43.480] has been honing on this development. As John [55:43.480 --> 55:45.480] pointed out, it's not showing up in the stock prices [55:45.480 --> 55:47.480] right now. Most of those issues are racing ahead. [55:47.480 --> 55:49.480] Microsoft, I think, of all the issues, [55:49.480 --> 55:51.480] maybe in combination with Facebook has seen [55:51.480 --> 55:53.480] its shared slip since this was first [55:53.480 --> 55:55.480] even whispered. But for the time [55:55.480 --> 55:57.480] being, they're kind of holding their own. [55:57.480 --> 55:59.480] As are all the major market averages, you know, [55:59.480 --> 56:01.480] we're only a little bit more than 500 points [56:01.480 --> 56:03.480] from Dow 30,000. [56:03.480 --> 56:05.480] That average is in record [56:05.480 --> 56:07.480] territory. It hasn't been 500 days as well. [56:07.480 --> 56:09.480] So is the NASDAQ. So right now, [56:09.480 --> 56:11.480] no worries. Just wonder [56:11.480 --> 56:13.480] into this. [56:13.480 --> 56:17.480] MUSIC [56:17.480 --> 56:19.480] MUSIC [56:19.480 --> 56:21.480] My body is truly powerful. [56:21.480 --> 56:23.480] I have the power to lower my blood [56:23.480 --> 56:25.480] sugar and A1C. 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If you have an allergic reaction, [56:55.480 --> 56:57.480] a lump or swelling in your neck or severe [56:57.480 --> 56:59.480] stomach pain, serious side effects may [56:59.480 --> 57:01.480] include pancreatitis. Taking trulicity [57:01.480 --> 57:03.480] with a sulfonylurea or insulin [57:03.480 --> 57:05.480] increases low blood sugar risk. [57:05.480 --> 57:07.480] Side effects include nausea, diarrhea, [57:07.480 --> 57:09.480] vomiting, belly pain and decreased [57:09.480 --> 57:11.480] appetite, which lead to dehydration [57:11.480 --> 57:13.480] and may worsen kidney problems. [57:13.480 --> 57:15.480] I have it within me to lower my A1C. [57:15.480 --> 57:17.480] Ask your doctor about trulicity. [57:17.480 --> 57:19.480] I was missing teeth. [57:19.480 --> 57:21.480] It was painful to chew [57:21.480 --> 57:23.480] and that's what originally drove me [57:23.480 --> 57:25.480] to clear choice. 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[59:31.480 --> 59:33.480] The Dow, the S&P 500, the Nasdaq, [59:33.480 --> 59:35.480] so what's mowing them, of course, is easing [59:35.480 --> 59:37.480] concerns that had been sort of getting [59:37.480 --> 59:39.480] ahead of steam over this coronavirus. [59:39.480 --> 59:41.480] Now, it goes by the day, and much like the [59:41.480 --> 59:43.480] whole China trade thing, good news is [59:43.480 --> 59:45.480] greeted favorably, worrisome news are the [59:45.480 --> 59:47.480] fact that this could escalate, or more [59:47.480 --> 59:49.480] companies are doing production. It's bad news [59:49.480 --> 59:51.480] so far. [59:51.480 --> 59:53.480] It's good news today. We'll keep an eye on [59:53.480 --> 59:55.480] the next condition. [59:55.480 --> 59:57.480] I've had more than 30,000 in the [59:57.480 --> 59:59.480] past. But we've reached over 30,000. [59:59.480 --> 01:00:01.480] Think about a little over 500 points. [01:00:01.480 --> 01:00:03.480] Oftentimes, we've done that kind of thing [01:00:03.480 --> 01:00:05.480] in a day. Meanwhile, the Democrat [01:00:05.480 --> 01:00:07.480] candidates are getting ready to move on [01:00:07.480 --> 01:00:09.480] to the next state. That would be Nevada. [01:00:09.480 --> 01:00:11.480] It's ramping up a lot of ad buying, and [01:00:11.480 --> 01:00:13.480] that state is a very big beneficiary [01:00:13.480 --> 01:00:15.480] of all of that. And then, of course, [01:00:15.480 --> 01:00:17.480] you have South Carolina. But again, all [01:00:17.480 --> 01:00:19.480] of that ahead of Super Tuesday. [01:00:19.480 --> 01:00:21.480] That's the biggie of the biggies where we [01:00:21.480 --> 01:00:22.480] process will go. [01:00:22.480 --> 01:00:27.320] Jonathan, this is a caucus state, right? [01:00:27.320 --> 01:00:32.780] This is a caucus state, Neil, and Nevada was a big winner last night after the results [01:00:32.780 --> 01:00:39.560] came in in New Hampshire simply because it focused more attention on what will happen [01:00:39.560 --> 01:00:40.680] here in Nevada. [01:00:40.680 --> 01:00:46.700] A lot of TV money already pouring in now, and the candidates of course themselves already [01:00:46.700 --> 01:00:47.700] on the way. [01:00:47.700 --> 01:00:53.920] The billionaire Tom Steyer, the first to arrive, he is holding a series of events in [01:00:53.920 --> 01:00:56.560] northern Nevada throughout the day. [01:00:56.560 --> 01:01:01.360] He does have some momentum, but frankly, he's still something of an afterthought in [01:01:01.360 --> 01:01:03.240] terms of the bigger picture. [01:01:03.240 --> 01:01:09.440] It now appears to be a race between Bernie Sanders on the progressive side of the Democratic [01:01:09.440 --> 01:01:15.080] Party and then the moderate wing, currently led by Mayor Pete Buttigieg. [01:01:15.080 --> 01:01:25.640] On to Nevada, it's on to South Carolina, it's on to win the Democratic nomination, and together [01:01:25.640 --> 01:01:30.960] I have no doubt that we will defeat Donald Trump. [01:01:30.960 --> 01:01:37.520] Now our campaign moves on to Nevada, to South Carolina, to communities across our country, [01:01:37.520 --> 01:01:44.160] and we will welcome new allies to our movement at every step. [01:01:44.160 --> 01:01:50.000] Senator Amy Klobuchar already has new ads on the air here in Nevada, and she will be [01:01:50.000 --> 01:01:56.160] hoping to overhaul Mayor Buttigieg to show she can carry the moderate banner. [01:01:56.160 --> 01:02:02.000] While Joe Biden's campaign, frankly, is on life support, he desperately needs to prove [01:02:02.000 --> 01:02:07.360] here what he has claimed before, that his strength is in winning states that look more [01:02:07.360 --> 01:02:08.360] like America. [01:02:08.360 --> 01:02:15.960] Iowa and New Hampshire, overwhelmingly white, Nevada most certainly not a large Latino population [01:02:15.960 --> 01:02:19.440] and around 40% overall non-white. [01:02:19.440 --> 01:02:20.440] Listen here. [01:02:20.440 --> 01:02:22.880] The state does look like America, right? [01:02:22.880 --> 01:02:26.920] And so not only does it matter winning in Nevada just because it's the third state and [01:02:26.920 --> 01:02:30.400] it's important to carry that momentum forward, but it's important, I think, for campaigns [01:02:30.400 --> 01:02:36.880] to be able to show we are, you know, appealing to America. [01:02:36.880 --> 01:02:40.440] Having the union vote is also vital in Nevada because of its power. [01:02:40.440 --> 01:02:46.640] The culinary union, big organizing force here, it hasn't endorsed yet, but it has implied [01:02:46.640 --> 01:02:50.320] it doesn't like Bernie Sanders' Medicare for All approach. [01:02:50.320 --> 01:02:55.240] Finally, the process, Neil, the first caucus since the Iowa disaster. [01:02:55.240 --> 01:03:00.160] Nevada has scrapped plans to use an app similar to the one that crashed in Iowa. [01:03:00.160 --> 01:03:05.440] Now they'll be using Google Docs and paper ballots, and this fairly simple process for [01:03:05.440 --> 01:03:08.320] early voting, which begins Saturday first. [01:03:08.320 --> 01:03:12.360] Voters will check in using a PDF file preloaded onto iPads. [01:03:12.360 --> 01:03:14.320] They'll get a card with a pin number. [01:03:14.320 --> 01:03:16.840] They'll enter that number into a Google form. [01:03:16.840 --> 01:03:19.760] They'll select three to five preferences on a paper ballot. [01:03:19.760 --> 01:03:22.880] They'll insert the ballots and cards into a ballot box. [01:03:22.880 --> 01:03:25.680] A volunteer will monitor each ballot box. [01:03:25.680 --> 01:03:30.400] Observers and campaign staff will be able to monitor the entire process. [01:03:30.400 --> 01:03:36.120] The ballot boxes will then be transported to designated ballot processing hubs. [01:03:36.120 --> 01:03:41.040] Finally, those ballots will be scanned and stored. [01:03:41.040 --> 01:03:43.080] Sounds entirely straightforward. [01:03:43.080 --> 01:03:44.960] What could possibly go wrong? [01:03:44.960 --> 01:03:45.960] Neil? [01:03:45.960 --> 01:03:47.160] You read my mind, my friend. [01:03:47.160 --> 01:03:51.560] Jonathan Hunt, great story as always in Las Vegas. [01:03:51.560 --> 01:03:54.320] Connell McChain, just back right now from New Hampshire. [01:03:54.320 --> 01:03:55.320] Good to see you, buddy. [01:03:55.320 --> 01:03:56.320] Great job. [01:03:56.320 --> 01:03:57.320] Yeah. [01:03:57.320 --> 01:03:58.320] Well, they brag that they got it right. [01:03:58.320 --> 01:04:00.360] This is a popular vote up and down. [01:04:00.360 --> 01:04:03.520] I always wondered, I was teasing it last night, whether they were deliberately going slow [01:04:03.520 --> 01:04:05.760] to make sure they got it right. [01:04:05.760 --> 01:04:09.400] But in the end, a lot of people are saying victory, though, was for Bernie Sanders. [01:04:09.400 --> 01:04:12.000] He didn't hit that 30% level. [01:04:12.000 --> 01:04:13.880] That would avoid a lot of second guessing. [01:04:13.880 --> 01:04:18.280] There seemed to be a thought process going in that were Sanders to win by five, six, [01:04:18.280 --> 01:04:22.040] seven, eight points, and that would be a, quote, strong win and give them the momentum [01:04:22.040 --> 01:04:25.280] to be a clear front runner going into these next few states. [01:04:25.280 --> 01:04:31.120] That said, he is, right now, just by default, the front runner in this race. [01:04:31.120 --> 01:04:32.960] I mean, we'll see how the next few weeks play out. [01:04:32.960 --> 01:04:33.960] That's a strong crowd. [01:04:33.960 --> 01:04:34.960] You were there. [01:04:34.960 --> 01:04:35.960] They were pretty jazzed. [01:04:35.960 --> 01:04:36.960] They always are. [01:04:36.960 --> 01:04:39.880] We were with them in Cedar Rapids the week before in Iowa, and he had 3,000 people. [01:04:39.880 --> 01:04:44.800] I know the night before the primary in New Hampshire with AOC had seven or 8,000 people. [01:04:44.800 --> 01:04:47.160] So he's able to bring the strong crowds. [01:04:47.160 --> 01:04:48.880] But we always look at how the market is reacting. [01:04:48.880 --> 01:04:51.120] I know today there's other issues as there often are. [01:04:51.120 --> 01:04:55.200] But I don't really think investors have factored in the fact that probably the second most [01:04:55.200 --> 01:04:59.640] likely person to be president after the next election right now, right now, as things stand, [01:04:59.640 --> 01:05:03.200] is Bernie Sanders, with the incumbent Donald Trump being the most likely, just if you're [01:05:03.200 --> 01:05:07.600] looking at scenarios, because he still is the most likely nominee, and it's just interesting [01:05:07.600 --> 01:05:12.160] to see that so many, if you speak to people on Wall Street and others and donors, they're [01:05:12.160 --> 01:05:15.440] just discounting that right now, and they may very well be right because of who they [01:05:15.440 --> 01:05:16.440] judge. [01:05:16.440 --> 01:05:19.600] Well, it could be in their own peril, but you went to a lot of these guys' stump events [01:05:19.600 --> 01:05:26.080] and it would have you, I always find that it could be very intriguing, the enthusiasm [01:05:26.080 --> 01:05:30.640] in the room, what the folks who are there are saying. [01:05:30.640 --> 01:05:34.480] So you've covered the gamut, Sanders all the way to Biden. [01:05:34.480 --> 01:05:35.480] What did you learn? [01:05:35.480 --> 01:05:38.960] Well, there is a big enthusiasm gap between candidates. [01:05:38.960 --> 01:05:45.080] So when the former vice president claims today or his campaign does tonight that it's really [01:05:45.080 --> 01:05:51.800] not that big of a deal to do as they did in Iowa and New Hampshire, that sounds a lot [01:05:51.800 --> 01:05:53.880] like spin on a number of levels. [01:05:53.880 --> 01:05:58.560] He was not expected to win those states, but to finish fifth is not a strong performance, [01:05:58.560 --> 01:05:59.560] but I think even more... [01:05:59.560 --> 01:06:00.560] They'll leave that day. [01:06:00.560 --> 01:06:04.280] Yeah, but even more than that, just the eye test of going to your point to going to the [01:06:04.280 --> 01:06:10.520] events, if you go to a Sanders event or certainly to a Buttigieg event, or even Warren or Amy [01:06:10.520 --> 01:06:15.280] Clarke, there is much more energy, you can feel it in the room than if you go to one of [01:06:15.280 --> 01:06:17.400] a former vice president, Joe Biden's event. [01:06:17.400 --> 01:06:18.840] So what does that say? [01:06:18.840 --> 01:06:23.200] It says that people kind of knew who the old Joe Biden was going in. [01:06:23.200 --> 01:06:24.200] They've known him for years. [01:06:24.200 --> 01:06:27.860] He served as a vice president of the United States for eight years and the Senate forever. [01:06:27.860 --> 01:06:33.560] So they're now taking stock of who the new or current vice president Biden is, and when [01:06:33.560 --> 01:06:37.240] they see him with their own eyes, he's losing support, not gaining it. [01:06:37.240 --> 01:06:40.680] And if that happens in these first two states, I'm not sure there's any reason to believe [01:06:40.680 --> 01:06:43.760] that it won't continue to happen in the other states unless something changes. [01:06:43.760 --> 01:06:44.760] He's trying to change that. [01:06:44.760 --> 01:06:45.760] He's been more aggressive. [01:06:45.760 --> 01:06:47.240] He's going after his opponents. [01:06:47.240 --> 01:06:50.640] So yeah, he could come back, but something's got to change in the ways campaigning, I would [01:06:50.640 --> 01:06:51.640] think. [01:06:51.640 --> 01:06:54.480] All right, if you could just stay there, kind of want to bring in the role of younger voters. [01:06:54.480 --> 01:06:56.400] They were apparently turned out for Bernie Sanders. [01:06:56.400 --> 01:07:00.080] It's just not in the numbers that Bernie Sanders might have quietly hoped for. [01:07:00.080 --> 01:07:04.480] Axis reporter Alayna Treene, Democratic strategist Blake Rutherford and campus reform editor [01:07:04.480 --> 01:07:06.920] in chief, Cabot Phillips. [01:07:06.920 --> 01:07:10.800] But anyway, to begin with you, you're Donald Trump, you're looking at what transpired among [01:07:10.800 --> 01:07:11.800] the Democrats. [01:07:11.800 --> 01:07:15.560] You're seeing it closely divided on the top three candidates. [01:07:15.560 --> 01:07:18.520] Are you sensing you could take this state? [01:07:18.520 --> 01:07:22.840] You could still win this race because Democrats have a problem here? [01:07:22.840 --> 01:07:27.560] Yeah, I think you're certainly encouraged by the fact that there doesn't seem to be any [01:07:27.560 --> 01:07:28.560] real unity. [01:07:28.560 --> 01:07:30.560] There hasn't been any coalescing forming yet. [01:07:30.560 --> 01:07:32.920] We still don't even know who's going to take over that moderate lane. [01:07:32.920 --> 01:07:35.320] I think you're certainly encouraged by that. [01:07:35.320 --> 01:07:38.440] And for all Bernie Sanders talk so far about being the candidate that's going to bring [01:07:38.440 --> 01:07:42.640] out record numbers of new voters and kind of that being his pits of electability of [01:07:42.640 --> 01:07:46.640] if I get to the 2020 election, I'm going to bring out people that have never voted before. [01:07:46.640 --> 01:07:47.880] We haven't necessarily seen that. [01:07:47.880 --> 01:07:49.440] We didn't see it in Iowa. [01:07:49.440 --> 01:07:52.480] Certainly we didn't see it as much New Hampshire of people coming to the polls for the first [01:07:52.480 --> 01:07:54.600] time and coming out for Bernie Sanders. [01:07:54.600 --> 01:07:58.960] So while he certainly does have a lot of youth support, certainly has obviously he's doing [01:07:58.960 --> 01:07:59.960] well so far. [01:07:59.960 --> 01:08:02.840] There hasn't exactly been him turning out new people and that's what it's going to [01:08:02.840 --> 01:08:04.440] take to defeat President Trump. [01:08:04.440 --> 01:08:08.200] So I certainly think that he's encouraged the longer this goes on, the more infighting [01:08:08.200 --> 01:08:12.280] there is, the longer before they have kind of a singular candidate to coalesce around. [01:08:12.280 --> 01:08:14.360] I think the more of the Trump campaign benefits from it. [01:08:14.360 --> 01:08:18.880] Well, you know, we remember history of like and looking at, you know, Democrats who were [01:08:18.880 --> 01:08:22.760] salivating and only infighting and cursing back and forth among Republicans before they [01:08:22.760 --> 01:08:27.360] ultimately settled on Donald Trump, that that that was something that Democrats didn't [01:08:27.360 --> 01:08:28.360] see happening. [01:08:28.360 --> 01:08:34.200] I wonder if Republicans might be risking doing the same by dismissing out of hand Bernie [01:08:34.200 --> 01:08:38.880] Sanders, that if he were to get the nomination, they would squish him like a bug. [01:08:38.880 --> 01:08:40.360] That can prove wrong. [01:08:40.360 --> 01:08:41.360] What do you think? [01:08:41.360 --> 01:08:44.920] Well, I first of all think that this is very early. [01:08:44.920 --> 01:08:51.360] I know there is a lot of energy, especially in the media, to call this horse race. [01:08:51.360 --> 01:08:56.480] The Democrats have now had contests in two small, predominantly white states with a total [01:08:56.480 --> 01:08:58.400] of 65 delegates. [01:08:58.400 --> 01:09:00.720] This is a process and I think we've got to get through Nevada. [01:09:00.720 --> 01:09:04.080] We've got to get through South Carolina states that are more representative. [01:09:04.080 --> 01:09:08.640] This was the point of adding these two states to this four state pod. [01:09:08.640 --> 01:09:11.920] And I think until those states vote, we really don't have a sense. [01:09:11.920 --> 01:09:15.400] Latinos haven't had a say, African Americans haven't had a say. [01:09:15.400 --> 01:09:16.400] And then we'll see. [01:09:16.400 --> 01:09:20.720] I personally think Bernie Sanders is an incredibly problematic general election candidate. [01:09:20.720 --> 01:09:23.160] I've been been very clear from that on the start. [01:09:23.160 --> 01:09:26.520] So I think, but for different reasons that was. [01:09:26.520 --> 01:09:28.440] So I think we just have to wait and see. [01:09:28.440 --> 01:09:33.200] I think we'll we'll have a better sense of this race after Nevada, after South Carolina. [01:09:33.200 --> 01:09:36.240] I do think people need to chill out just a little bit. [01:09:36.240 --> 01:09:37.240] Let those states vote. [01:09:37.240 --> 01:09:38.240] No, you're right. [01:09:38.240 --> 01:09:39.240] You're right about that. [01:09:39.240 --> 01:09:40.240] And then we'll see where we are. [01:09:40.240 --> 01:09:41.240] And Elaine it to his point. [01:09:41.240 --> 01:09:44.320] I mean, we're 2% into the delegate sort of quest here. [01:09:44.320 --> 01:09:49.920] I mean, there are roughly 4,000 delegates at stake here and you need close to 2,000 of [01:09:49.920 --> 01:09:53.760] the close, the deal and the top candidate for the time being Pete Buttigieg. [01:09:53.760 --> 01:09:55.880] Is that all of 22 delegates? [01:09:55.880 --> 01:09:57.800] So he's right there. [01:09:57.800 --> 01:10:01.440] Where is the momentum factor, you think, from New Hampshire here? [01:10:01.440 --> 01:10:03.280] That usually win those out candidates. [01:10:03.280 --> 01:10:07.760] If you have dropped off develop Patrick the latest, Andrew Yang, John Delaney, Michael [01:10:07.760 --> 01:10:09.960] Bennett all in the last week. [01:10:09.960 --> 01:10:11.960] What do you make of that? [01:10:11.960 --> 01:10:16.720] Yeah, well, this is exactly that period in the primaries where you do start to see the [01:10:16.720 --> 01:10:17.840] field narrowing. [01:10:17.840 --> 01:10:22.040] It's not narrowing as much as some had thought it would at this point. [01:10:22.040 --> 01:10:24.520] And I think that's something that's really helping Bernie Sanders. [01:10:24.520 --> 01:10:30.880] We're seeing a lot of delegates, yes, going to people like Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar. [01:10:30.880 --> 01:10:36.280] But the moderate field, they're still kind of beating each other up on this, on the trail [01:10:36.280 --> 01:10:37.280] right now. [01:10:37.280 --> 01:10:41.360] And that's helping fuel people like Bernie Sanders, who, whereas before he used to really [01:10:41.360 --> 01:10:47.440] have to share the more activist, leftist part of the Democratic Party with Elizabeth Warren, [01:10:47.440 --> 01:10:52.000] she's seeming to fade right now, especially after her performance in Iowa and in New Hampshire. [01:10:52.000 --> 01:10:55.960] And so it looks like they're really consolidating that support behind Bernie, whereas the moderates [01:10:55.960 --> 01:10:57.800] are still pretty split. [01:10:57.800 --> 01:11:02.560] Because we had a Democratic operative speak with Axios about this today, who said, look, [01:11:02.560 --> 01:11:08.400] in 2016, the non-Trumpers, if they had consolidated early enough, the President Trump might not [01:11:08.400 --> 01:11:09.640] have been the nominee. [01:11:09.640 --> 01:11:13.720] We're starting to see that same situation play out now with Bernie Sanders. [01:11:13.720 --> 01:11:18.720] And if the moderates don't consolidate, then he does have a really prominent and strong [01:11:18.720 --> 01:11:19.720] lead here. [01:11:19.720 --> 01:11:23.000] To that point, I think the reason that Pete Buttigieg didn't win outright last night in [01:11:23.000 --> 01:11:26.920] New Hampshire is not because of Bernie Sanders, but it's probably because of Amy Klobuchar [01:11:26.920 --> 01:11:30.760] and the strong performance that she had in the last few days, especially at the debate. [01:11:30.760 --> 01:11:34.400] So we were even talking at a Buttigieg event and at the Klobuchar event, but especially [01:11:34.400 --> 01:11:35.400] at the Buttigieg event. [01:11:35.400 --> 01:11:38.160] And there were a number of people who were deciding between the two. [01:11:38.160 --> 01:11:42.480] So for Klobuchar to get up to 20%, you never know where voters come from, but you have [01:11:42.480 --> 01:11:45.280] to assume that a few may have voted for Buttigieg had they not. [01:11:45.280 --> 01:11:49.480] And just to go back quickly to Cabot's original point about bringing in the new voters, that's [01:11:49.480 --> 01:11:53.440] something from the data I saw last night, that Cabot's right, that Sanders has not been [01:11:53.440 --> 01:11:58.480] able to do, but Buttigieg was able to do to some extent, but again, was stopped short [01:11:58.480 --> 01:12:02.240] of winning outright in New Hampshire, largely because of the surge of Klobuchar. [01:12:02.240 --> 01:12:06.560] You know, Cabot, you're close to the Trump folks, and the argument is always enraged. [01:12:06.560 --> 01:12:10.520] The only one who could screw it up for Donald Trump might be Donald Trump. [01:12:10.520 --> 01:12:16.520] In other words, some of this role in these prosecutors quitting the case on the Roger [01:12:16.520 --> 01:12:22.680] Stone issue or his firing of officials, whether right or wrong, that's the kind of stuff [01:12:22.680 --> 01:12:28.200] that would mess it up or risk messing it up for the president, not the economy, certainly [01:12:28.200 --> 01:12:29.200] not the markets. [01:12:29.200 --> 01:12:30.700] What do you think of that? [01:12:30.700 --> 01:12:36.080] Yeah, I think any day where President Trump is letting the Democrats be the main story [01:12:36.080 --> 01:12:38.840] and letting the economy do its thing, I think it's a victory for him. [01:12:38.840 --> 01:12:43.480] We look at polling data out today, over 60% of Americans saying they're better off economically [01:12:43.480 --> 01:12:48.080] than they were when President Trump took office, another over 70% of people saying they think [01:12:48.080 --> 01:12:50.680] they'll be better off a year from now than they are now. [01:12:50.680 --> 01:12:54.120] That kind of optimism is something that we haven't seen in decades, really. [01:12:54.120 --> 01:12:58.240] We haven't seen that second number since the 1970s, and so I think that obviously people [01:12:58.240 --> 01:12:59.240] vote with their pocketbooks. [01:12:59.240 --> 01:13:02.440] I think that's got to be a good sign there, and so I think President Trump letting that [01:13:02.440 --> 01:13:04.440] be the main focus is the winning point. [01:13:04.440 --> 01:13:07.720] And I think to go back to New Hampshire and kind of looking at the election moving forward, [01:13:07.720 --> 01:13:11.480] I think it's too soon to say that if, you know, one moderate candidate drops out, that [01:13:11.480 --> 01:13:13.960] we should assume that they're all going to go to the other moderate candidate. [01:13:13.960 --> 01:13:17.760] I worked on the Rubio campaign in 2016, and we kept saying once Jeb drops out, we'll [01:13:17.760 --> 01:13:18.960] get all his supporters. [01:13:18.960 --> 01:13:22.160] If Scott Walker drops out, we'll get his supporters because they're in the same lane. [01:13:22.160 --> 01:13:23.160] That obviously didn't happen. [01:13:23.160 --> 01:13:25.920] And so I think even looking like that the number two candidate for them is actually [01:13:25.920 --> 01:13:26.920] Bernie Sanders. [01:13:26.920 --> 01:13:27.920] That was the most common response. [01:13:27.920 --> 01:13:31.600] So I think voters are a lot more fluid than we like to make them, and it's not as common [01:13:31.600 --> 01:13:35.120] for us to say, well, if they like one moderate candidate, they're automatically going to [01:13:35.120 --> 01:13:36.120] go to the other. [01:13:36.120 --> 01:13:39.560] I think there's a lot more decision making that goes into that than just assuming they'll [01:13:39.560 --> 01:13:40.560] go one way. [01:13:40.560 --> 01:13:44.360] And like the same could apply to Bernie Sanders voters, hoping that they capture Elizabeth [01:13:44.360 --> 01:13:45.800] Warren voters, right? [01:13:45.800 --> 01:13:47.120] Yeah, that's exactly right. [01:13:47.120 --> 01:13:53.240] I mean, I think we have to be very careful about assuming that liberals, moderates, even [01:13:53.240 --> 01:13:55.720] moderate conservative Democrats are monolithic. [01:13:55.720 --> 01:14:00.560] I mean, there are certainly preferences depending on issues, a lot of which at the end of the [01:14:00.560 --> 01:14:03.640] day, and as Cabot pointed out, are personal to them. [01:14:03.640 --> 01:14:05.440] So again, I want to reemphasize the point. [01:14:05.440 --> 01:14:12.240] I think we just got to pump the brakes a little bit and let South Carolina and Nevada vote. [01:14:12.240 --> 01:14:14.000] I think that will tell us a lot. [01:14:14.000 --> 01:14:17.560] I do think the field will consolidate for natural reasons. [01:14:17.560 --> 01:14:19.400] Some candidates are going to run out of money. [01:14:19.400 --> 01:14:23.600] Some candidates are going to underperform, and it's going to be very difficult to make [01:14:23.600 --> 01:14:27.520] an argument to move on to Super Tuesday, where you have very expensive states like [01:14:27.520 --> 01:14:33.080] South Carolina and where you have a region the South where Democrats don't do well in [01:14:33.080 --> 01:14:36.680] general elections, but when you put together are a fair amount of delegates. [01:14:36.680 --> 01:14:42.280] So I think we will know a lot more in 17, 18 days. [01:14:42.280 --> 01:14:46.320] And I think that will tell us a lot about a Bernie Sanders standing, because again, it [01:14:46.320 --> 01:14:51.240] is important to note that he did underperform with youth voters and the foundation of his [01:14:51.240 --> 01:14:56.240] entire campaign is youth voters and he couldn't get them to the polls in New Hampshire. [01:14:56.240 --> 01:15:00.160] Is he going to be able to turn that around going forward? [01:15:00.160 --> 01:15:04.320] It will also tell us a lot, of course, about Joe Biden, his standing among the African [01:15:04.320 --> 01:15:09.760] American community and whether South Carolina really is going to be that reset for him. [01:15:09.760 --> 01:15:10.760] We'll see. [01:15:10.760 --> 01:15:11.760] Guys, I want to thank you. [01:15:11.760 --> 01:15:17.040] I've already put in a travel request for Las Vegas, for all that coal. [01:15:17.040 --> 01:15:18.280] That's actually what I'm not going to. [01:15:18.280 --> 01:15:19.280] Yeah. [01:15:19.280 --> 01:15:20.280] All right. [01:15:20.280 --> 01:15:21.280] We'll see about that. [01:15:21.280 --> 01:15:22.280] All right. [01:15:22.280 --> 01:15:23.280] Meanwhile, tourism and coronavirus. [01:15:23.280 --> 01:15:24.280] Why what's happening on that front? [01:15:24.280 --> 01:15:34.320] There's a lot of people worried what's going to happen on the global front after this. [01:15:34.320 --> 01:15:40.360] This program is brought to you by Jaguar, the art of performance. [01:15:40.360 --> 01:15:48.240] Where I look, I see light and shape, and some shapes are just more beautiful than others. [01:15:48.240 --> 01:15:50.920] I think about lots of things when I drive. [01:15:50.920 --> 01:15:58.120] The cost of schedule maintenance certainly isn't one of them. [01:15:58.120 --> 01:15:59.480] The F-Pace. [01:15:59.480 --> 01:16:02.160] How Jaguar makes mess UV. [01:16:02.160 --> 01:16:09.400] The great offers visit your Jaguar retailer during an impeccable timing sales event. [01:16:09.400 --> 01:16:12.360] There's a new way to vacation here. [01:16:12.360 --> 01:16:15.240] And stay in a place like this. [01:16:15.240 --> 01:16:17.240] And bring her, him, them. [01:16:17.240 --> 01:16:19.240] Yeah, you too. [01:16:19.240 --> 01:16:21.080] We're going to go do this. [01:16:21.080 --> 01:16:22.080] That. [01:16:22.080 --> 01:16:23.080] Whoa. 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[01:17:25.440 --> 01:17:27.560] So let's talk. [01:17:27.560 --> 01:17:32.920] We are Edward Jones, with one financial advisor per office, we're built for hearing what's [01:17:32.920 --> 01:17:33.920] important to you. [01:17:33.920 --> 01:17:34.920] One to one. [01:17:34.920 --> 01:17:38.920] Edward Jones, it's time for investing to feel individual. [01:17:38.920 --> 01:17:45.720] Hi, we're glad you came in. [01:17:45.720 --> 01:17:46.720] What's on your mind? [01:17:46.720 --> 01:17:48.640] Can you help keep these guys protected online? [01:17:48.640 --> 01:17:49.640] Easy. [01:17:49.640 --> 01:17:50.640] Connect to the X5 Gateway. [01:17:50.640 --> 01:17:53.840] What about internet speeds that keep up with my gaming? [01:17:53.840 --> 01:17:56.560] Let's hook you up with the fastest internet from Xfinity. [01:17:56.560 --> 01:17:58.560] What about wireless data options for the family? [01:17:58.560 --> 01:18:02.760] Of course, you can customize and save. [01:18:02.760 --> 01:18:05.280] Could you save me from this conversation? [01:18:05.280 --> 01:18:08.000] That we can't do, but come in and see what we can do. [01:18:08.000 --> 01:18:11.080] We are here to make life simple, easy, awesome. [01:18:11.080 --> 01:18:16.880] Ask Shop Discover at your local Xfinity store today. [01:18:16.880 --> 01:18:21.080] And now for their service to the community, we present Limuimu and Doug with this key [01:18:21.080 --> 01:18:23.080] to the city. [01:18:23.080 --> 01:18:29.880] It's an honor to tell you that Liberty Mutual customizes your car insurance so you only [01:18:29.880 --> 01:18:31.400] pay for what you need. [01:18:31.400 --> 01:18:39.160] And now, we need to get back to work. [01:18:39.160 --> 01:18:41.000] Only pay for what you need. [01:18:41.000 --> 01:18:47.320] Liberty, Liberty, Liberty, Liberty, E. [01:18:47.320 --> 01:18:52.800] All right, besides just the tragedy, the unfolding illnesses and deaths and cases coronavirus [01:18:52.800 --> 01:18:56.960] is now taking a big toll on U.S. tourism. [01:18:56.960 --> 01:19:04.320] The travel industry is already looking to take at least a $1 billion hit on all of this. [01:19:04.320 --> 01:19:08.240] Our economist, Haley Berg, who follows us very, very closely with us right now. [01:19:08.240 --> 01:19:10.640] Haley, how bad do you think this gets? [01:19:10.640 --> 01:19:15.080] Obviously, people cancel plans even if they're not canceled for them and they're not quick [01:19:15.080 --> 01:19:18.200] to go back and revise those plans. [01:19:18.200 --> 01:19:19.920] So what do you see happening? [01:19:19.920 --> 01:19:23.240] We're already seeing some of the impact. [01:19:23.240 --> 01:19:28.720] So international travel demand from the U.S. is down about 3% already and not just driven [01:19:28.720 --> 01:19:31.440] by destinations in China. [01:19:31.440 --> 01:19:34.720] We're seeing slippage on other Southeast Asian destinations. [01:19:34.720 --> 01:19:39.720] The good news is that a lot of that demand is shifting back towards domestic destinations. [01:19:39.720 --> 01:19:42.240] So tourism continues to grow. [01:19:42.240 --> 01:19:44.400] We'll see more of it domestically this year. [01:19:44.400 --> 01:19:46.160] What about those coming here? [01:19:46.160 --> 01:19:47.160] Forget about Asia and all. [01:19:47.160 --> 01:19:51.800] Is there just a skittishness about travel these days? [01:19:51.800 --> 01:19:53.440] Definitely. [01:19:53.440 --> 01:19:58.720] In the next two months alone, we were expecting to receive over a million seats from planes [01:19:58.720 --> 01:20:00.360] coming from China. [01:20:00.360 --> 01:20:05.440] Many of those passengers connecting through China to the United States, New York, Los Angeles, [01:20:05.440 --> 01:20:10.080] San Francisco, collectively will definitely feel an impact with fewer tourists landing [01:20:10.080 --> 01:20:11.080] here. [01:20:11.080 --> 01:20:14.840] You know, I could be crass about it, but I'm curious. [01:20:14.840 --> 01:20:20.760] This leads to big discounts on the board of airlines, hotels, casinos to try to draw people [01:20:20.760 --> 01:20:23.520] to their places, their planes. [01:20:23.520 --> 01:20:26.360] You see any of that going on? [01:20:26.360 --> 01:20:27.840] We aren't seeing that yet. [01:20:27.840 --> 01:20:31.800] I think part of the reason is because there's still a lot of uncertainty about how long [01:20:31.800 --> 01:20:36.720] the virus will continue to spread and create uncertainty in the market. [01:20:36.720 --> 01:20:41.440] What I would expect is if we see this continue through the end of spring, some airlines have [01:20:41.440 --> 01:20:45.800] already canceled flights to and from China through the end of April, that's when we'll [01:20:45.800 --> 01:20:50.960] start to see some action from the tourism industry, domestic, and abroad. [01:20:50.960 --> 01:20:51.960] All right. [01:20:51.960 --> 01:20:52.960] Kelly, thank you very much. [01:20:52.960 --> 01:20:58.040] Kelly Berg, looking at all of this in the fallout, fairly substantial, and they hope [01:20:58.040 --> 01:21:00.080] obviously it doesn't go on that long. [01:21:00.080 --> 01:21:04.320] In the meantime, Samsung had a whole bunch of new phone offerings. [01:21:04.320 --> 01:21:09.680] You name it, you have it, but what got very little attention is this foldable phone. [01:21:09.680 --> 01:21:12.440] That's getting a lot more than even Samsung thought. [01:21:12.440 --> 01:21:23.000] Oh, yeah, and 5G after this. [01:21:23.000 --> 01:21:26.280] Turn on my TV and boom, it's got all my favorite shows right there. [01:21:26.280 --> 01:21:28.440] I wish my trading platform worked like that. [01:21:28.440 --> 01:21:30.920] Well, have you tried Think or Swim? [01:21:30.920 --> 01:21:33.880] This is totally customizable, so you focus only on what you want. [01:21:33.880 --> 01:21:34.880] Okay. [01:21:34.880 --> 01:21:35.880] It's got screeners and watch lists. [01:21:35.880 --> 01:21:39.320] You can even see how your predictions might affect the value of the stocks you're interested [01:21:39.320 --> 01:21:40.320] in. [01:21:40.320 --> 01:21:41.320] Now, this is what I'm talking about. [01:21:41.320 --> 01:21:43.640] Yeah, you'll free up more time for your true crime shows. [01:21:43.640 --> 01:21:44.640] British Bacon Competitions. [01:21:44.640 --> 01:21:47.240] Hmm, then beg you for a crumpet guy. 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[01:24:41.720 --> 01:24:43.920] The new Galaxy Z Folds. [01:24:43.920 --> 01:24:44.920] Here you go. [01:24:44.920 --> 01:24:45.920] Look at that. [01:24:45.920 --> 01:24:50.160] It opens up to a 6.7 inch screen, first all glass, foldable phone for you available this [01:24:50.160 --> 01:24:53.720] Friday, and as you said, retails for $1,380. [01:24:53.720 --> 01:24:58.840] The aspect I think that a lot of young folks who buy this would enjoy is a camera system. [01:24:58.840 --> 01:24:59.840] Take a look at that. [01:24:59.840 --> 01:25:04.340] Folds out to a half screen, and then if you flip it around, you don't even need a selfie [01:25:04.340 --> 01:25:05.920] stick to take your own picture. [01:25:05.920 --> 01:25:07.560] Smile and record. [01:25:07.560 --> 01:25:09.920] Now take a look at the S20 as well. [01:25:09.920 --> 01:25:12.200] More phones as Samsung rolled out yesterday. [01:25:12.200 --> 01:25:16.640] Three different divisions and 5G enabled of this S20 Galaxy. [01:25:16.640 --> 01:25:20.600] And I would say that the camera system on this Ultra, which is the top end of the line, [01:25:20.600 --> 01:25:24.200] the quad camera is probably the biggest selling point in creating a lot of buzz. [01:25:24.200 --> 01:25:29.520] So normally on a lot of these phones, it's a 10-time zoom is the average that you get. [01:25:29.520 --> 01:25:30.520] So here we go. [01:25:30.520 --> 01:25:31.520] A 10-time zoom. [01:25:31.520 --> 01:25:32.520] There it is. [01:25:32.520 --> 01:25:33.600] You see that bowl on your screen? [01:25:33.600 --> 01:25:38.680] This goes out to 100 times, which probably catches some of the dust as well. [01:25:38.680 --> 01:25:43.360] So as I mentioned to you, 5G enabled, the S20 has three different phones, starts at $1,000 [01:25:43.360 --> 01:25:45.880] to $1,400 for this particular one. [01:25:45.880 --> 01:25:50.840] It'll be interesting, Neil, to see if Samsung can continue to sell these four-figure phones, [01:25:50.840 --> 01:25:55.280] because we know that Apple cut the price of their base model to below $700 because they [01:25:55.280 --> 01:25:59.080] are trying to sell it to people who don't make a lot of money in developing countries. [01:25:59.080 --> 01:26:00.960] But I see the flippable one for you. [01:26:00.960 --> 01:26:01.960] What do you think? [01:26:01.960 --> 01:26:02.960] It's beautiful. [01:26:02.960 --> 01:26:03.960] They're beautiful. [01:26:03.960 --> 01:26:04.960] And obviously price is no object. [01:26:04.960 --> 01:26:07.920] So they rolled the dice on all the S20 offerings. [01:26:07.920 --> 01:26:11.960] They just leaped from what the S11's all the way to 20, right? [01:26:11.960 --> 01:26:15.760] I mean, what was the rationale behind that? [01:26:15.760 --> 01:26:16.760] You're right. [01:26:16.760 --> 01:26:19.200] Yeah, well, it depends on the line. [01:26:19.200 --> 01:26:21.080] So this is the Galaxy S20. [01:26:21.080 --> 01:26:26.600] I think they're rolling up the 5G enabled phones, which will work on Verizon, AT&T, and [01:26:26.600 --> 01:26:27.600] the like. [01:26:27.600 --> 01:26:31.480] And yeah, they're trying to sell you, really, on the new camera system, which is what the [01:26:31.480 --> 01:26:33.080] iPhone 11 did as well. [01:26:33.080 --> 01:26:34.400] All right, great stuff. [01:26:34.400 --> 01:26:35.400] Susan Lee, thank you very, very much. [01:26:35.400 --> 01:26:37.320] Can you imagine 100 times zoom? [01:26:37.320 --> 01:26:41.280] I mean, you could be looking at people in other states with that. [01:26:41.280 --> 01:26:43.720] Anyway, that's the way the world is going. [01:26:43.720 --> 01:26:46.440] No one talks about the sound of the phone call anymore. 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[01:30:41.720 --> 01:30:45.880] Listen, apparently these talks between Harry, Meghan, and Goldman Sachs happened all the [01:30:45.880 --> 01:30:51.400] way back in November when the royal couple were enjoying their well-earned six-week vacation [01:30:51.400 --> 01:30:53.920] in Vancouver. [01:30:53.920 --> 01:30:58.240] And this, of course, was before the royal couple quit the royal family. [01:30:58.240 --> 01:31:02.160] So they were obviously thinking about the future long before they made it official that they [01:31:02.160 --> 01:31:03.520] were opting out. [01:31:03.520 --> 01:31:08.840] Now, Harry could be following in the footsteps of other high-profile people such as Gwyneth [01:31:08.840 --> 01:31:11.320] Paltrow, David Beckham. [01:31:11.320 --> 01:31:16.840] They all signed on to speak at these Goldman Sachs so-called talk events. [01:31:16.840 --> 01:31:22.200] But what we understand is, if Harry does sign on, he would not be paid for those speeches. [01:31:22.200 --> 01:31:23.200] So what's the point? [01:31:23.200 --> 01:31:29.600] But PR experts say it will most likely lead to a very lucrative future relationship. [01:31:29.600 --> 01:31:33.960] Now, right now, how much is the royal couple worthy to $45 million? [01:31:33.960 --> 01:31:34.960] Somewhere in there. [01:31:34.960 --> 01:31:39.680] But if they can start getting these relationships with the big banks, the financial companies, [01:31:39.680 --> 01:31:40.680] well, who knows? [01:31:40.680 --> 01:31:43.760] Some estimates above a billion dollars. [01:31:43.760 --> 01:31:46.920] So that is financial independence by any description. [01:31:46.920 --> 01:31:51.400] Harry and Meghan's team back at Kensington Palace in the UK, trying to do a little bit [01:31:51.400 --> 01:31:56.160] of damage control, saying that that contact back in November was purely on behalf of Harry's [01:31:56.160 --> 01:31:57.160] charities. [01:31:57.160 --> 01:32:01.000] But it took a lot of people by surprise, and I'm sure those inside Buckingham Palace [01:32:01.000 --> 01:32:02.000] as well. [01:32:02.000 --> 01:32:07.040] But we should also note that Harry gave a speech just recently at South Beach in Miami. [01:32:07.040 --> 01:32:10.120] It was an event put on by J.P. Morgan in front of a crowd. [01:32:10.120 --> 01:32:15.320] We're told of billionaires and other famous people, including Magic Johnson. [01:32:15.320 --> 01:32:21.240] He apparently or reportedly talked about his mother, her death, and his time in therapy, [01:32:21.240 --> 01:32:26.240] also touching on why he and his wife and his baby son Archie there, why they decided to [01:32:26.240 --> 01:32:27.840] leave the royal family. [01:32:27.840 --> 01:32:33.080] Now, there is a report that for that J.P. Morgan event, he got more than a million dollars. [01:32:33.080 --> 01:32:37.920] No one is confirming that, certainly not the bank or spokespeople for Harry and Meghan, [01:32:37.920 --> 01:32:42.800] but it just gives you a sense of what the future may hold for this couple, certainly [01:32:42.800 --> 01:32:46.720] a lucrative future if you believe some of these numbers, Neil. [01:32:46.720 --> 01:32:47.720] Pretty impressive. [01:32:47.720 --> 01:32:53.640] And although purists, critics would say it's all a bit sleazy when you're marketing yourself [01:32:53.640 --> 01:32:58.240] off of the royal brand, but I'm sure they're laughing all the way to the bank. [01:32:58.240 --> 01:33:00.120] Only if they veer into the bobblehead dolls. [01:33:00.120 --> 01:33:02.320] And so far, we're avoiding that. [01:33:02.320 --> 01:33:04.800] All right, that's Ashley Webster kind of money there. [01:33:04.800 --> 01:33:06.040] All right, thank you, Mike Fran. [01:33:06.040 --> 01:33:07.040] You're the best. [01:33:07.040 --> 01:33:09.880] Meanwhile, we've got some more records on Wall Street. [01:33:09.880 --> 01:33:15.440] Investors are convinced that Bernie Sanders, even if he is the nominee, will not beat [01:33:15.440 --> 01:33:19.880] the current White House occupant, Rose Cliff founder, Mike Murphy, on that. [01:33:19.880 --> 01:33:20.880] What do you think of that? [01:33:20.880 --> 01:33:23.080] That is growing as a consensus view. [01:33:23.080 --> 01:33:24.080] It is. [01:33:24.080 --> 01:33:28.680] And as Bernie gets more and more momentum, you have to think about the fact that when [01:33:28.680 --> 01:33:32.440] he does go up against Trump, there's a big part of this country that's going to vote [01:33:32.440 --> 01:33:34.920] anyone but President Trump. [01:33:34.920 --> 01:33:38.760] So anyone who goes up against him at least has a fighter's chance. [01:33:38.760 --> 01:33:43.720] So I think to that extent, the market is not pricing in a socialist being the president [01:33:43.720 --> 01:33:50.000] of the United States because if it were, you'd have, I don't pick a number, 25, 30, 50% haircut [01:33:50.000 --> 01:33:51.000] from where we are right now. [01:33:51.000 --> 01:33:58.240] What's interesting about it, too, is the notion that at least in 2016, Donald Trump and Bernie [01:33:58.240 --> 01:34:01.840] Sanders shared a lot of the same populist, angry voters. [01:34:01.840 --> 01:34:06.080] I don't mean to dismiss them as such, but that they had more in common than you would [01:34:06.080 --> 01:34:07.080] think. [01:34:07.080 --> 01:34:12.840] I'm wondering how that plays out or the closer, if he gets close to this, and there's a big [01:34:12.840 --> 01:34:17.840] concern if he gets this, that the Democrats will do their best to avoid it. [01:34:17.840 --> 01:34:19.840] How much of a force could he be? [01:34:19.840 --> 01:34:24.880] I think just the fact that he's up there is the most force he will be. [01:34:24.880 --> 01:34:29.560] I don't think he can beat President Trump in a general election by any stretch, except [01:34:29.560 --> 01:34:33.040] unless there's something else that happens between now and the election. [01:34:33.040 --> 01:34:34.880] Or the president does something to derail it. [01:34:34.880 --> 01:34:35.880] Right. [01:34:35.880 --> 01:34:38.520] Not having nothing to do with the economy that remains strong or the markets that remain [01:34:38.520 --> 01:34:43.320] strong, something does like these prosecutors quitting the Justice Department, stuff like [01:34:43.320 --> 01:34:45.480] that that mushrooms into something. [01:34:45.480 --> 01:34:50.320] And that's a real, those geopolitical type events or real events that could derail things. [01:34:50.320 --> 01:34:53.040] But people, a lot of times, they'll vote with their pocketbooks. [01:34:53.040 --> 01:34:58.240] In 2016, you had Trump the outsider, Bernie the outsider, so to speak, who both had these [01:34:58.240 --> 01:34:59.240] wild plans. [01:34:59.240 --> 01:35:01.360] But now President Trump has delivered. [01:35:01.360 --> 01:35:05.080] People have jobs, they have higher wages. [01:35:05.080 --> 01:35:07.000] People feel better about the economy. [01:35:07.000 --> 01:35:11.480] So to now run on the socialists, we're going to get more from bigger government and we're [01:35:11.480 --> 01:35:13.080] going to give more handouts. [01:35:13.080 --> 01:35:17.120] I don't think that sells as well in 2020 as it may have back in 2016. [01:35:17.120 --> 01:35:22.040] I don't know if you saw this Wall Street Journal column today looking at Democrats don't give [01:35:22.040 --> 01:35:26.160] up hope, saying much of the good sentiment and goodwill about the economy has felt more [01:35:26.160 --> 01:35:28.480] by Republicans than it is by Democrats. [01:35:28.480 --> 01:35:32.840] And that with the economy that's strong, the president should be higher. [01:35:32.840 --> 01:35:34.600] You've heard all these arguments before. [01:35:34.600 --> 01:35:39.480] I guess as much to say Republicans take nothing for granted, Democrats, it's not the end of [01:35:39.480 --> 01:35:40.480] the road. [01:35:40.480 --> 01:35:41.480] What did you make of that? [01:35:41.480 --> 01:35:45.880] If you see President Trump out on the campaign trail, he's definitely not resting on what [01:35:45.880 --> 01:35:48.600] he's accomplished so far and thinking that he has this in the bag. [01:35:48.600 --> 01:35:49.600] He's out there. [01:35:49.600 --> 01:35:51.720] He's hustling as he has for the past three years. [01:35:51.720 --> 01:35:53.680] So I think that's one thing to look at. [01:35:53.680 --> 01:35:57.840] But as far as Republicans versus Democrats, I think this rally that we've seen in the [01:35:57.840 --> 01:36:03.360] United States economy, forget the stock market, but in the U.S. economy, people don't go for [01:36:03.360 --> 01:36:06.640] jobs and they ask, are you Republican or Democrat? [01:36:06.640 --> 01:36:09.120] Everybody's feeling the growth in the economy. [01:36:09.120 --> 01:36:10.880] Everybody's feeling the growth in wages. [01:36:10.880 --> 01:36:13.040] If you wanted a job, there's a job out there for you. [01:36:13.040 --> 01:36:14.040] You can get the job. [01:36:14.040 --> 01:36:18.240] Now, people will vote on that just the fact that they feel better. [01:36:18.240 --> 01:36:19.240] Well, I have you here. [01:36:19.240 --> 01:36:23.560] What do you make of the resilience of these big tech names that are absorbing these body [01:36:23.560 --> 01:36:28.880] blows of an FTC investigation that could look at deals they made dating back a decade? [01:36:28.880 --> 01:36:29.880] Yeah. [01:36:29.880 --> 01:36:33.640] I think a lot of money that's on the sidelines now and is coming into this market wants to [01:36:33.640 --> 01:36:35.000] go to where there is growth. [01:36:35.000 --> 01:36:41.360] And if you're looking at Apple, at Alphabet, at Amazon, at Google, at all the big tech [01:36:41.360 --> 01:36:44.520] names, that's where money has seen the most growth. [01:36:44.520 --> 01:36:46.000] It's been where it's rewarded the most. [01:36:46.000 --> 01:36:49.440] And until that changes, you're going to see a lot of money coming in there. [01:36:49.440 --> 01:36:50.440] And it's still coming in. [01:36:50.440 --> 01:36:51.440] Thank you very, very much. [01:36:51.440 --> 01:36:54.000] My friend, Mike Murphy, follows this so well. [01:36:54.000 --> 01:36:59.800] Meanwhile, back to politics and Joe Biden, who's hoping for a comeback in South Carolina, [01:36:59.800 --> 01:37:12.480] former South Carolina Congressman Trey Gowdy on whether he is in store for what after this. [01:37:12.480 --> 01:37:17.360] Can you customize the S&P 500 to meet your client's growth objective? [01:37:17.360 --> 01:37:23.920] Only sector spider ETFs can divide the benchmark into 11 investable pieces. [01:37:23.920 --> 01:37:28.320] This allows you to underweight sectors like real estate and utilities and overweight sectors [01:37:28.320 --> 01:37:30.040] like technology. [01:37:30.040 --> 01:37:33.560] Sector spiders, write your next chapter in investing. [01:37:33.560 --> 01:37:37.200] Before investing, consider the funds investment of checkers, risks, charges and expenses. 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[01:40:22.000 --> 01:40:27.720] Our votes count, too. [01:40:27.720 --> 01:40:29.840] You know those cable TV talkers. [01:40:29.840 --> 01:40:34.520] Anyway, Joe Biden is hoping to revive his campaign by going after cable TV talkers. [01:40:34.520 --> 01:40:35.520] No, no. [01:40:35.520 --> 01:40:39.080] But in South Carolina, at least, he hopes to say, I could change this around. [01:40:39.080 --> 01:40:41.560] This is a state I can change it around in. [01:40:41.560 --> 01:40:44.240] Remember South Carolina, Congressman Trey Gowdy? [01:40:44.240 --> 01:40:45.240] Congressman, always great having you. [01:40:45.240 --> 01:40:50.160] What do you think of his argument that there is any state where he could turn it around [01:40:50.160 --> 01:40:52.760] in South Carolina? [01:40:52.760 --> 01:40:55.400] It depends on what he means by turn it around. [01:40:55.400 --> 01:40:59.840] If he means don't come in dead last, yes, there's a chance. [01:40:59.840 --> 01:41:03.360] So I think people in South Carolina, remember him finally. [01:41:03.360 --> 01:41:07.760] You know, Neil, he eulogized Strom Thurman in a political environment where not everyone [01:41:07.760 --> 01:41:11.040] would have done that when Senator Thurman passed away. [01:41:11.040 --> 01:41:16.560] He is light here, but he's built his campaign on a platform of electability. [01:41:16.560 --> 01:41:20.040] And that facade has been exposed in Iowa and New Hampshire. [01:41:20.040 --> 01:41:22.920] And I don't think he's going to win South Carolina. [01:41:22.920 --> 01:41:27.200] And if history is any indicator, no one has finished where he finished in Iowa and New [01:41:27.200 --> 01:41:29.520] Hampshire and gone on to be the nominee. [01:41:29.520 --> 01:41:32.920] He'll do better, but he won't win, and I don't think he's going to be the nominee. [01:41:32.920 --> 01:41:37.800] So this quest for the African-American vote, you know, you had the argument being Democrats [01:41:37.800 --> 01:41:42.000] who had these lily white states, Iowa and New Hampshire, this is real indicative of the [01:41:42.000 --> 01:41:44.760] Democratic base in South Carolina. [01:41:44.760 --> 01:41:46.160] That's tailor made for him. [01:41:46.160 --> 01:41:48.480] So your argument, he doesn't do well, doesn't win there. [01:41:48.480 --> 01:41:51.440] He's pretty much finished. [01:41:51.440 --> 01:41:53.440] I think he's finished no matter what. [01:41:53.440 --> 01:41:56.960] Historically, no one has finished where he finished in the two other states and gone [01:41:56.960 --> 01:41:59.000] on to be the nominee. [01:41:59.000 --> 01:42:04.560] I do think African-American voters are a big constituency within the Democrat party. [01:42:04.560 --> 01:42:07.400] I looked at the last debate stage. [01:42:07.400 --> 01:42:09.920] Maybe I missed the candidates of color. [01:42:09.920 --> 01:42:11.560] I don't see any. [01:42:11.560 --> 01:42:16.120] So the question is going to be, do they reward his loyalty to President Obama, or do they [01:42:16.120 --> 01:42:18.600] go with their hearts? [01:42:18.600 --> 01:42:23.920] And it's hard for Joe Biden to make the argument that anyone is passionate about him because [01:42:23.920 --> 01:42:24.920] of his ideas. [01:42:24.920 --> 01:42:25.920] It's all about electability. [01:42:25.920 --> 01:42:29.960] And if that facade's exposed, then you got to look somewhere else. [01:42:29.960 --> 01:42:34.280] You know, and you might be right about that, but Patrick, the latest candidate to take [01:42:34.280 --> 01:42:39.120] himself out of the race to spend his campaign, of course, the former governor of Massachusetts, [01:42:39.120 --> 01:42:41.120] African-American. [01:42:41.120 --> 01:42:44.720] What is your sense of what will propel this race? [01:42:44.720 --> 01:42:48.680] You always hear, Congressman, it's Donald Trump's to lose, and the only one who could [01:42:48.680 --> 01:42:51.080] screw it up for Donald Trump is Donald Trump. [01:42:51.080 --> 01:42:55.720] And so when you hear this talk about him praising Bill Barr for taking control of the Roger [01:42:55.720 --> 01:43:00.640] Stone case, Democrats seize on stuff like that to say, aha, he's at it again. [01:43:00.640 --> 01:43:02.720] What do you say? [01:43:02.720 --> 01:43:04.680] I just find that so bitterly ironic. [01:43:04.680 --> 01:43:09.080] I mean, go back to the Democrat debate stage where they are blasting Kamala Harris and [01:43:09.080 --> 01:43:13.960] they are blasting Amy Klobuchar, and they're even blasting Mayor Pete because God forbid [01:43:13.960 --> 01:43:17.880] two of them were prosecutors and may have put a couple of people in jail, and now they [01:43:17.880 --> 01:43:23.880] found somebody that they think ought to receive essentially a life sentence for a nonviolent [01:43:23.880 --> 01:43:24.880] crime. [01:43:24.880 --> 01:43:28.160] So I just can't get over the irony that the Democrats have finally found someone that [01:43:28.160 --> 01:43:32.560] they think ought to be subjected to a long period of incarceration. [01:43:32.560 --> 01:43:35.440] Prosecutors don't sentence people, Neil. [01:43:35.440 --> 01:43:37.040] Prosecutors don't sentence people. [01:43:37.040 --> 01:43:38.040] The judge does. [01:43:38.040 --> 01:43:41.480] And this judge heard every syllable of this trial. [01:43:41.480 --> 01:43:43.040] It was a trial. [01:43:43.040 --> 01:43:44.040] He was convicted. [01:43:44.040 --> 01:43:45.040] He lost. [01:43:45.040 --> 01:43:47.840] He should get an act of prison sentence. [01:43:47.840 --> 01:43:52.440] Whether or not it should be nine years or not, that is more, Neil, than any child pornographer [01:43:52.440 --> 01:43:55.360] I ever prosecuted as a federal prosecutor. [01:43:55.360 --> 01:43:59.680] Nine years is a long time for relying to a member of Congress. [01:43:59.680 --> 01:44:00.840] You should be punished. [01:44:00.840 --> 01:44:04.520] There's no question about that, but we have to have some proportionality. [01:44:04.520 --> 01:44:09.760] I don't think the president, as the head of the executive branch, weighing in, I don't [01:44:09.760 --> 01:44:11.960] think is going to move a single voter. [01:44:11.960 --> 01:44:15.040] I wish he would offer his commentary privately. [01:44:15.040 --> 01:44:16.040] Yeah. [01:44:16.040 --> 01:44:24.960] Well, the question I had for you, Congressman, is whether these four prosecutors who quit [01:44:24.960 --> 01:44:30.040] as a result, whether that was a staged event, Republicans are saying that was all preplanned. [01:44:30.040 --> 01:44:33.120] I don't know where the truth is, but they left in a huff. [01:44:33.120 --> 01:44:35.720] Was it a prearranged huff? [01:44:35.720 --> 01:44:37.040] I don't know. [01:44:37.040 --> 01:44:41.440] And in fairness, I try to be fair, particularly when I don't know anything. [01:44:41.440 --> 01:44:42.640] I don't know why they left. [01:44:42.640 --> 01:44:45.800] I think two of them were leaving anyway. [01:44:45.800 --> 01:44:46.800] Here's the reality. [01:44:46.800 --> 01:44:48.120] I did what they did. [01:44:48.120 --> 01:44:49.840] I did it for a long time. [01:44:49.840 --> 01:44:51.480] Prosecutors don't sentence people. [01:44:51.480 --> 01:44:54.000] And we all have bosses that disagree with us. [01:44:54.000 --> 01:44:59.440] If you read what Bill Barr, if you read the second filing, it is this is a serious crime. [01:44:59.440 --> 01:45:03.720] It deserves an act of prison sentence, but it may not deserve nine years. [01:45:03.720 --> 01:45:07.440] If you're going to quit because you think somebody ought to get nine years and your [01:45:07.440 --> 01:45:12.440] boss thinks they ought to get four, then maybe it wasn't the right job for you anyway. [01:45:12.440 --> 01:45:14.240] Do you find anything unusual about it? [01:45:14.240 --> 01:45:17.880] Have you ever heard or seen anything like that? [01:45:17.880 --> 01:45:22.560] I find the last two years to be wildly unusual. [01:45:22.560 --> 01:45:26.280] I was in the room when Roger Stone lied to Congress. [01:45:26.280 --> 01:45:29.040] It may have been my question for all I know. [01:45:29.040 --> 01:45:33.480] I would like to give back to a point where we can all agree you shouldn't lie when you [01:45:33.480 --> 01:45:38.280] take an oath not to, but we all agree that the judge is going to do the sentencing, not [01:45:38.280 --> 01:45:40.960] the prosecutors, not the CNN commentators. [01:45:40.960 --> 01:45:45.820] And I'd also like to get to a world where you don't have to apologize for being a prosecutor [01:45:45.820 --> 01:45:49.000] if you're a Democrat candidate for the nomination. [01:45:49.000 --> 01:45:52.920] And they beat the hell out of Kamala Harris and Amy Klobuchar because they were prosecutors. [01:45:52.920 --> 01:45:58.200] So this newfound desire for a vigorous, strong justice system. [01:45:58.200 --> 01:46:03.520] I just find it to be amusing when Democrats are asking for a significant jail sentence [01:46:03.520 --> 01:46:04.920] for a nonviolent crime. [01:46:04.920 --> 01:46:10.760] Yeah, the judge could be zero influenced by whatever recommendations are out there, right? [01:46:10.760 --> 01:46:13.560] That's why we give them life tenure. [01:46:13.560 --> 01:46:19.240] I think this particular judge is going to do whatever she thinks is right. [01:46:19.240 --> 01:46:23.080] And that's why we give them jobs for the remainder of their natural lives. [01:46:23.080 --> 01:46:24.080] Well said. [01:46:24.080 --> 01:46:25.160] All right, Congressman, very good seeing you again. [01:46:25.160 --> 01:46:26.160] I appreciate it. [01:46:26.160 --> 01:46:27.160] Yes, sir. [01:46:27.160 --> 01:46:28.160] Thank you. [01:46:28.160 --> 01:46:29.160] Thank you. [01:46:29.160 --> 01:46:30.960] And I can't wait to hear from you about everyone who's fleeing the high-tax states and going [01:46:30.960 --> 01:46:33.440] to more affordable confines. 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[01:50:11.360 --> 01:50:15.160] That's right, Barcelona, this was scheduled for not Asia, but so many of the players were [01:50:15.160 --> 01:50:19.360] coming from Asia and those coming in the United States in Europe, they thought, you know what, [01:50:19.360 --> 01:50:20.360] we just won't do it. [01:50:20.360 --> 01:50:24.080] And the World Health Organization is reporting right now that a lot of the cases that are [01:50:24.080 --> 01:50:30.120] outside of China have actually begun to be localized to transmission in that region. [01:50:30.120 --> 01:50:36.160] In other words, it's not as big as it was feared outside the Asian community. [01:50:36.160 --> 01:50:39.840] We're watching that very, very closely, whether that's greeted as favorable news or just a [01:50:39.840 --> 01:50:45.560] reminder that it remains stubbornly high math news just when you look at the number of new [01:50:45.560 --> 01:50:50.760] cases of that increase by a rate of 12% to 14% every day, it's in the eye of the beholder, [01:50:50.760 --> 01:50:54.320] but the argument from that seems to be that it is stabilizing, and at least that's what [01:50:54.320 --> 01:50:56.320] the markets hope as well. [01:50:56.320 --> 01:51:01.320] In the meantime, on to investment issues, bedbath and beyond stock is falling right now as sales [01:51:01.320 --> 01:51:02.320] continue to fall. [01:51:02.320 --> 01:51:06.800] That's not an indictment on the retailing community or the shopper, but more on this [01:51:06.800 --> 01:51:07.800] particular issue. [01:51:07.800 --> 01:51:08.800] Let's say it's making money. [01:51:08.800 --> 01:51:09.800] How's Charles Payne? [01:51:09.800 --> 01:51:10.800] Charles, what do you think? [01:51:10.800 --> 01:51:12.280] Well, there's no doubt about it. [01:51:12.280 --> 01:51:15.880] You know, you look at somebody almost every day when there's a name that sticks out like [01:51:15.880 --> 01:51:21.280] that, you can see it's a name that's been in trouble for some time, under armor, for [01:51:21.280 --> 01:51:22.600] instance, same thing. [01:51:22.600 --> 01:51:26.680] Look at a three-year, five-year chart, there's just some issues that they're not grappling [01:51:26.680 --> 01:51:30.720] with, but for the most part, we know that American consumers don't understand it nearly [01:51:30.720 --> 01:51:36.000] well, but there's a C-shift, even like a name like this, it's not the company we thought [01:51:36.000 --> 01:51:37.000] it was. [01:51:37.000 --> 01:51:40.480] Coming into the day now, it was less than $2 billion in value. [01:51:40.480 --> 01:51:45.040] On the other hand, there's new exciting names out there that they don't make the mainstream [01:51:45.040 --> 01:51:51.840] financial media, but they're huge, they're big, and you know who knows about them, millennials. [01:51:51.840 --> 01:51:55.520] My nephew was over for the Super Bowl, he was with some friends, and the names they were [01:51:55.520 --> 01:51:58.640] talking about in the stock market, they're up huge. [01:51:58.640 --> 01:52:01.840] These kids, they get it, these millennials, and they're making big money off of it. [01:52:01.840 --> 01:52:03.840] I think they were just trying to impress you, myself. [01:52:03.840 --> 01:52:04.840] They did a good job. [01:52:04.840 --> 01:52:05.840] There you go. [01:52:05.840 --> 01:52:06.840] You're right. [01:52:06.840 --> 01:52:10.360] You know, and you famously, years and years and years ago, talked about your approach, [01:52:10.360 --> 01:52:16.840] which kind of follows the Peter Lynch examination of parking lots outside stores that they're [01:52:16.840 --> 01:52:22.000] sold, maybe find out what's going on, kids and everyday products they buy and get drawn [01:52:22.000 --> 01:52:23.000] to that. [01:52:23.000 --> 01:52:27.800] Now the question becomes, even if they like what they want to buy, what they want to buy [01:52:27.800 --> 01:52:29.480] is a lot more expensive. [01:52:29.480 --> 01:52:30.480] What do you tell them? [01:52:30.480 --> 01:52:35.040] Well, you know what, as long as it's not where it is now, it's where it goes, right? [01:52:35.040 --> 01:52:38.920] It's almost like the stock market, when people say, well, do you buy here? [01:52:38.920 --> 01:52:42.480] That was the question when the Dow hit 100 the first time, when the Dow hit 1,000 the [01:52:42.480 --> 01:52:44.400] first time, when it hit 10,000. [01:52:44.400 --> 01:52:49.520] In their realm of someone who's 26 years old, has a job, not a lot of bills, you know, maybe [01:52:49.520 --> 01:52:51.880] living still with home with their parents. [01:52:51.880 --> 01:52:56.640] This is the time to go ahead and to immerse yourself into things that are going to be [01:52:56.640 --> 01:53:00.440] part of their everyday lives, and to be quite frank with you, some of these things I've [01:53:00.440 --> 01:53:02.520] never heard of, but they exist. [01:53:02.520 --> 01:53:07.560] They do very well, and they could be the sort of Microsofts that have that endurance over [01:53:07.560 --> 01:53:12.080] 10 to 15 years, where now, looking back 10 years from now, they'll look like, man, that [01:53:12.080 --> 01:53:13.080] was cheap back then. [01:53:13.080 --> 01:53:15.320] Man, oh man, the long term has changed for me, buddy. [01:53:15.320 --> 01:53:20.560] I mean, the long term now is lunch tomorrow, so we'll see what happens. [01:53:20.560 --> 01:53:24.920] Great job, great read on just things that people should think about. [01:53:24.920 --> 01:53:26.240] Charles Payne, he's up in a few minutes. [01:53:26.240 --> 01:53:29.680] In the meantime, the residents who are fleeing the Northeast for tax relief, well, they're [01:53:29.680 --> 01:53:33.800] finding that a new breed of these multi-million dollar condos are popping up waiting for him [01:53:33.800 --> 01:53:35.800] near Miami. [01:53:35.800 --> 01:53:38.320] Cheryl Cassone gives us a little, okay, Cheryl. [01:53:38.320 --> 01:53:41.000] Hey, good afternoon, Neil. [01:53:41.000 --> 01:53:43.680] And yes, we are in Sunny Isles, Florida, just north of Miami. [01:53:43.680 --> 01:53:45.960] This is Residences by Armani Casa. [01:53:45.960 --> 01:53:50.480] Giorgio Armani designed everything himself, including that piece of artwork that you see [01:53:50.480 --> 01:53:51.480] behind me in that fountain. [01:53:51.480 --> 01:53:55.400] But let's show you some of the things that are inside of this residence, in particular [01:53:55.400 --> 01:54:00.240] the wine room, because if you're going to own a condominium for somewhere between, say, [01:54:00.240 --> 01:54:05.880] $1.7 to $17 million, you want to have your own wine room and, of course, a sommelier [01:54:05.880 --> 01:54:06.880] to serve you. [01:54:06.880 --> 01:54:10.200] There's also a pretty incredible cigar room as well. [01:54:10.200 --> 01:54:12.440] That's also located inside of the property. [01:54:12.440 --> 01:54:15.520] And that is where you can go and have a cigar so that, you know, your wife or your husband, [01:54:15.520 --> 01:54:19.640] I'm not judging, might not want to smell your cigar smoke, and also it's a place to be social [01:54:19.640 --> 01:54:20.640] as well. [01:54:20.640 --> 01:54:23.280] And then the fitness center, pretty amazing stuff. [01:54:23.280 --> 01:54:24.440] It's a yoga studio. [01:54:24.440 --> 01:54:29.000] It's two levels, Neil, and it actually has ocean views, which are beautiful, and there's [01:54:29.000 --> 01:54:30.400] also some Pilates equipment. [01:54:30.400 --> 01:54:31.920] A few things about this building. [01:54:31.920 --> 01:54:33.320] We're now in the main lobby. [01:54:33.320 --> 01:54:38.920] A lot of activity around here, they just opened this tower, and that's what's so crazy about [01:54:38.920 --> 01:54:39.920] it. [01:54:39.920 --> 01:54:40.920] It is up here right now. [01:54:40.920 --> 01:54:42.840] It has got 56 stories. [01:54:42.840 --> 01:54:45.200] It's 308 units. [01:54:45.200 --> 01:54:49.600] They call it the glass palace here in sunny aisles because of the structure. [01:54:49.600 --> 01:54:52.600] That gives it the amazing views that you see in some of the rooms. [01:54:52.600 --> 01:54:55.800] Also a lifestyleist, Neil, because if you're going to come down here, if you're going to [01:54:55.800 --> 01:54:59.840] flee to Jersey, and you're going to come down here, you need a lifestyleist that's going [01:54:59.840 --> 01:55:03.520] to, you know, take care of your life 24-7 and dress you and head to Toramani. [01:55:03.520 --> 01:55:07.400] I'm going to get back to you in New York in my favorite, you know, Armani blue dress [01:55:07.400 --> 01:55:09.600] that I happened to pack from New York City. [01:55:09.600 --> 01:55:13.160] It's a little bit warmer, not to brag, Neil, back to you up there in, I think, Brady, New [01:55:13.160 --> 01:55:14.160] York? [01:55:14.160 --> 01:55:15.160] Is that right? [01:55:15.160 --> 01:55:16.160] That's fine. [01:55:16.160 --> 01:55:17.160] That's fine. [01:55:17.160 --> 01:55:19.160] A lot of these things, because that could have been a deal breaker for me. [01:55:19.160 --> 01:55:24.040] Look around outside for any botchy ball courts, because that, too, is kind of more to me, [01:55:24.040 --> 01:55:26.200] Charles, but we'll talk later about that. [01:55:26.200 --> 01:55:29.360] Great job as always, my friend, Charles Cassone on that. [01:55:29.360 --> 01:55:31.600] She looks so at home in that environment, doesn't she? [01:55:31.600 --> 01:55:32.600] All right. [01:55:32.600 --> 01:55:35.520] The president is set to welcome the Ecuadorian president to the White House. [01:55:35.520 --> 01:55:36.520] You know the drill on that. [01:55:36.520 --> 01:55:38.480] Sometimes he'll comment on other things that are developing. [01:55:38.480 --> 01:55:49.360] I don't know, like, we answer the markets, the economy, you name it, after this. [01:55:49.360 --> 01:55:54.480] At Fidelity, online U.S. stocks and ETFs are commission free, and when you open a new brokerage [01:55:54.480 --> 01:55:58.120] account, your cash is automatically invested at a great rate. [01:55:58.120 --> 01:56:03.000] That's why Fidelity leads the industry in value, while our competition continues to talk. [01:56:03.000 --> 01:56:08.280] I'm going to do it yourself, so when I needed legal advice, I just decided to go to law [01:56:08.280 --> 01:56:11.520] school and handle it myself. [01:56:11.520 --> 01:56:12.520] Just kidding. [01:56:12.520 --> 01:56:13.520] I hated school. [01:56:13.520 --> 01:56:17.080] If you aren't interested in becoming a lawyer yourself, call LegalZoom, and we'll connect [01:56:17.080 --> 01:56:20.280] you with an actual attorney. [01:56:20.280 --> 01:56:30.440] How do I even begin to tell you how bright you shine, how strong you are, how brilliant, [01:56:30.440 --> 01:56:36.800] unique, how you're my rock, my diamond? [01:56:36.800 --> 01:56:41.240] For the diamond in your life, there's only one diamond store. [01:56:41.240 --> 01:56:43.120] It's the Valentine's Day sale. [01:56:43.120 --> 01:56:47.480] Get 25% off everything, including these special deals. [01:56:47.480 --> 01:56:49.920] At sales, the diamond store. [01:56:49.920 --> 01:56:55.440] From roof to foundation, the damage to your home can be devastating from clogged gutters, [01:56:55.440 --> 01:57:01.240] leaking roofs, rotting wood and fascia, and flooded basements. [01:57:01.240 --> 01:57:05.360] Protect your entire home with leaf filter, the nation's number one rated gutter protection [01:57:05.360 --> 01:57:06.560] system. [01:57:06.560 --> 01:57:09.680] Once our ladders go up, you can put yours down forever. [01:57:09.680 --> 01:57:15.240] One of the things that I like the most is I don't have to get back on the ladder anymore. [01:57:15.240 --> 01:57:19.160] Leaf filter starts by cleaning, sealing, and realigning your gutters. [01:57:19.160 --> 01:57:23.000] We then install our micro mesh screen over your existing gutters, which is guaranteed [01:57:23.000 --> 01:57:25.880] to filter out everything except for water. [01:57:25.880 --> 01:57:29.440] Trying other products is what made us finally go to leaf filter. [01:57:29.440 --> 01:57:34.160] And leaf filter's lifetime transferable warranty makes it an extraordinary value. [01:57:34.160 --> 01:57:36.480] Leaf filter's going to make my home more valuable. [01:57:36.480 --> 01:57:38.200] Especially when I go to sell it. [01:57:38.200 --> 01:57:44.960] Call 833-LEAF-FILTER or go to getleaffilter.com for your free gutter inspection and estimate. [01:57:44.960 --> 01:57:50.320] Call or log on today and save 15%. [01:57:50.320 --> 01:57:55.400] I would come in to work as early as three and four in the morning to avoid people. [01:57:55.400 --> 01:57:59.840] When you've got 10 to 12 teeth missing, you can't hide that. [01:57:59.840 --> 01:58:03.440] Having to talk in front of groups, he was very shy because he didn't like to, you know, [01:58:03.440 --> 01:58:05.240] show his teeth or smile. [01:58:05.240 --> 01:58:10.920] For years, I would dream of a place where I could go and one day come out and have all [01:58:10.920 --> 01:58:11.920] my teeth. [01:58:11.920 --> 01:58:13.720] That could be your choice. [01:58:13.720 --> 01:58:17.160] Our responsibility is to educate you and facilitate. [01:58:17.160 --> 01:58:20.920] So you are very comfortable with the decision you are making. [01:58:20.920 --> 01:58:24.080] Doing dentures just wouldn't work for me. [01:58:24.080 --> 01:58:27.600] It was a very collaborative and team approach. [01:58:27.600 --> 01:58:33.400] They've got a lab there, put together a personalized plan, and I've got the best smile I could [01:58:33.400 --> 01:58:39.400] ever ask for, and one day, it is a 100% transformation. [01:58:39.400 --> 01:58:52.600] All right, all the major averages are in record territory. [01:58:52.600 --> 01:58:55.400] Later on today, I'm going to be speaking with the Republican, Texas Congresswoman, Kevin [01:58:55.400 --> 01:58:56.400] Brady. [01:58:56.400 --> 01:58:58.880] He's going to join me on your world forum at Easter, and I'm at Fox News. [01:58:58.880 --> 01:59:04.280] He and the administration lately have been talking up a sort of tax 2.0, a tax on 2.0 [01:59:04.280 --> 01:59:09.520] that would be geared more toward middle-class investors, whether that has any chance of [01:59:09.520 --> 01:59:13.760] going anywhere to the Democratic House, where it all has to start, as anyone's guessed. [01:59:13.760 --> 01:59:17.960] But he's very optimistic that we're still seeing the payoff from the tax cuts we're [01:59:17.960 --> 01:59:22.240] ready to see, even though Democrats campaigning are saying we are not seeing that. [01:59:22.240 --> 01:59:23.640] And the arguments go on. [01:59:23.640 --> 01:59:27.280] They stopped with my next guest, the anchor, Charles Payne. [01:59:27.280 --> 01:59:28.280] Thank you very much, Neil. [01:59:28.280 --> 01:59:29.280] I appreciate it. [01:59:29.280 --> 01:59:30.280] Hey, good afternoon, everyone. [01:59:30.280 --> 01:59:31.280] I'm Charles Payne. [01:59:31.280 --> 01:59:32.280] This is Making Money. [01:59:32.280 --> 01:59:33.280] Breaking at this moment, folks. [01:59:33.280 --> 01:59:37.360] Stocks for record territory once again, and it's thanks to good old fundamental. [01:59:37.360 --> 01:59:42.200] We're talking about the wrong stocks, I think, and sometimes we miss big money-making moves [01:59:42.200 --> 01:59:43.200] right under our nose. [01:59:43.200 --> 01:59:46.800] I talk about it all the time, but the millennials, they have figured a lot of this out. [01:59:46.800 --> 01:59:49.200] I'll tell you exactly what I mean in just a bit. [01:59:49.200 --> 01:59:53.560] Plus, it may have been a huge night for Bernie Sanders, but today there's a plethora of good [01:59:53.560 --> 01:59:56.240] news for Donald Trump as we head into November. [01:59:56.240 --> 01:59:58.680] My dims should be afraid of all these polls. [01:59:58.680 --> 02:00:26.440] I'm going to share them with you all that and so much more on Making Money.