off the allergies. dagen: two weeks. connell: you have not called in sick, though. dagen: no. i do not believe in it. connell: let's go to nicole petallides. nicole: let's take a look at what is going on. the dow jones industrials down about 24 points. yesterday, we broke new records again. we have not had that since 1998. obviously, we have had a run-up. now, it is taking a little bit offa breather. we got in our weekly jobless claims. slightly better than we expected. most of the names have down arrows. dagen: thank you. connell: a huge problem overseas. greek youth unemployment over 64%. 64%. dagen: it also ticked up to 27%. what about here at home? dan had a column about this very thing. you cite a center for american progress report. the "new york times" has really jumped on the problem of youth unemployment and really taking it there political issue versus the gop. >> the study came out last month and was actually very good. white, hispanic, black. for black teenagers, the unemployment rate is between 40 and 50% and has been for a long time. we are talking about the united states. this is a potential political problem. as in places like greece. you cannot have the most energetic people in your population sitting around doing nothing for years. at some point, there will be a political effect. someone eventually will get blamed for it. they are trying to address it. i will say, they do not have any answers. connell: you identify it as a political problem, but also may be a political opportunity. on the other side, in conservative politics, where are they on this issue? >> well, they are pretty much nowhere, connell. we have had at best about 2% growth. it has at times been closed to zero. it should be at least pay for -- it should be at least 3% or 4%. it is hard for politicians in washington to talk about that. they rather talk about discrete legislation. we think the best kids in america sitting at home watching television. dagen: you point this out in the column, if you look back to the 70s, you can see how europe's current problem was being created that then. it is a regulatory burden. how long do we have, as a nation, to fix those problems in this country before we have, well, another greece? >> i thought we did not have enough time at the last election. that was one of the main reasons of changing administration. the obama administration, they were pushing us in the direction of europe. europe has proven it is really hard to unwind your self once you get yourself in that trap. we do not want to get into the point where it is chronic in the united states. connell: right. get on it here. do not forget, but let's get our priorities straight. >> i think that those who are running for the presidency should start talking about exactly what dagen engine. the regulatory overhang, taxes and link them to the fact that the economy is not growing, jobs are not being created and kids are sitting at home doing nothing. dagen: do you think we have a worth ethic that you do not see and europe? will that change? >> >> if people are out of work for a long period of time, the work ethic erodes. they lose heart. they lose aspirational instincts. it is hard. the longer they are out of work, the harder it is. connell: we talked over and over about 15,000 this milestone. this time last month our next guest was on. remember, he said a crash was up soon. mark fober is on the telephone with us right now. you have been all around the world. how big of a problem do you think that is in terms of political unrest, economic consequences, on down the line? >> i think it is a big problem. you lose a lot of skills and the energy to work. it creates a very poor social environment. this is certainly something i would be concerned about. connell: as we transition that into a conversation about financial markets, the last time you were on you said 30 or 40% maybe. since then, we have seen stocks go back up. >> yes, i mentioned that. unless we have a correction after february, the market could do as they did, in other words, go off like 40%. if you look at the performance of the market, we are up 146% since the march 2009 lows. we are up 59% from october 27 low. it looks to me that this is going to blow itself out like the nasdaq blew itself out in march in 2007. i think the market may still rise. possibly intel july, august. that is a possibility, not a prediction. connell: what should someone that is watching now and hearing that commentary from you, we have heard it before from you, for a long time you have been more on the doom then the boom side on your report. what should they do with that information? >> my asset allocation is 25%. as i said, they may still go up. that does not make them good value. if you look at the actual funds, after 2008, there was mixed outgrowth. i would be very reluctant to buy stuff at the present time. connell: thank you very much. >> thank you. dagen: when it comes to flying, loading up on frequent flyer miles is easy. using them to get a free flight is another story. the top airline is southwest airlines with 100% seat availability followed by jetblue with 89% availability. do not expect an easy feat from delta or u.s. airways. spending on prescription medication falling last year for the first time in decades. total spending dropped to $325 billion. the report is from the imf institute for healthcare. it also revealed the average spending per person on medicine filed by $33 to just under $900 last year. connell: eight arrests have been made at a global cyber crime bust. dagen: the tweet, the phony tweet that shook the market. the hash crash overreaction could not have gone down the way that it did. the arraignment in the suspect of the cleveland kidnapping story has grabbed everyone's attention. ♪ are you still sleeping? 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[ crows ] now where's the snooze button? visit us at marsco.com. no trading minimum. no share limits. no inactivity fees. go to marsco.com to open your account today. $3.95 a trade. dagen: stocks now. nicole is looking at shares of groupon. nicole: we will take a look here. groupon double-digit gains here today. certainly looking good. you have the analysts jumping on board. they are raising their price targets on groupon after they came out with their quarterly reports. certainly a great day here. that is the year to date chart. it continues to be a winner. their first-quarter loss narrowed. they posted stronger revenue. they cut back on their marketing costs. so far so good today. dagen: thank you, nicole. connell: time to make money with our friend, charles payne. dagen: the question is will they fight to the death, so to speak? charles: yes, they will fight to the death. a gladiator who believes in a cause. when these shorts get on the stock, they stay short. they are short, arrogant and greedy. this is going to zero. we spoke about wall street yesterday. these are the big-time guys. the hedge fund guys. nicole just mentioned groupon. green mountain up today. tesla up huge today. barnes & noble, which, by the way, i think we all wrote it all. 32% short. they do make a lot of money. there is a lot of them that they are making a lot of money. connell: what do we do with this information? charles: a lot of times, if you believe a company has great fundamentals, you can go against the big guys knowing they typically have more money and access to the press. there have been days where groupon has been down a lot, days where tesla has been down a lot, days where green mountain was down a lot. if we think starbucks will be successful and green mountain stocks get hammered -- it was never a competition. on green mountain, i did what you guys did. einhorn said it was a short. i disagreed with him on that and a whole lot of others. restoration hardware. 78% of this stock is short. i got a package from then. the most amazing thing anyone has ever set me in the mail. i bought a sofa from them. earning estimates are trending higher. the company has been beating the street on earnings. i think this could be the next blood bath before you talk about green mountain and groupon. on the long side, individuals often get burned. they bet on companies that they like. they bite groupon and green mountain before they take. charles: you are right. they do not give up. connell: charles, thank you very much. dagen: i want to see charles sofa. a global cyber crime bust. folks that stole tens of millions from banks accounts. there are arrests. connell: what through the hash crash. why one fake tweet should not have brought the market down the way it did. first, a look at currencies and how everyone is faring against the dollar today. ♪ how do traders using technical analysis streamline their process? at fidelity, we do i by merging two tools into one. combining your customized charts with leading-edge analysis tools from recognia so you can quick spot key trends and possible entry and exit points. we like this idea so much that we've applied for a patent. i'm colin beck of fidelity investments. our integrated technical analysis is oneore innovative reason serious investors are choosing fidelity. now get 200 free trades when you open an account. ♪ >> 23 minutes past the hour. hi, everybody. i am jamie colby. this is your fox news minute. ariel castro has been charged with rape and kidnapping charges. three women were held captive in his house. one of the women gave birth to a daughter while in captivity. the bail is set at $8 million. in phoenix, the jury that found jodi arias guilty of first degree murder will be in court today. she said she would rather get that answer life behind bars. washington congressman is calling on more than god the whistleblowers to come forward. those are just some of your headlines this hour. i am jamie colby. i will send it back to dagen and connell. dagen: federal prosecutors have arrested eight members of a crime ring. connell: details from adam shapiro. >> eight members arrested. allegedly stealing $45 million world wide. a press conference going on right now in brooklyn. here is how it worked. they allegedly would steel pin numbers by going into the bank data numbers. with those pin numbers, they would then go to atms and withdrawal money. prosecutors are saying they withdrew $2.8 million out of compromised bank accounts in the compromised. apparently, this was a worldwide operation that netted $45 billion. dagen: thank you, adam. connell: a killer for the economy. billions of dollars lost to six calls. can this kind of thing be prevented. dagen: within in leadership. we are live at the forbes summit. liz claman is live. i cannot wait for that. here are some winners today on the s&p. ♪ i turned 65 last week. the math of retirement is different today. money has to lt longer. i don't want to pour over pie charts all day. i want to travel, and i want the income to do it. ishares incomes etfs. low cost and diversified. find out why nine out of ten large professional iestors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus, which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. read and consider it carefully before investing. risk includes possible loss of principal. welcome to the new buffalo..... where new york state is investing one billion dollars to attract and grow business... where mpanies like geicare investing in technology & finance. welcome to the state where cutting taxes for business... is our business. welcome to the new buffalo. welcomto the new buffalo. welcome to the new buffalo. new york state is throwing out the old rule book to give your business a new edge, the edge you can only get in new york state. to grow or start your business, visit thenewny.com we asked total strangers to watch it for us. thank you so much. i appreciate it. i'll be right back. they didn't take aime. how much in fees does your bank take to watch your money? if your bank takes more money than a stranger, you need an ally. ally bank. your money needs an ally. dagen: six calls putting the economy on bed rest. the cost and the billions of dollars. working with mayor mike bloomberg. elizabeth macdonald just talked about that. connell: good stuff. the cathie black interview should be interesting. dagen: sure working with the mayor. connell: to nicole now at the bottom of the hour. nicole: stocks now. we are going to do a little technology feature. this is after reports that its partner microsoft is considering an offer for the milk media digital play. do not forget, microsoft rd owns part of it. now, looking at the potential of moving in on the rest of it. you are seeing the stock really jumping. microsoft is virtually flat. that is the news that we are following. back to you. connell: thank you, nicole. dagen: companies lose $80 billion every year from employee absenteeism. connell: first of all, what do you make of it? is there something we can do about it way back we do not do well enough? i had a horrible thought the other day. i saw a very overweight, an obese woman having a cigarette and i thought, i have to pay for your healthcare. what we need to do is be more creative about it. insurance needs to encourage preventive care. we need to encourage people to quit smoking. there are some companies that are doing innovative things. encouraging them to get to the gym to start to adopt a healthy lifestyle. not mandating it, but encouraging them. dagen: the new york city council just mandated that businesses in the city with 20 or more employees have to give five paid sick days every year to all employees. >> i think that is an overreach for a city government to be doing that to the private businesses. obviously, you need to have some kind of recognition. connell: people are less likely to take unlimited sick days. a limited sick days, i still do not take them. but then you do not even think about them. >> i do not know. we were, obviously, judging this assuming people will be the worst. assuming they will take advantage of whatever system. dagen: if you give a set number of sick days, by the end of the year, it is like, hey, i have three left and it is vacation time. >> they may be a little more careful about taking it when they just have a little cold. dagen: is it more of a burden, though, on the employees that do not call in sick then it is the overall company? >> i really think employers should be ensuring that employees and allow them to buy extra coverage if they want is for families and they can offer them some kind of a bundle, some kind of a blower premium they would get. as it is now, the individual employee is really paying for someone who has five children who is being insured through the corporations plan. we need to look at the whole equity issue here. connell: 77% figure, if it is right, that have to be it. people either need to be better taking care of themselves or be healthier overall. >> there are people who have chronic conditions. you cannot just work your way out of them. we need to recognize that. there are people with really bad habits. they are doing damage to themselves as well as the rest of us. we all end up paying for it before we all bear the burden. thank you. kathy black talks to elizabeth macdonald about her ill fated role back in 2010. why she knew it was time to get out. connell: it was pretty quick. competition for ad dollars is greater than ever. we will get into that as well. dagen: the problem is so many of them. the talent that they have is not talented. connell: let's go to treasury yields this morning. 1.8% on the ten year period back with kathy black and much more. ♪ ♪ >> i have your fox business brief. mortgage rates are on the rise after more than a month of the client. the average rate is now 3.42%. a day after stellar earnings, tesla motors getting another boost. the company's model s is the best car tested since 2007. the first time a plug-in electric has received such a high score. few companies are using social media to release information. that is the latest from the fox business network. giving you the power to prosper. ♪ [ agent smith ] i've found software that intrigues me. it appears it's an agent of good. ♪ [ agent smith ] ge software connects patients to nurses to the right machines while dramatically reducing waiting time. 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[ static warbles ] ♪ connell: big real estate special coming tomorrow. dagen: who is your favorite? connell: love them all. we will have all of that tomorrow. absolutely. we will talk about kathy black. a big executive at hearst. best known now for that short little stint she had as new york city's counselor. mayor mike bloomberg's administration try to build support from ms. black as the chancellor. dagen: after stepping down, black has been trying to move down from several ventures. elizabeth macdonald is at the forbes summit. liz: you are right. we did speak with kathy black about those embarrassing e-mails. she only lasted for three months. she was really outspoken. she spoke to us very honestly about how she is reinventing herself again. cathie has reinvented herself. i feel like it is my very exciting chapter. their founders are -- >> it literally ranges from data analytics. i think it will be very successful. two women who founded the daily muse which is a young successful site. it really is a wide group of them. the purpose of my being involved is that i, you know, want to help them, mentor them and help them grow their businesses. liz: you wrote a book called "back to black" -- "basic black" , as i was saying earlier, you are one of those unique individuals that transitions from business to government. we talk about how we need more business executives running government. they will do a better job of it. you worked under mayor bloomberg. then there was this "new york times" story about e-mails being released where you were getting endorsements from oprah winfrey and others. >> i had a very successful career. i spent 96 days as chancellor of new york. it is not something i want to be defined by. i always believed that i would do something in public service at a time in my career. it just seems like exactly the right moment. it seemed like such a privilege. i hoped i would be successful at it. you have to say to yourself and i have always said this to women and men in their jobs, there is a time, unfortunately, when you say all of this will not change. i will not be able to be affected here. all different kinds of initiatives. perhaps, there is less support for him in the boroughs. at the end of the day, both he and i, said this is not working out. it gave me time after that to really reflect and say how do i want to use my energy. >> what did not work? >> i know a lot of business executives imagine they will do public service. we have run businesses. we are thinking about profit in the bottom line and leadership and teambuilding. there is a clock saying how many days left in this administration. liz: a real culture clash. >> i was painted as a social life. it does not matter now. it is over now. it is not a green road. liz: really interesting stuff, dagen and connell. coming up in the next hour, we have lauren bush. she is the granddaughter of 8w bush. beating 60 million people around the world. we will also be talking to donna karan. we have a jam packed day here at the summit. stocks now. >> just keep on buying. based upon some lighter than expected data. this market is absolutely irresistible at this point. dagen: what could take it down? aren't you at least a little nervous? >> there is a lot of technical features thattwe are looking at inside of the market. a lot of quantitative features that give us reason to be concerned. it is starting to roll over. people can do what they want to do with their money. you wouud be up 30% at this point. it may be reasonable to just take some money off the table, sell in may and come back in september. dagen: thank you very much. connell: apple may soon have 99 problems. all from know via. chief executive saying sub $100 smart phones could be huge. take a look at the stock today. it is at $3.60. with over 400 million tweets a day, that is how many there are out there, how do we police the traffic and prevent one of these hash crashes? dagen: jeff flock has this story. jeff: also telling investors how to make money in the stock market using the predictive power of social media. >> what you are looking at is a list of the top 20 stocks. of course, a list of the stocks that people are talking about most negatively. jeff: groupon is the number three on their chart today. you started to see sentiment in social media positive on that before the stock started trending up. >> that is correct. jeff: this is true of other companies also. tesla, for example. >> we do the deviations from that norm. we are looking at when a stock is acting or positivelyor negatively. jeff: here is whole foods market. you start to see trending positive of social media. you solve the sentiment rise before that. interesting. interesting stuff, social media. someday i will have to get on twitter. connell: you would be good. jeff flock would be good on twitter. a lot of potential. dagen: a lot of photographs. the clean kind. connell: of course. dagen: "american idol." breaking in huge advertisement dollars. now in heated competition with "the boys." connell: we will have that story coming up with dennis kneale. also, your winners on the nasdaq today. ♪ all stations come over to mission a for a final go. this is for real this time. step seven point two one two. rify and lock. command is locked. five seconds. three, two, one. standing by for capture. the most innovative software on the planet... dragon is captured. is connecting today's leading companies to places beyond it. siemens. answers. for sein a whole new way. for seeing what cash is coming in and going out... so you can understand every angle of your cash flow- last week, this month, and even next year. for seeing your business's cash flow like never before, introducing cash flow insight powered by pnc cfo. a suite of online tools that lets you turn insight into action. ♪ dagen: the competition for viewers and cash. connell: here is dennis kneale with the details. dennis: the fans of "american idol", they have been watching it all season. the uncomfortable, cringe worthy bickering between nikki minaj and mariah carey. now comes a hollywood trade. this is usually a very creditable website. next season all four posts of the show will be fired outright. copied and echoed by other apps and websites. connell: all the judges and seacrest? dennis: not seacrest so far. no one yet is quite concerned. all right. the whole area of reality. "american idol." with the ratings down that much, someone at fox broadcasting, someone is thinking we need big changes. that is why this story is getting so much pick up. if it were true, this report, is it simply firing a shot saying to the judges, you guys better get along? dagen: how do you actually prove that that is the very reason? it is just a format difference between "the voice" and "american idol." dennis: the "x factor" was down season two from season one. i think the entire john ross baby getting a little tired. do you now think you better behave or do you instead say, well, now that i will be fired, i will just go out there and is behave even more. connell: that is the reason to watch the show. dagen: there are too many singing competitions. connell: more from dennis kneale coming up. dagen: thank you. do not go anywhere. orbit shares hitting a new high. exclusive interview with the ceo on how the economic recovery is hoping that business on "markets now." ♪ [ goodall ] i think the most amazing thing is how like us these chimpanzees are. 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>> look a look at the markets, every 15 minutes, the dow jones industrial at 15100, down just four points, erasing some of the losses with a mixed market, and nasdaq moved into the green now. the s&p 500 down just three points so, really is anybody's game here, as far as whether or not a winning or losing day. the stocks are mixed at the moment, as far as the dow jones industrial members within the group, you have names like hp, and united technologies, the best performers, and weakness to speak of like jpmorgan, and united health care on a day where jobless claims were better than expected. back to you. >> nicole, thank you very much, we'll see you 14 minutes from now as we always do. well, on these markets, our next guest says the only reason markets hit new records over and over again is because of bailout fever. the wealth manager president joining me now, and, kim, it's a hot market on a weak foundation. what do you mean? >> absolutely. this is, like, you know, cheryl, we've started out the beginning of the year in a flight pattern that's gone straight up, and so long as the feds continue to bail out and feed the markets with the fuel, dive air pockets detriment to the markets, and it's on a false foundation, but you can't fight the fed, checial, so you have to be in the market to get the reward. cheryl: you got clients in the marks, but you're leaning towards value companies, value stocks, picks for them, and, also, dividend payers, but when do yo go for growth? there's a shift in the last six months from many value company picks, and now to growth companies. the same, i'm not going to fight the tape, go for it. when do you do that? >> well, you know, i'm pullly invested all the time, and it's up 50% in two years, and that's gone from a value to more of a growth, and we have two core portfolios, one more value tilted, one more core growth, both in the portfolios, 3,000 picks, but we're fully invested, but with that, you want the payers too, like, one of my top holdings in the core portfolio is verizon. there's a 3.9% dividend, the second leading mobile company or second leading phone company in the world in the united states, and leading in the technology and, quite frangsly, more people are using the mobile phones today, 511% so that could mean up in their build with more growth for the company for verizon as well as a nice dividend, best of both worlds. cheryl: kim, you like verizon, up 30%, and the performance is there. i'm curious about the other pick, which is pfizer and verizon, but the stock up 31% over the last year, showing the viewers the chart, if ewe will, with verizon. do you like telecom overall or stock picking for everybody? >> no, no, not just stock picking, fully invested in, you know, 44 countries, 12,000 stocks, but i do like the verizon, the telecom communication because the reality is i look at my daughter, and i said, madison, seriously, our bill, the data that she uses cost us to go over on the bill, and, you know, she uses that phone for everything, everything, facebook, everything, so that means these companies are not going anywhere but i think up in the future. we like that in the portfolio and pfizer that partnered with cvs offering viagra online. 36% of the men will buy them online and have them home delivered. cheryl: up 47% in the last year, cvs and viagra and the website is a big move for pfizer, but before i let you go, kim, there's defensiveness in the picks, and i'm curious, we're worried about the fed, but what if the fed sticks with us for the next couple years, kim. there's got to be plays on that that make us really good returns and i know clients are ready to give back money lost over the last five years. >> absolutely. that's where it comes down to, cheryl, is allocation. i'm not saying the after market or to try to pad the market, but i'm against that, but what we can do is you can, if you have extra money, have the effortings now, and win the turbulent air pockets hit, have money on the sidelines to put into the large cap, large value, small cap stock across the board. you can be defensive, but the reality is, this market probably is going to go up. there's a lot of money on the sidelines so you have to participate. just watch the allocation, and by good solid companies to pay you along the way. cheryl: bullish along the end, kim fox, good to see you, thank you. >> thanks, cheryl. dennis: even the reluctant like the market. can't hold it down. cheryl: came around. dennis: 15 # 100, shares of orbitz at a 52-week high, stocks up 137% year to date as earnings are better than expected, and joining us for a fox business exclusive, the ceo, thank you for being with us, and now, the good news is the nice revenue, profit at 146 billion. bad news, the operating expensive up 1% more than the sales, and you're required a 160 million tax benefit for the profit. when do you make money for real? >> you know, we absolutely think we make money for real, very pleased at the results delivered this quarter delivering just a little bit and revenue above the top end of the range, and above analyst consensus in the quarter and pleased to deliver accelerating growth, room night growth came in at 14%, substantially up from 7%, delivered last quarter, and took to investors about the continuing accelerating trends, march, april, up 17% on a state basis, up 20% on the book basis. j dennis: there was a chart that said ma majority of airline reservations online, hotels and other travels not as much. does growth lie in reservations for hotel rooms and other things rather than air tickets? >> well, we're focused on the hotel opportunity. we see a huge opportunity for us, and there's still so much to be done to improve the experience. one of the areas of focus for us is mobile. we drive a quarter of the hotel reservations through the mobile devices, a vast market, a lot of growth opportunity here. dennis: smart for the mobile. everyone's got to make the transition, facebook's struggling with it. 25% of the reservations for hotels, now, what do you want that to be in a year? that percentage? great question. i think it will surpass 50%, and whether it's in 12 months, i don't know, but 50% is -- more than 50% is where it's going. dennis: the business does not rise unless we, travelers, spend the money. what are you seeing as a pulse point on the economy and travel? >> well, we sur surveyed consumers, and 78 planned a vacation this year. we're seeing hotel rates up, but good air fares out there, and in terms of destinations, orlando, hawaii, l.a., still see significant growth in the drive destinations so east coast beaches and mountain and outdoor destinations, but if you want to save money, the best bay to do it, if you fly, buy an article ticket and hotel room together. as a package on orbitz, you save 500 or more. dennis: when i do that, i go to jet blue rather than orbitz or expedia, there's a combo with a hotel. how much is airline competition like that a factor in your business in your rivals? >> well, you know, our hotels compete with us because of the websites, but we find mainstream consumers are focused on being able to compare multiple competitors and who offers the lowest price. we find surveys that brand loyalty is going down and people are focused on getting the value for the money. dennis: ag gaiter is a better way to shop, and then, lastly, it seems like this market needs consolidation, be bought by somebody, a couple huge players rather than so many brand names out there. what do you think? >> we generate $11 billion in total travel bookings, if you look over the last 12 months, large already, and as a result of the scale, we're able to bring real value to the consumers, hundreds of people around the world who are negotiating special rates that are, in many cases, exclusive to customers. we feel good about the value we offer to consumers now across the brands, but we continue to focus on getting great deals for consumers every day of the year. den deny i didn't ask on value, but whether you buy somebody or be bought. can you answer that question before we go? >> you know, we have a policy we don't comment on speculation about mna activity, sorry, i can't give you an answer. dennis: given the scale, you're a buyer, rather than a buye,, thank you. >> thank you so much. cheryl: george w. bush's niece, a fashion model and ceo of the feed project, and liz mcdonald's interview with lauren bush. dennis: she's doing great. groupon not offering a coupon to buy the stock, up 42% in the last six months, back from the dead. we talk about what's ahead. figure, look how oil's doing today. ♪ ♪ [ cows moo ] [ sizzling ] more rain... [ thunder rumbles ] ♪ [ male announcer ] when the world moves... futures move first. learn futures from experienced pros with dedicated chats and daily live webinars. and trade with papermoney to test-drive the market. ♪ all on thinkorswim. from td ameritrade. we don't let frequent heartburn come between us and what we love. so if you're one of them people who gets heartburn and then treats day afr day... block the acid with prilosec otc and don't get heartburn in the first place! [ male announcer ] e pill eachmorning. 24 hours. zero heartbur you are gonna need a wingman. and my cash back keeps the party going. but my airline miles take it worldwide. [ male annncer ] it shouldn't be this hard. with creditcards.com, it's easy to search hundreds of cards and apply online. creditcards.com. cheryl: markets holding on, above 15 # ,000 for the dow jones, we have another record set on england, but mixed bag, hpq leading it, and united health care dragging. dennis: stocks every 15 minutes, and tesla, the electric car maker with shocking results. >> good ones at that. look at the stock now, maintains a very nice performance up almost 25%. today, hit a new all-time high r 70.80 a share. the up arrows, came out with the numbers and beat the street. basically, the quarterly profit, that easily beat the street, and they delivered nearly 5,000 model s electric vehicles in the first three months of the year. as i noted, they topped estimates and lifted the sales outlook, this couple wed fact that consumer reports gave them a near perfect score on the model s, their first ever quarterly profit. a great run here for tesla. >> you are keying up charles payne right now, because he's following up on previous recommendations, and electric cars and tesla is a company to focus on. >> what's funny, first time i did it with you guys, next day defense hit, next day, you have to buy it. this is a company, by the way, it had so many in the last years, so many hits of 10%, 9%, 11%, and in part, never had to do with news, like, remember the "new york times" story on it? the guy drove it in the "new york times," drove it, and said it ran out of juice. it was huge. the stock took a hit on that, but -- dennis: which is shouldn't. >> he took a route, did cities, country, it was incredible. i find when there's a big giant short position on the stocks, they get fortuitous media coverage. cheryl: hey, we're the media. >> well, not all media's the same. bottom line is, though, obviously, the grand slam, the shorts jump back on that. i want to talk about monster and rackspace because they are two that i have subscribers in, and they are under pressure today. monster, reported, that's one of the shorts, don't like, the number was, i thought the number was good. here's what i take from it. when management tells me to take market share, i love that. now, taking market share of a market that's smaller, obviously, that's not always the greatest news, and that's what the argument is here, but there's no doubt this category is growing faster than carbonated drinks. cheryl: follow the san fransisco attorney general who filed suit against mop steer, not marketing to children, says they are, and it's negative. do you care about that? >> i care about the legal battles right now. it's unfortunate they have become politically incorrect. more people die today from drinking pepsi than die the next 200 years in drinking monster. that's the way it is. dennis: no one is having investigations on cigarettes that kill 200,000 people a year. i don't get the monster bev ramming thing. >> i don't either. as far as rackspace is concernedded, the biggest concern. hold for now, five firms downgraded it, over sold, don't buy more, not yet. cheryl: like the honesty. >> a high speed whack i'm taking right now, high speed. cheryl: all right, from luxury apartments to the foreclosure down the block, we are talking about the big business of real estate tomorrow. who is making money, how you can cash in and e perts have the answers. we have kevin and jacob of united realty, and sherry, the ceo of better homes and gardens. dennis: we want to hear your real estate horror stories and triumphs. tweet us @foxbusiness hash tag business recovery, and you may see them live op fox tomorrow, go ahead, be famous. $8 million bail set for the man accused in the cleveland kidnappings. latest ahead in the fox news minute. cheryl: plus, the politics of jobs as jobless claims hit a five-year low, and republicans say it's not good enough. that's coming up, but, first, going to break, look at the world's currencies and how they fare against the u.s. dollar. again, there's the pound against the dollar. big day, five and a half year day for england. be right back. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ are you still sleeping? st wanted to check and make sure that we were on schedule. the first technology of its kind... mom and dad, i have great news. is now providing answers families need. siemens. answers. welcome to the new buffalo... where new york state is investing one billion dollars to attract and grow business... where companies like geico are investing in technology & finance. welcome to the state where cutting taxes for business... is our business. welcome to the new buffalo. welcome to the new buffalo. welcome to the new buffalo. new york state is throwing out the old rule book to give your business a new edge, the edge you can only get in new york state. to grow or start your business, visit thenewny.com >> 23 minutes past the hour, i'm jamie colby with your fox news minute. in bangladesh, eight dead after an 11 story sweater factory caught fire accelerated by the flammable acrylic material inside. this is two weeks after the nearby garment factory collapsed where the death toll is now 930. back here at home in cleve, accused candidate napper, case crow, arraignedded on rape and kidnapping charges. three women who disappeared between 2002-2004 held captive in the house until they were rescued tuesday. bail for the former school bus driver set at $8 million, $2 # million per count, could be more. in the jury that found arias guilty of first degree murder back to court to determine whether she faces the death penalty, the final decision. in an interview with the fox affiliate, ksaz, she would rather have death than serve life behind bars. those are your headlines, all of this and more for you, back to you, cheryl. cheryl: my favorite attorney. >> oh, thank you. cheryl: great job following the story. >> thank you so much. cheryl: thank you. george w. bush's niece, a fashion model, and liz joins us with an exclusive interview with lauren bush lauren, liz, take it away. >> great to be with you, here with lauren bush lauren, and we were just talking, lauren got off of the stage talking about the charity, and it's one of the most innovative charrties i heard, dennis and cheryl, so, lauren, tell us more about feed, and you got a bag here to show the viewer what you got. >> i do. seed, we're a social business, a non-profit, but the money raised to give meals is for the for-profit business, a different way of doing it, and we've been able to give in the six years we've been around, near 6 # # million school million meals. in asia, latin, america, and africa, and really what feed is is a way for individual consumers to get involved in the fight to end world hunger through the sales product. here's a bag. when you buy this bag, for example, it gives a hundred school meals. there's a number, clearly printed on every one of the products signifying the number of meals we give or micronutrient powder. >> the product has the number of meal on it? interesting. lauren, the reason why it's innovative is you hooked up with big name companies. tell us about that. >> yeah, we've been fortunate to work with amazing, you know, big companies that have helped build the feed brand reach over the last six years like disney, the gap, pottery barn, whole food market, and today we look with godiva and about to launch with target end of june. >> wow. the way it works, 50 different products that you are developing, and they are for sale in companies like stores like target? >> we have an array of products for sale on the website, feedprojects.com, and target is a limited time only collaboration, and all the proceeds from the target goes to giving meals here in america so the hope is that we're able to sell enough products to be able to donate 10 million meals to hungry children and families in america. >> so impressed. is this sort of like a lifestyle brand, non-profit, is that what you aim for? there was a story out you could be the martha stewart of charities and -- >> oh, gosh. >> i know, and in other words, being innovative in having, you know, lifestyle products for sale, but linked to a charity. >> feed is growing into a lifestyle brand, and i really am personally a big believer that, ewe know, consumers want to do good through the consumer dollars, especially young people, and they want to wear that badge of honor saying, i'm wearing something cool, like the product first, of course, but it's also, you know, doing x, giving meals, or helping kids. >> jewelry clothing. >> uh-huh. >> what is your uncle george w. and grandfather think of the work? >> i think they are proud of it. >> very proud, huh? >> yeah. >> lauren, great to be with you. lauren bush lauren, guy, innovative charity she's work and co-founded, feed. we are just about an hour away of talking to carley, and in the two o'clock hour, dr. julie, returning merck vaccine and donna karen as well. back to you. cheryl: liz, thank you so much. liz, thank you. dennis: liz invented the women's power list forbes when she was there, a one page thing, and now it's a cover story, a whole conference, that started with liz. nice job, liz. cheryl: yeah, liz. >> thank you. dennis: sib crime bust that stole millions from bank accounts. the arrest made in the case, ahead. cheryl: "american idol," the judges continue to clash. are the judges going to stay, or are they going to go next season? a lot of speculation on this story. dennis will cover that. look as we go to the break, the s&p winners, a flat market, but nice names making big games, first solar one of them. we'll be right back. ♪ welcome to the new buffalo... where new york state is investing one billion dollars to attract and grow business... where companies like geico are investing in technology & finance. welcome to the state where cutting taxes for business... is our business. welcome to the new buffalo. welcome to the new buffalo. welcome to the new buffalo. new york state is throwing out the old rule book to give your business new edge, the edge you can only get in new york state. to grow or start your business, visit thenewny.com for sein a whole new way. for seeing what cash is coming in and going out... so you can understand every angle of your cash flow- last week, this month, and even next year. for seeing your business's cash flow like never before, introducing cash flow insight powered by pnc cfo. a suite of online tools that lets you turn insight into action. over any other carrier? many choose us because we have the largest 4glte network. others, because of our reputation for reliability. or maybe it's because we've received jd power and associates' customer service award 4x in a row. in the end, there are countless reasons. but one choice. dennis: politics of jobs, jobless claims hitting a five-year low, but republicans say it's not good enough. "wall street journal" bureau chief is ahead. eight arrested in a worldwide cyber crime team bust, and adam has details. groupon shares soaring, buy, hold, or sell? analysts ahead. cheryl: stocks every 15 # minutes, bottom of the hour, and dish in the red after the company missed earnings this morning. nicole, you have that. >> it's interesting because, yesterday, the stock hit the highest levels in many years since 2007, but, today, pulling back today, cheryl and dennis. the stock down 2.8% at the moment after coming out with the quarterly report, profit did drop, and a big amount here, profit falling 40%. one of the reasons is they were hurt by higher programming and subscriber acquisition costs. now, they did add subscribers, but not as many as wall street had been anticipated. they added 36,000 net subscribers with an estimate of 58,000. clearly, under performing there. they have blockbuster revenue that fell, and overall, a tough day for dish. back to you. den depp thank you, nicole. and the politics of jobs. jobless claims coming in this morning at the lowest level in five years. still, republicans say it's not good enough. we are joined by "wall street journal" washington bureau chief, so, jerry, jobless claims fell unexpectedly, four week average, hitting a level not seen since a month before the great recession began. what's not to like? >> there's a lot to like, first of all. the thing to like most about the report saying layoffs have probably stopped, that, you know, the bleeding stopped because that's what this number tells you about. layoffs happen, people file claims for jobless benefits. that's stopped. that doesn't mean hiring back started yet, unemployment at 7.5%, at the en was at 5%. that's a long climb down from 7.5% to 5%, and jobs are created, but they are going to be created at the 150-200,000 a month phase or rate we've been seeing before. that's good, but not great. dennis: yeah, i think we need 200,000 just to match a population, new jobs each month, and need 350 a month to get the nation truly back and working because some like 14 million under employed people counting them with the jobs numbers. another thing happened i wanted to ask about. the report of higher than expected revenue for the treasury coming in, more than 50 billion more than expected. what i was wondering is, given the washington crow's nest view, will we see pressure start to ease off of the spending cuts, because, oh, new money's coming in. does that change the debate? >> well, changes the debate, not necessarily in that way, i think, first of all, yourself right, the deficit comes down faster than people thought because of the higher revenues. there are more people working, tax rates did go up a bit at the beginning of the year, but spending is also come down a little bit as well, and so put those two things together, and, plus, an interesting factor, some of the bailouts paid back, and fannie announced they are giving the federal government back $59 million because they are making money again in the housing market. all those things together bring the deficit down a little bit. that eases the pressure for a big budget deal, big budget deficit deal, not necessarily a good thing. i think that given the fact that one of the factors in bringing the deficit down is restraint on spending, an argument to stick with the sequester level spending cut. dennis: sequester is not all that devastating at all given the good jobs numbers. do you think there's any link between them, jerry? do you think all the talk in washington about we need to cut spending, cut deficit hurts the confidence to hire new jobs? >> well, there is -- there is no doubt that the fact that there's some -- there's some austerity coming from washington, actually, putting a little bit of a squeeze on hiring and probably creating psychological problems, but there's also some upside benefit to having people have a sense that the deficit's getting under control, maybe that's inspiring confidence down the road. the trick in washington right now, dennis, is finding the balance between austerity and growth policies, what washington is struggling to find and has not got there yet, but as numbers suggest, we're in shape on both fronts more than before. dennis: thank you for being with us. >> sure, happy to see you. cheryl: federal prosecutors busted a crime organization, and adam following this for us from the news room today, fascinating story, adam. >> it is fascinating. the cyber crooks and fbi call them unlimited operations because of the way they work, you know, essentially withdrawal unlimited funds with the fraudulent debit cards, prepaid debt cards, involving two banks from overseas, middle eastern banks, and thousands, perhaps, people connected to this thing because it involves 26 countries. first, the global impact of what's transpired. roughly 45 million dollars stolen in two worldwide cyber attacks. first in december, the second in february, and that one in february included new york city. using prepaid debate cards and data stolen from the processors of prefade r paid debit cards, go in, get the pin numbers on the debit cards, and then go into the banks and they would wipe out withdrawal limits on the cards as well as notifications on the cards. in new york, eight people then spanned out, called cashers, withdrawing $2.8 million, eight charged, one is dead. he was murdered in april. they are charged with things like fraudulent withdrawals. to give you an idea of the magnitude, on february 19th-20th in 24 countries around the world, in ten hours, there were 36,000 transactions at atms like those in new york, and they withdrew $40 million. incredible. cheryl: all from younkers, one tried to flee to go to the dominican republic, and it reads like a novel. >> they are crooks with taste because the government has seized row lex watches, two mercedes and poshes they purchased with the funds. you can't fault them for that with high standards. dennis: i don't remember hearing about the heist when it happened. you only hear about arrests. banks are too quiet sometimes. >> hey, you know, we talk about, for instance, jpmorgan chase, the consent order of money laundering? it was the compliance with money laundering laws that help nab the people because the authorities were notifieded that amounts greater than $10,000 were being deposited at banks in south florida and here in new york. cheryl: you'll be on it all day long. thank you. >> yeah. dennis: talk "american idol," and one unconfirmed report says all four celebrity judges will be voted off next season. that's ahead in the media minute. cheryl: west coast minute, who won the naming rights for the new 49ers's new stadium. it is going to be a nice stadium. we'll be right back. changeakel ♪ ♪ >> i'm tracy burns, and according to the imf, the institute for health care, medicine fell last year for the best drop, the best factor, a drop of independencive generic versions of widely used drugs. time is ticking in the motor city, dallas, a company manufacturing its brand of watches in detroit. the watch maker has a lofty production target of 45,000. taking a drive to clear your head could be the thing of the past if gm has its way. according to the news, gm explores ways to bring advertising to in-car information. the navigation voice could be replaced by the voice of a tv star, and the oil change reminder could be sponsored by a gas station and whatever else ad worlds dream up. that's the latest giving you the power to prosper. ♪ dennis: stocks now, keith, dow down two, but still up over 15,000, are we going to be down from here tomorrow or up from here? be bold. >> ha-ha, well, dennis, i wish i had a crystal ball, which i think is what you're asking me, but hard to see where the market would go down in any great form right now, and i mean, as long as you got the central banks around the world, the fed and the bank of japan pumping money into the systems to, really, backstop the fiscal policies of the government around the world, hard to see why the market goes down. people buy it and money flows into it. there's all the action in finance. capital goes where capital's rewarded, and it's rewarded in the equity markets. dennis: okay, well thank you very much, keith. i like that, a bode of confidence there. you're on my side. have a good day. >> thank yous. cheryl: groupon, the stock soaring, following about a better than expected earnings report, and for more what's in sight, we have the senior research analyst. we have to start out with the ceo, the ceo story, andrew, leaves last quarter, a colorful ceo, do you like the stock more than now that he's gone? >> it's not so much about liking him more or less, you know, since he left, but the idea is the company was on the right track last quarter, where, i think, they missed the mark was the top line growing, bottom line was not moving forward like people wanted. what we see now is, you know, they have internationals starting to look better, still a long way to go for the guys, but i believe in the model, add value to the consumers, and i think the model works over the coming years, and this company's operating at a sub operative level. that's the opportunity. cheryl: you like mobile, couple things, stock up 40% in the last six momentses, and analysts say it's because andrew mason is gone, hence the question about it, but moving on, again, groupon seems to be soaring from a transaction perspective off of smart phones and spend more money than those using groupon on the desk top. why is that? >> i think mobile is a national extension of the desk top business, an important point because the internet companies are, actually, you know, hurt because of the shift from desk top to mobiles, and people are exhibiting they are comfortable, you know, doing transactions on mobile with respect to the groupon business, and, in fact, what you are seeing people spend 50% more doing mobile transaction so for groupon, this has been quite seemless, and keep in mind that the 45% is in north america in international markets, it's lower. it's growing faster, but that's the other opportunity. cheryl: would be a great thing, though, group on's in 48 countries now. the saturation levels for smart phones around the world improve, groupon's really going to take off based on that. you have a price target of $9 on the stock now. that must be a piece of what you see; right? >> well, absolutely, no doubt. i think mobile is an important part of the thesis. you know, we're thinking that, you know, mobile is going to be more than 50%, you know, before too long, and -- cheryl: internationally, to be clear, on the international scale, though; right? >> i think international takes longer, but, yeah, i think they'll get there eventually. you're right, they're in 48 countries, 500 markets, and people forget that this is a company that's only five years old, and they got $5.5 billion of merchant billings, grew too fast, have to unify the systems. once it's flowing and hitting on all cylinder, it's another company in a few years. cheryl: what the board said, we're not in a hurry for new leadership. the stock price is okay they're not in a big urry now, but there's a lot of speculation with a deal with google, a partnership, something like that between groupon and google. what do you think? >> you know, it's an old speculation that started before the company went public, obviously, because google was reportedly interested in buying the company for $6 billion. you know, the current valuation of the company now is, you know, less than half that, so, really google saw something there, and what's different this is company is profitable, and back then, it was unclear if they would be profitable. they are generating free cash flow, not clear this, they have 1.# # billion on the balance sheet, and if anything, they have a much more dominant position, stronger balance sheet, and a bigger business. they should be more valuable now. cheryl: revenue's up 8% for the company for groupon, and, again, they got a media hit, probably from us, but they got a tough time when andrew mason made the strange projections, and it seems like they survived. interesting story. we'll see, senior research analyst, thank you. it's good to see you, again. >> thank you, cheryl, appreciate it. dennis: can the series be saved? "american idol," lynch pin of fox broadcasting in trouble. and now a hollywood trade site says all four idol celebrity judges will be fired next season along with the show's executive producer. now, a spokesman for fox declines to comment. idol all but created reality competitive format that spawned knockoffs like "the voice," "dancing with the stars," and "x-factor," but idol's ratings hurt because of the cat fights of the judges, and no wonder they bicker. "american idol" down 23% in total viewer, and worse, down more, 25% among the demographic group that advertisers pay to reach. that's adults under age 50. turns out the story is not true, know that it should be. "american idol" is in desperate need of big changes. cheryl: "the voice," i mean, they are not mean, but supporting the artists, trying to help the kids. dennis: that is up this year and idol is down. cheryl: nevada topping a list that many homeowners are not going to. dosh -- going to want to see or like, especially if you're in nevada. dennis: wrigleys a jolt from the fda and why they pulled the latest product off the shelf because it has caffeine. give me a break. first, look at today's winners on the nasdaq. ♪ cheryl: time for the west coast minutement the san fransisco 49ers reached a deal to name the new stadium, the $220 million agreement for the project announced by levi's ceo, and 49er ceo at levi plaza in san fransisco. it's going to be in silicon valley, though, a 49-mile drive south of san fransisco. this season will be the last for the 49ers at candlestick park, and it's time for it to retire. nevada is leading the nation in home foreclosures. in april, the sale of disstressed property jumped 40% year over year. although, the last two months activity slowed, am is say they are confident foreclosure paperwork is reliable. finally, tomorrow is national shrimp day, and fishermen are celebrating, and oregon is going gang busters growing into a multimillion dollar industry supporting thousands of new jobs. the 2012 shrimp catch worth $244 million, accounting for 75% of the landings on the entire west coast, so happy shrimp day a day early. who knew. dennis: i like that. wrigley pulling the caffeinated gum, alert, off the shelf. the new gum put out a month ago has the same amount of caffeine as a half cup of coffee in each stick of gum. they are temporarily halting sales out of respect of the fda. it's a probe by the agency to explore the effects of caffeine in kids. the next target coke? cheryl: i don't know. people like red bull and coke and monster, but, anyway, all right, don't forget, everyone, tomorrow, talking about the big business of real estate and how you make money in today's housing market, maybe not in nevada. experts join me with the answers, brian willis, kevin of walsh, and jacob of the united realty, and cherry from better holmeses and guards pes here. dennis: so many names, glad i didn't read it. you're good. best or worst real estate experiences? tweet us @foxbusiness, hash tag real estate recovery. cheryl: tweet now. we'll be on that for you tomorrow. cashing in on the power of twitter. behind the seans look of a company protecting business from what could be another tax crash. dennis: diversifying your portfolio with art, spring art auctions in full swing, but if a $37 million say son is not in the cards, lori has far more affordable options coming up next on fox business.. ♪ rify and lock. command is locked. five seconds. three, two, one. standing by for capture. the most innovative software on the planet... dragon is captured. is connecting today's leading companies to places beyond it. siemens. answers. you are gonna need a wingman. and my cash back keeps the party going. but my airline miles take it worldwide. [ male announcer ] it shouldn't be this hard. with creditcards.com, it's easy to search hundreds of cards and apply online. creditcards.com. lori: hello, everybody. welcome to a brand new hour on market now. i am lori rothman. ashley: i am ashley webster. stocks pulling off after five days of you record highs. americans applying for unemployment benefits dropping to the lowest level since 2008. lori: in europe, the jobs news not nearly as good. 27%. ashley: and exclusive interview with hewlett-packard ceo. what she said she needs to do to catch up with apple. lori: trial to control us even more. ashley: time for stocks now. let's head to the new york stock exchange.