good morning everyone. i m bianna golodryga. this just in to cnn, concerning data as the u.s. looks to combat rising inflation. consumer prices rising 4% since september, 8.2 september year over year, higher than experted predicted. cnn business correspondent christine romans joins me to walk through the numbers. these are figures every american feels every time they go to the grocery store or the gas station. why does it remain so stubbornly high? that s the big question. the fed has been raising interest rates for months and these numbers are still near 40-year highs. when you dig inside these numbers and this is what everyone is paying close attention to. when you strip out food and energy, that core inflation, annual core inflation 6.6%. that s the highest since 1982. that s a fresh 40-year high for core inflation. month-over-month core inflation 4.6% matches what we saw in august. you can see how it s off the worst levels that we ve seen earlier this year. maybe show
hours from now. after wholesale inflation, a painfully high 8.7%. we thought we saw everything in the game, and a new friend wants to join our party. i know it s an intense playoff game, but i can t help but laugh at this point. ainsley: a picture of vegas. beautiful they are. it s 69 degrees now, it s going to be 92. not a cloud in the sky. gorgeous weather. brian: this trip is where they call it, where kids go to gamble. steve: kids? ainsley: kids? brian: where young men and women go to gamble and celebrate bachelor parties, bachelorette parties. and you can see raider games now. steve: and supposedly they go to that little white chapel to get hitched in the middle the night. this is prime hitchin weather out in las vegas. ainsley: perfect day to get married. brian: do people still go to vegas the same way they use to? steel and i think so. brian: you can t see any people there. steve: well, it s 4:00 in the morning out there. what s very te
interest rates that we ve seen, the rate hikes we have seen have done the trick to ease that. so why did stocks soar when all was said and done? a lot of technical definitions being given here. let s put it this way. people were in a buying mood. welcome. i m neil cavuto. this is your world. what in the world to make of inflation that remaining pretty much out of control, but buyers that seem to find a certain resolve. based not so much on what they see there but an economy that they re convinced has seen its worst. has it? is it? we ll explore that beginning with connell mcshane taking a look at the events that prompting the buying wave and the reaction from washington as well. connell? it was a wild day. consumer inflation at a 40-year high. 40-year high. still as you say, the stock market came storming back from the early losses. now we re seeing speculation when you talk to investors that maybe, just maybe, the market has reached a bottom. we ll get to that. let s sta
night. jonathan karl standing by, he s with us tonight. as this was all playing out late today, the supreme court rejecting former president trump s emergency request involving those classified documents from mar-a-lago. terry moran on that tonight. the emotional scene for families who lost sons and daughters in the parkland shootings. the jury sparing nikolas cruz the death penalty. parkland families walking out of the courtroom. tonight, the deadfully police ambush. two police officers killed, a third seriously wounded. were they lured in by a suspicious 911 call? the numbers on inflation here in the u.s. the prices you re paying for everything. also, the change to social security payments. and the dow ending the day up. the american airlines flight making an emergency landing. several crew members sickened. the war in ukraine tonight. roughly 40 towns struck in just 24 hours, some with kamikaze drones. and here in the u.s. in the northeast tonight, flood watc
with one on the way. cbs s lilia luciano is o the scene. today our hearts are broken. o donnell: and red-hot inflation. prices are up everywhere, from the grocery store to the gas station, even at the bar. ( ringing bell ) plus, what happened today on wall street. o donnell: good evening and thank you for joining us on this busy thursday night. it was a dramatic ending to what s expected to be the final january 6th hearing, a vote to subpoena former president trump to appear before congress, and it came after shocking new evidence and never-before-seen video. that video showed congressional leaders at a secure location including house speaker nancy pelosi, calling state and federal officials to plead for help. investigators laid out today in vivid detail why they believe the attack on the capitol was not a spur of the moment decision but a premeditated plan months in the making to overturn the will of the people and the 2020 election. the committee today placed the blam