The stock is down almost 25 this year. And the crypto climb continues. Crypto up 56 in a month. Im melissa lee, coming to you live from studio b at the nasdaq. On the desk tonight tim seymour, karen finerman, dan nathan, and guy adami. We start off with the trifecta of trouble in the socalled magnificent seven. Apple, after fa bet and tesla all down sharply this year. Yet the Broader Market seems to be okay, shrugging off the weakness. The s p closing the day basically flat. The dow and nasdaq were down less than half a percent. And look where the strength came from. Nvidia up 3. 6 , a new alltime high. That stock is now up more than 250 from a year ago. Lilly and the glp space also continuing to gain. That stock quickly closing in on the trillion dollar market cap club, but its not all the same old stocks. Transports also at a record, with todays move higher drichbt driven by lyfts 4 pop. Industrials also on a tear. Names like caterpillar, up days in a row here. What does this broaden
The 14th anniversary of the Affordable Care act is later this month. N Enterprise Institute hosted a discussion on how Health Care Law has survived and changed over time. And by republicans efforts to repeal and replace it have failed. This is about 90 minutes. [inaudibleversations] good morning, everyone, welcome to the american Enterprise Institute, and todays event, chasing the ghost of the Affordable Careā n act. Decided not to go with Abraham Lincoln vampire killer, but we work on that. First, i am tom miller, senior fellow at the american Enterprise Institute and periodically i always talke d you do with the Affordable Care act. I think the Obama Administration for necessary. I think the Trump Administration for making it more litigious and regulatory. And i think the biden tion for being more nostalgic and reflective. So thats where we are at the moment. But this is kind an annual newsy in terms of getting with the Affordable Care act. They comes up with the anniversary of the
of the investigative journalists behind the story. ben, out of interest, as we re talking about twitter, how important is it as a tool for your reporting? look, for many of us, twitter is really a lifeline. you know, not only is it a way to share findings, but i think there s there s a couple of reasons. first of all, collaboration. i never would have met some of the people i ve worked with had it not been for twitter. second, it s a world of sources at our fingertips, so that we re able to contact those that we really wouldn t be able to actually reach. and third, it s a way for us to actually speak to people on the ground and it s one of those crucial platforms for that, which, as we ve seen with this investigation, we wouldn t have had access to many of those people had it not been for some platforms like twitter. 0k, and we will come back to more of that, i m sure, later. but let s go for the big story this week. elon musk announced himself as chief twit last week when
the management of the platform. the letter follows the billionaire s sacking of half the staff, including the entire human rights team. those are our top stories this hour. now on bbc news, the media show. a warning this programme contains flashing images. hello. today, we re asking whether it matters that the world s richest man now owns twitter. elon musk is the latest american billionaire to take control of an influential social media platform. should we care? and we ll also hear from journalists with the bbc s africa eye investigations team about how open source journalism allowed them to uncover the truth behind tragedy on the moroccan spanish border. ben strick is one of the investigative journalists behind the story. ben, out of interest, as we re talking about twitter, how important is it as a tool for your reporting? look, for many of us, twitter is really a lifeline. you know, not only is it a way to share findings, but i think there s there s a couple of reason
american billionaire to take control of an influential social media platform. should we care? we will also hear from journalists with the bbc s africa eye investigations team about how open source journalism allowed them to uncover the truth behind tragedy on the moroccan spanish border. ben strick is one of the investigative journalists behind the story. out of interest, as we are talking about twitter, how important is it as a tool for your reporting? for many of us twitter is a lifeline. not only is it a way to share findings but there are a couple of reasons, first of all, collaboration. i never would have met some of the people i have worked with had it not been for twitter. second, it is a world of sources at our fingertips so we are able to contact those that we would not be able to actually reach. and third, it s a way for us to actually speak to people on the ground and it is one of those crucial platforms for that which, as we have seen with this investigation, we w