87, the russell small caps up 20 , its best month ever can the run continue and moderna says its ready to file for emergency use while novavax announces a second delay in its late trials we have the details. P power lunch starts right now it wouldnt be a record rally if there werent some bumps along the way. Was today just a oneday pause or something more . Lets go to bob pisani for more. Hi, bob. Hello, kelly. It actual its actually not a bad day. We were down 447 points, weve regained almost half of that if you look at whats down today, Energy Stocks, some up 30 for the month. Thats down. Bank stocks, another amazing rally. Look at this, tech is up apples had a monster day, up overall some of the semiconductors also doing well health care is down fractionally, thats a defense of group if you look at whats going on for november and the value cyclical location, this must be an alltime record for Energy Stocks banks up almost 20 , industrials as a cyclical group. So theyre not selling t
Was 25 n the s p 500 better than average over the last month. We are waiting on the let us check of japan, as the pandemic puts more pressure on the economy already sliding into recession. Inflation numbers are due at this hour. Haidi lets check in on the markets. We had a pretty tepid handover from the u. S. Stocks edging higher. Volumes still below what we have seen over the past month or so. Very much a rangebound trading session. We continue to seek a new catalyst. We continue to see rising cases across the u. S. , driving the idea of a second wave. Beijing struggling with a second wave as well. Conflicting data not giving a great deal of intel as to what the future holds. We are dealing and upside on s p futures, up about. 3 . Nikkei futures also a little bit higher, japan weighing the frostburg of reopening. Also the potential demise when it comes to tourism. Sydney futures are a little bit to the downside at the moment. We could see a modest bounce at the start of trading here i
Hi, welcome. So im mac, a professor here at georgetown, in the law school and Computer Science department. I welcome you to our after lunch panel. Thank you for sticking around. On Digital Technologies and coding. We have on our panel who i will introduce very briefly, four very distinguished experts at various parts of the digital elections landscape, and the technology and the risks of some of the Underlying Technology that is inherent there. And well be talking about this subject for, from a very wide range of different perspectives, but all with a very technological bias. So im going to very briefly introduce these people and i want to apologize now for being extremely incomplete in my introductions because they would take up the entire panel. Andrew appel is a profess her of Computer Science at princeton, where he served since 1986, and in fact, he was one of the members of my Doctoral Committee at princeton. His research focuses on software verification, security programming lang
We have a huge lineup this morning. Steven mnuchin will join us. That is at 7 45 a. M. Eastern at 8 00, well get reaction from political strategist hes been out all over the place what is there to talk about . A few things what did we say . President trump is ripping apple . Ive said all along, apple has to get on board. Switching sides no. Im not. It is not apples responsibility to keep us safe the issue is how much theyve been cooperating it does sound like the company has been pretty responsive they dont want to create an encryption key to allow any government to get any phone. They should cooperate in cases like this. I hope they are cooperating behind the scenes. I do want to see them cooperate on some of these but i can under the broader issue. The journals point is that in the meantime, apple shouldnt be seen as a public enemy no. So barr wants cooperation. Right but not just on this issue. He wants to create a larger issue. He wants to establish and create law for life that wou
[inaudible conversations] good afternoon everybody. And everybody who is looking at us virtually and everybody in line in the security line trying to get in. And everybody who will be watching sometime soon on a cable network. So i am jane harman, president and ceo of the Wilson Center and today we are probing a very complicated issue that is in my view d valvoline policymakers in washington and all over the world. At least three parts of the problem are the u. S. , china, and the 5g supply chain. The Wilson Center has just produced this is a prop, a spectacular policy brief by Melissa Griffith who is in the front row, and we will see in a little bit which is entitled there is more to worry about the huawei. I think you get the just of this. And she will explain in detail but run, do not walk to read this. Meanwhile, what captures the attention around 5g is that Chinabased Huawei has led the way in developing the superfast networks which will power self driving cars, virtualreality and