time here. here s the good news. we re six months through this. here s the bad news. get ready for six months more of this? welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. we begin with lauren simonetti on what happens and what could be coming next. hi, lauren. neil, let me take you back to january 4, 2022. that was the high of the year. dow 36,799. just a few days later, the blue chip average fell over 1,000. that is ringing true this year also.so the day russia invaded ukraine, february 24, the dow went to 33,223. the seventh official correction mark ago 10% decline from that january high. investors paused. spring didn t seem so bad. the war did. commodity costs, they climbed even higher. the federal reserve started to take more drastic action. they raised the rate 50 basis points may 4, a steep sell-off on wall street right after that. so investors started to think, oh, 50 basis points. maybe that s not enough when consumer prices surged 8.6%. we found that out june 10th. inflation
faced with delays and cancellations look at these numbers and they will get higher heading to the fourth of july. passengers are just trying to deal with it and get through it. they say this. i have a five-hour layover. i got to la guardia airport at new york in 6:00 a.m. to find out that my 8:00 fight was cancelled. even with the delays, they worked with us. we had no problems. oh, boy. this person is way more patient than i would be. the pilots are out in force and protesting today. they say they are stretched way too thin, that even that flights are being put in place, that they know they don t have pilots for. then there s this concern. listen closely. they re trying to fly airplanes without pilots available. they re pilot pushing and narrowing the margin of safety. martha: that does and sound good. where is the secretary of transportation in this? he announced a $1 billion pilot program for road equity. his office says they re doing things to make sure pe
FARMING MACHINES. National Corn Program Director Milo Delos Reyes (3rd from left) leads the turnover of PHP3.8 million worth of farming equipment to the corn farmers in Tago, Surigao del Sur, Thursday (June 30, 2022). The equipment was received by Richard Virtudazo (2nd from right), the chair of local organization BAKIFA, and witnessed by Melody Quimary (right), the DA-13 Regional Corn Program Coordinator. (Photo courtesy of DA-13) BUTUAN CITY - A group of farmers in the Surigao del Sur town of Tago are seeing a good future in corn farming with the aid of farm mechanization. Richard Virtudazo, chairperson of the Bangsud Anahao Bag-o Kinabigtasan Farmer's Association (BAKIFA), said farm mechanization remains one of the best solutions to boosting farm productivity and increasing income for farmers. "We thank the government for the farm machinery we received through the Department of Agriculture-Caraga Region (DA-13)," Virtudazo said in an interview Friday. BAKIFA received P
anyway, it s not really the palace s way to publish a report either way. my guess is they re trying to protect her what some people said either way. so that is the latest from london and that is the story here in new york on this thursday june 30. as always, the story goes on. thanks very much for being with us this afternoon. we look forward to seeing you tomorrow on friday. have a great afternoon and evening, everybody. bye-bye. neil: halfway through, fully fed up. fox on top of a year at the half done point and americans at the breaking point. markets ending this day, this quarter and this half year as they began 2022 with stocks in a tail spin and prices for everything on a tear. inflation the highest it has been in 40 years. the s&p 500 closing its worst six month in more than 50 years. consumer confidence at an all-time low. super power tensions at an all