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be more of these. david: the who said yesterday it was a chinese health crisis, not a global health crisis. drew: all of the infection so far seem to be happening in china. that means it is a regional case. you do not see people in the u.s. affecting other folks in the u.s.. you have a reservoir of disease and its own self-perpetuating thing. that is the difference between this being a china issue and a truly global outbreak. what is the treatment? drew: the symptoms resemble a flu or a cold. it is being described as pneumonia like. right now there is not a vaccine or a medicine approved to attack the specifically, so most of the care is likely to be supportive in nature. armstrong, always great to hear from you. now we go to kevin cirilli. the third day from the democrats. they want to get these witnesses called. do they have a chance? kevin: i am going to be candid. areblican strategist who working on the impeachment issue and working with mitch mcconnell have all independently told me it is increasingly unlikely they would be able to do that. that could change if there were to be a last-minute switch. leader mcconnell has orchestrated it would look like that would be unlikely. the anticipation from the white house is this trial would be wrapped up by the state of the union address on february 4. democrats pushing forcefully on day three, in terms of their arguments to remove president trump from office. the president weeding out earlier today that he is outppointed -- tweeting that he is disappointed the republicans will make their case on saturday morning, which in the presidents world is not the best prime time tv time. will: he has a rally he appear at today for the first time ever for president. kevin: he will attend the march for life rally. the tech data the secretary of state mentioning that anna -- the secretary of state mentioning that in a speech he gave in florida, another conservative base they are trying to win. this is something that will be position for the base. we should also note the president making news to our own jordan fabian, who asked him about a middle east peace plan. that is anticipated according to the president to come out before the israelis visit the white house next week. david: we have our calendar circle. thanks a much to kevin cirilli welcome back to washington after that tour of latin america. now we turn to katie cry felt in new york. eld.atie grief secretary mnuchin made some news about the bonds. the interesting thing for bondholders is this will slightly extend the maturity of the outstanding treasury debt. that is interesting because that probably means treasuries will not adjust the options too much. the weighted average maturity, they are not paying that as much attention. the thinking was they would issue more shorter-term debt to keep maturity and duration stable. with the economist, it is clear tinker witht try to options too much. david: what does that do to the yield curve when you change the adjustment of the maturities you are issuing? katie: duration is scary because it is sensitivity to interest rate moves, which means if you have bonds with longer duration, it could be open to more losses. mnuchin did not say by how much this would alter the duration, but he said it would not be that are map of an increase. thate not going to see of an opening up of bond traders to too much losses. david: thank you so much to katie greifeld for that report. let's see how the markets are reacting. joining us is kailey leinz. it looks a bit risk off. does it have to do with the coronavirus? kailey: when we came into the open we were near record highs and we have sharply pulled off as confirmed cases in the u.s., two, possibly three. the s&p 500 is down .6%. this could be the worst day for the s&p and about three weeks. we have seen the nasdaq flip into the red, which was also seen sustained strength earlier. while investors are coming out of stops, they are watching the safer haven assets. the 10 year yield is now below 1.70. david: what could be contributing to this beyond the coronavirus? kailey: you had disappointing manufacturing pmi. that number became -- that number came in below estimates. it has accelerated as the reports of the virus circulate. you are seeing that underneath the surface of the market when you're look at groups like travel stops, the likes of united, american airlines, crews are down 4% as are some of the online travel agencies like tripadvisor, as are some of the casino stocks that are exposed to macau. you are seeing this percolate through the market. david: the week friday as of now. thanks so much to kailey leinz for that market report. now we were turned to mark crumpton for first word news. mark: following up on the coronavirus story, u.s. health officials are about to confirm a third case of the wuhan virus in the united states. that is according to three senators speaking to reporters in washington. earlier today the center for disease control and prevention confirmed a second case in united states, saying a chicago woman in her 60's is affected. last month she visited the chinese center at the -- the chinese city at the center of the out break. the virus has killed at least 25 people in china and second more than 800. democratic impeachment managers have one more day to convince senate republicans they want to subpoena witnesses and documents to help make their case against president trump. to do that, they will need at least four republicans voting with the 47 democrats. the presidents lawyers begin their arguments tomorrow. the eu says more time is needed to unravel a dispute between countries involved in the iran nuclear agreement. last week britain, france, and germany triggered the accord disputereckon is him -- reconciliation mechanism. if no solution is found, it could result in new sanctions on iran. yemen's governments want to resume direct peace talks with iranian backed rebels and end of five-year conflict. the envoy says getting insurgents back to the negotiating table would require military pressure and international diplomacy. five years of fighting has created what united nations has called the world's worst humanitarian disaster. global news 24 hours a day, on air and on quicktake by bloomberg, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in over 120 countries. i am mark crumpton. this is bloomberg. david? president trump is about to speak at the march for life in washington, becoming the first u.s. president ever is to do so. we will discuss how important social issues will be in the new election with our panel. bloomberg. ♪ david: this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. today is the 47th annual march for life in washington, pro-life event time for the anniversary of roe v. wade. it attracts antiabortion advocates from around the country. no u.s. president has ever appeared at the rally until today. president trump is scheduled to speak there momentarily. we go to our political panel of rachel navarre, senior director of policy at the conservative zogby,te, and john founder and senior partner at john zogby strategy. we have been focused on the democrats. the democrats do not seem to be disagreeing with each other. does president trump need to shore this up? doesn't he have it solid with his base? does, but evangelicals, conservative catholics, took a gamble on him on the social conservative issue and he is now the first president ever to go for the march for life. i think shoring up the accomplishments he has gotten for the community. he has been the most pro-life president we have had. getting planned parenthood to defund themselves, allowing states to restrict medicaid funding to abortion providers, reinstituting guidance saying babies born alive after an abortion get care, all of these things have been on the agenda for social conservatives and hills lock them down in addition to appointing a host of conservative jurists. this is an important constituency for him and they are extremely excited to see him. what about the constituency in wisconsin, virginia, pennsylvania, to what extent will the votes there, the critical votes the president needs driven by things such as abortion? john: to a large degree they will. the question we always ask in the battleground states is among blue-collar voters, they will vote on the economy where they will vote on values. they tend to be a bit more conservative on values. this president is making a clear and unequivocal statement about where he stands. from his vantage point, what he is doing is he is solidifying that base, perhaps more than any other president has by coming out today. he runs the risk of shoring up the democratic base on the opposite end by taking such a strong stand. that in itself makes abortion and some of these gay rights and other conservative issues the ultimate wedge issue. where do swing voters in wisconsin and michigan land? that is where the other issues come in. any riskchel, is there of the president going too far on this issue. let me talk about suburban women. there has been some reporting that may be even red states, there has been some defection from suburban women. is there any danger he could alienate some of the people he needs? rachel: when you look at what the polling shows, most americans support restrictions on late-term abortions. president trump has responded to the increasing extremism of democrats on this issue. you had a governor of estate say it was ok for a baby born after a botched abortion to not receive medical care. that is extreme. that is infanticide. that has galvanized. i do not think the left realizes how that has galvanized social conservatives. a lot of what he is proposing is simple. a lot has been religious freedom, protections, saying late-term abortions would not happen and allowing people to make choices. when you look at his agenda on this issue, it has not been that extreme. it is in line with a lot of the polling, which shows across the country people are in the middle. they support restrictions on late-term abortions after three months, and that is a lot of what president trump has been focusing on. david: a lot of people tend to be somewhere in the middle, they do not want to have an abortion whenever they want and are in favor of some restrictions. is there anyone on the democratic side who may triangulate and say i'm for abortion but i am against some of the extreme things that rachel just talked about? john: there is not one candidate out there who takes that position at all. this is the ultimate wedge issue , and this is why we are talking about it today. for every solid republican and conservative the president brings into his corner, he is also alienating a possible swaying or soft liberal supporter. we are at about 50% of all voters say they will never vote for donald trump. the democrats problem is they need to be sure these folks come out and vote for whoever the democratic nominee is. an issue like this taking such a strong and one-sided view on abortion could actually help ring some of those voters out. rachel: can i just add to the point that no democrat takes the position of infanticide, increasingly progressive base has push them to take that position. just last year there was a vote in the senate on the borderline abortion survivors protection act, which said that a baby born alive after botched abortion deserves care. all 44 senate democrats voted against that. they are on record supporting care -- not supporting care for an aborted infant that managed to survive. the progressive base is pulling the democratic party to the left taking advantage of it. things donaldthe trump has done his supreme court nominations, putting people on the supreme court. we have a big abortion case on the court. could this entire landscape change depending on how that comes out? we had a lot of republicans assume that when it came to obamacare the court would go a certain way, and we achieve justice roberts go another way. put it change between now and november? rachel: i have learned you never want to predict the supreme court. the abortion case is important. it is not as much of a seachange as everyone is making it out to be. whethert just about abortion dollar. -- abortion doctors should have admitting privileges at local hospitals. going back to this base for president trump, this is why a lot of evangelicals and conservative catholics came to the polls. they knew he would put conservative justices in place on the supreme court. more and more frequently, because congress fails to do its job, these issues are being litigated in the court. those appointments matter more than they ever have before and trump has delivered on all of these issues. david: we need to spend a minute or does go on impeachment. there is an impeachment trial on capitol hill, a historic event. is there any prospect at this point they will get those four republican senators to vote to call witnesses? john: they are trying awfully hard to do it, but no. there is really no chance. the veryular, you had strong statements by jerry nadler and adam schiff that were by specific moderate republicans to be insulting. that is not the way to win friends and influence people. the bottom line is the democrats are trying very hard to make a point. that point has been made over and over again. this issue -- the president is not going to be removed from office, even though if the polls flow back and forth, 48% removed , 51% removed, the thing is you're not going to remove a president of the united states who has support in the mid-40's. to get nixon out of office all those years ago, his numbers went out a 23% and it became a political liability. the president is not viewed as a political liability by these republicans. david: rachel bovard, final november will this impeachment factor at all in the election? rachel: i think democrats wanted to but i do not think it will come out that way. people have made up their minds already. they are where they are. this impeachment trial is not changing their mind and it is turning a lot of independent off. weighing on the final outlook of 2020. david: thank star political panel, rachel bovard and john zogby. you can watch the president's speech on the function live . disney is our company in the crosshairs as the coronavirus forces the company to shut down its theme park in shanghai. ons is "balance of power" bloomberg television and radio. ♪ david: this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. i am david westin. earlier there was a report about elizabeth holmes and a silver kate -- in a civil case. a reporter mentioned the case with walmart, she misspoke and was referring to the relationship with walgreens. we apologize for that error. it is time for the stock of the hour. disney is lower more than 1% today after the company announced it will close its shanghai park beginning tomorrow due to fears about the coronavirus. kailey leinz is here with more. last am i looked at was down .5%, now it is down 1%. kailey: for the broader market, the declines are steeping. it is probably part of the larger selloff. for disney it is down more than 3% on the week amid concerns about the virus. the news today they will close the shanghai park beginning tomorrow because they say they need to ensure the safety of not only the visitors but their performers. they will open it at an unknown time and stay in close contact with the government. there shanghai park, disney only owns 43%. the other 57% is the chinese government. they may have a hand in this decision. the government is taking increasing action to stop the spread of the virus. some of the actions include the delay or cancellation of the openings, people closing theaters, that could affect disney as well. david: anticipating. that is not the only investment disney has made in china. they have hong kong. they have made a good push on consumer goods, on movies, disney has put a big bet on china. kailey: it absolutely has. asia makes up about 11% of the company's revenue. the hong kong park has had struggles. we saw in last quarter a big hit because of the protests in hong kong. now we are seeing two asian parks that have weakness in revenue. this is all happening during the lunar new year period where a lot of families are traveling and they may not be doing that anymore. david: that is not the only thing disney is doing. they have disney plus, which is way outperforming projections. kailey: it really is. you have an analyst at morgan stanley lifting his price target on disney because of the strength of disney plus, saying it is scaling so much faster than could be anticipated, showing strength and taking hold. if there is a bright side to look at the coronavirus through the disneyland, -- through the that may be a boost to streaming. instead of families going to movie theaters, they are staying at home and binge watching disney plus or netflix. we have seen netflix up 8% on that exact idea. david: disney plus is doing well, much better than they said they would do. you mentioned netflix. you also have amazon and others coming in. hbo, a lot of other things. it will be a crowded area. kailey: there is a lot of competition. analysts seem to be optimistic on disney plus odds that it will be able to withstand that. that is kailey leinz with a report on the market. up next, jenneth or hillman, former member of the -- jennifer tillman joins us to discuss reports to reform the wto and whether they will work. ons is "balance of power" bloomberg television and radio. ♪ david: from new york, this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. i'm david westin. for bloomberg first word news, we go to mark crumpton. record thatws has a appears to show president saying he wanted marie yovanovitch removed as ambassador to ukraine. although abc did not provide audio, the network says a voice on the table and appears to be mr. trump says get rid of her, get her out tomorrow. accurate, the reporting backs of testimony that the president had her removed because she was viewed as an obstacle to his efforts to press ukraine into investigating joe biden and his son. the impeachment trial continues in about half an hour from now. house democrats have one more day to present their case. the president is set to become the first u.s. president to speak in person to antiabortion protesters at the march for life rally. the event is held every year and is getting underway at this hour. it marks the supreme court's roe v. wade decision in 1973 that protects the rights to an abortion. the president spoke to the rally by satellite previously. london police say they'll start using live facial recognition cameras to catch criminals. and after that human rights groups calls a dangerous and sinister step. the technology looks were faces in crowds to see if they are a watchlist for serious crimes. metropolitan police say it will only be used in specific parts of the city where offenders are most likely to be caught. erdogan oncedent an other countries in the region to put pressure on the reinforces to abide by a tentative truce. he spoke at the opening ceremony of a turkish-german university campus with angela merkel. talk between erdogan and merkel were also expected to focus on the future of migration, the european union. global news 24 hours a day, on-air, and on quicktake by bloomberg, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in over 120 countries. i'm mark crumpton. this is bloomberg. are talking about a whole new structure for the deal, or we will have to do something. has been very unfair to the united states for many, many years. david: that was president trump speaking in davos on wednesday of this week. joining us now is jennifer for tradeenior fellow at the council of international relations. she is also a former member of the wto appellate body. trump said, reforming wto. what are the reforms venue to be done, can they get done? jennifer: it's great news that they are talking to one another, and it appears the president is getting more engaged at the wto. we have to understand we are starting from a fairly bad place. the u.s. has blocked any appointment of members to sit on the functional equivalent of the wto supreme court. as of december of last year, the demi to appellate body could no longer function. what that means is if countries are found to be violating the trade rules, they can get out from under those obligations by filing a notice of appeal to a nonexistent appellate body. we are starting from a place in which the u.s. has done a good job of burning the house down without really saying anything about how we are going to build it back up again. the fact that there was this meeting and that the president appears to be ready to get engaged, what we need to do to reform the wto, is good news. reforms have to come on both sides of the house. there has to be reforms and improvement to this dispute settlement mechanism, so the rules themselves are binding on countries. secondly, there has to be reforms that allow the double etf to reach new agreements more readily. the negotiating function of the wto is the other place that you'll need to see reforms. give us a look at 2020 and trade. last year was an off a lot of u.s.-china. now we have a phase one agreement, they say pays to. -- phase two. u.s.-china, usmca is taken care of. the president also said we are going after europe. then we have u.s.-u.k. unaware signed anon has agreement which may free him up to negotiate with us. what are the biggest trade issues this year? jennifer: basically all three of them. you are right. the context of this is there has been a whole lot of unilateral and bilateral activity by the united states, much of it in violation of the debbie to rules. index the question of whether we are now moving in a direction of managed trade, bilateral trade, mini the o's, or whether we are still interested in the broader wto multilateral rules. the honest answer i think is we will have to do both. on the u.s. u.k. side, it's interesting secretary mnuchin said we are going to get an agreement by the end of the year. i think it's worth, it's pretty unrealistic. most u.s. companies are going to want to know first what is the relationship between europe and the united kingdom. an awful lot of what u.s. companies do when they invest in the u.k., what they really want is access to the european market . take ford as a company that is doing a lot of business in the brand ofgle largest cars sold in the u.k. right now is a ford car. in largeis in the u.k. part to sell cars into the rest of europe. right now, ford can do that duty-free, tariff-free, and regulatory-free. once brexit happens, if there is no agreement between the u.k. and the eu, now for has to pay duties on every car moving across the channel and has to get them inspected. so how interested in the agreement depends on a relationship between the eu and the u.k. i'm not sure it's realistic to think that we are going to get a u.s.-u.k. agreement until and unless there is something worked out with the eu. troubling is the potential for a major trade war with the european union. by way of context, we already have tariffs on the european union steel and aluminum, and europe has retaliated. they have tariffs on us. all else,t tariffs on wine, cheese, up to the tune of seven point $5 billion, because europe was found to be in violation of its wto obligations as a result of subsidies to airbus. coming soon this year is a ruling that will allow europe to retaliate against the u.s. because of our subsidies to boeing. over all of this is the threat of maybe we will have tariffs on autos under this national security investigation. clearly looming is major trade tensions with the european union . in the background is potentially some kind of an agreement with the u.k.. over all of it is the need to figure out how we get the multilateral, the bigger, broader base set of rules going at the wto. david: we are talking the jennifer hillman. as a final note, what role does agriculture play in this with respect to europe and the u.k. as well that is something that was addressed in the phase one agreement with a commitment to a -- to buy more products. agriculture is sensitive both in europe and the u.k.. jennifer: again you are looking at huge dilemmas. the beginning of this idea of a u.s.-eu agreement came between a meeting between resident juncker and president trump last year. the parameters of that on paper were that the agreement would notr only industrial goods, agriculture. the european union says we never agree to put to buy more produc. agriculture is sensitive both in europe and the u.k.. jennifer: agriculture on the table. on the other hand, from the u.s. side is, we don't want to do an agreement unless and until it covers agriculture. even the scope of what an agreement between the u.s. and the european union would be is still up for grabs. a lot of recriminations back and forth. america, the key market access that they really want into europe is in the agriculture area. david: thank you so much for being with us, jennifer hillman. coming up, the cdc has announced a new case of that deadly china virus in the u.s. more on the medical response from dr. xi chen from yale university. this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. ♪ david: this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. i'm david westin. u.s. health officials are about to confirm a third case of the wuhan virus in the u.s., according to three senators speaking to reporters. this comes as officials in china have essentially put 40 million of its citizens on lockdown, ordered travel agencies to stop selling tour packages. chen, yalenow dr. xi university assistant professor of public health. start with the medical science on this. what do we know about the virus? >> this virus is highly infectious and has already been affecting hundreds of people, and a lot of cases are not confirmed yet. china has already been shutting down transportation for eight cities, the size of a population equivalent to canada. this is a very big issue, especially with the timing of this spring festival which not only affects china but also the region. many areas celebrate this holiday. it's also located in a central city, so it can reach other cities around the world. the worst news is that we still don't know the region of this pathogen, we don't know how it is transmitted, how quickly it can get from person to person. those are the key questions. david: you said it is very infectious. how fatal is it? something like 25 people have died, which is serious, but does it have the same rate of mortality as other viruses we have encountered? dr. chen: this is a large uncertainty, how deadly it will be compared to sars or mers. there are two issues. the current death rate, the number of deaths is still low, so statistically, it may not be very meaningful to judge at this moment. also, the confirmation of the deaths is determined by the capacity of the local health care systems. as i heard, local hospital facilities already are being overstretched, overcrowded. affects the program to identify people, confirmed deaths as a result of this virus. so this number could be underestimated. we have no idea about any closer to the real number. variouse have seen chinese officials checking people across the country. how detectable is it? we have heard reports that somebody may have it whe ithout even having a theater. very person to person. some people, they don't develop any symptoms until a few days before death, and they even have normal temperature, so it is hard to distinguish. also, it is hard to distinguish from the common cold or flu. is alsor's flu season lasting very long and hurt a lot so it is hard to distinguish the two. the fundamental issue is, the hospitals are so it overstretche to the over investment in the hospital systems in the last couple of years in china's health reform in which puts primary form as the gatekeeper of this system at the wake position. they are not able to attract more patients who have mild symptoms. so they should not go to the hospital. 90% of them may only have the or a cold, but since they are not distinguishable, and due to the social media affect, they or a cold,have panic, so they o go. that is a major issue, compared sars years ago, when was out there. less panic than today, and we are in a different world today. talking tore dr. xi chen. you say we don't know enough about the origins and transmission. are we confident it originated in wuhan? i have heard reports that it may have started at a live animal market there. dr. chen: there is a seafood market there, but that market itself, overwhelmingly, more wild animals that compared to seafood. talking to dr. xi chen. all kinds of wild animals come cats,ing snakes, raccoon dogs, all sorts of things. in the scientific community, people are saying this could be then lateres, and they change their mind. today they also change their mind again, so there is no course of the infection. the source of the infection is so important. if it is across a lot of animals, that means the scale of the infection could be course oe infection. the source of the infection is so important. higher, depending on the origin of the virus. david: what do we know about the chinese government's reaction to this? there was a criticism when sars happened earlier. has the government learned from that experience, improved their response? dr. chen: i believe so, especially in the central government, they acted swiftly by sharing the gene sequence of the pathogen. they also waives all the fees for health care. in china, it was an out-of-pocket model. for this disease, they don't need to pay anything. this already categorized to be a grade a infectious disease, so there is a mandatory travel ban for all patients and people in close contact with them. that is why it is more infective. local officials, they may have something to improve. they share news about the human transmission, they delayed that messaging, sending it to the public. i think that is the major thing to transmission, they blame. david: do we have public health such as yourself in the labs around the world working on this? dr. chen: yes. in the yield school of public health, we just put together a news article such as yourself ie labs around the world working on this? dr. chen: about frequently asked questions about sars, transmission, how to avoid, prevent, control this disease. that is on the webpage of our yell school of public health. we have more colleagues in this , jon across the u.s. hopkins, howard, many other institutions are working very closely monitoring this. even today, the journal in the u.k., they published five articles about this disease. two of the articles have really detailed data. david: thank you so much for joining us. we will have more coming up in the next hour on bloomberg radio. this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. coming to you from new york. ♪ hopkins, howard, many other david: this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. i'm david westin. much of the talk at davos this week was about climate change. in this weeks episode of bloomberg wall street week, we sat down with larry summers, roger ferguson, and jetblue head of sustain a steep -- sustainability to discuss what could be done in the airline industry beyond merely talking about it. >> each airline flies planes differently. what we are doing is taking care of the carbon on the customer's behalf without asking them to make a sacrifice. we are not saying squeeze your knees in or give up first-class. we are saying, flying needs to happen, you need to be on our aircraft. that creates carbon emissions, which we need to take care of as the cost of doing business. >> how but the speed at which you fly? >> flying slower does in some cases save fuel. a more business and customers have a way to do it is to buy jetblue has. like the new aircraft are increasingly fuel-efficient. technology, i'm often hearing the answer is technology, dropping down the need to consume fossil fuels as we wait for more green fuels. what are you seeing when you talk to providers of jet engines that is helping you give you confidence that this will get better? >> aviation is a bright spot in this. we are not waiting for the technology. the new aircraft are more fuel-efficient. we have already made investments in new electric aircraft companies. carbon offset are happening today, so that is carbon being avoided and sucked out of the environment. sustainable aviation fuel already exist. we need more of it. we need economies of scale. that is an economics problem, not a technology problem. david: one thing the airlines cannot fix on their own is air traffic control. i understand we need to revamp that. if we were to do that tomorrow, how much would that save in terms of carbon? >> significant, and not just carbon, it would save time and money. this is a good example, the intersection of business and government. the global climate crisis is so big, it's affecting us so quickly, there is no corner of the economy that hasn't been confidence that this will get better? affected, that will not be potentially cripple fight it. everyone needs to come with a solution. >> i'll tell you a story. 2009, entered government, the government was taking about its priorities. i had a meeting as head of the president's national economic council with the ceos of half a dozen or more airlines. they all told me we need to work in the air traffic control system. they had a plan called next object. the thing about the plan is that it would take a whole generation. i said, if we did this, according to your plan, when would we have a modern air traffic control system? this was in 2009. they said, 2035. reallyto them, that is very interesting and i appreciate it, and i know this but butplicated problem, world war ii was a big and congregated war, and it took three and half years from the time we entered to the time that we but world war ii was a big and congregated war, and it took three and half years from the time we entered to the time that we won, with 12 million people under arms. so why is it going to take us a quarter good morning! oh no, here comes the neighbor probably to brag about how amazing his xfinity customer service is. i'm mike, i'm so busy. good thing xfinity has two-hour appointment windows. they have night and weekend appointments too. he's here. bill? karolyn? nope! no, just a couple of rocks. download the my account app to manage your appointments making today's xfinity customer service simple, easy, awesome. i'll pass. can you help keep these iguys protected online?? easy, connect to the xfi gateway. what about internet speeds that keep up with my gaming? let's hook you up with the fastest internet from xfinity. what about wireless data options for the family? of course, you can customize and save. can you save me from this conversation? that we can't do, but come in and see what we can do. we're here to make life simple. easy. awesome. ask. shop. discover. at your local xfinity store today. >> alisa abramovitz in for jonathan ferro. bloomberg real yield starts right now. lisa: bank executives in davos wrapping up their calls to end negative rates. with credit markets remaining hot, new deals as much as seven times oversubscribed by prompting new fears on wall street that the party may be nearing an end. let's start with the big issue, rising debate over the impact of negative rates. the business community doesn't want just lower rates. >> negative rates are a problem. >>

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