Transcripts For FBC Varney Company 20240622

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this is how the social network will wire up the whole world. and how about this? a computer that processes a billion a billion computation, it's a very early development in america. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ first this china has been selected to host the 2022 winter olympics beijing will become the first city who host both the summer and the winter games they hosted in the summer of 2008. they narrowly edged out other cities, and boston did not want it in their city. and price of barrel is down. gas look at this 2.66 down another penny overnight. here is the headline triple-a says $2 a gallon gas by the winter. lower in some states. look who is here. the former president of shell oil. all right, john listen up do not rain on my parade. do not tell our viewers what you told them six months ago, that gas is going back to $4 a gallon this year. don't do it. >> okay stuart. i know we still have an open bet don't we? >> yes, we do we do. >> so we shall see who collects at the end of the year. stuart: okay. >> the good news is from a commercial standpoint all-time record production from our refineries in this country and all time record consumption by consumers in this country and that says that people are enjoying the low price gasoline, but guess what? in there lie the seeds of higher prices and we all know that. i think by the october time frame we're going to see material decline in the production of oil in this country, which will set the traders going in the other direction. i do think that we're going to see higher prices for crude oil sometime in the november december time frame. >> okay. >> so i think i will rain on your parade a little bit. >> you are indeed this is a thunderstorm on this parade frankly. look it, triple-a they don't often come out with that kind of dramatic forecast and it is a dramatic forecast. now, they're not looking at refinery capacity. they're not looking so much at the price of crude oil, they're simply saying $2 a gallon by winters. you're saying absolutely not, are you saying is a that? >> triple-a said in a movie called pumped. this was filmed two years ago, the u.s. will never see prices $2 a gallon every again. they're wrong. anybody who makes predictions, stuart, will be wrong because you cannot predict the unpredictable it will happen. whatever happens happens. i'm looking at the underlying trend of production declines when we're not drilling. >> 200 billion in off shore capital around the world has been cut already by the oil companies. we are facing-- we will be facing shorter supplies in the next one or two years and we will see it in the price of crude oil and the price at the pump. the companies had to make money, but at $47 it's difficult to make money. something has to give here and the business will be successful, but really, keeping the balance right for consumers and i afford in-- i believe in affordable energy including using gas for transportation fuel. again i've got to be a realist. >> we've got $100 bet. i think you said $4 a gallon gas by the end of the year and i said nonsense. and i said put $100 on it and you said yes. that's the bet, isn't it? >> right, that's the bet. >> there's no question i am going to win. >> see what you're not figuring out is that the iranians are going to start pumping more oil and they've got 30 million barrels of their stuff sitting around in tankers off shore. that's going to come ashore and affect the price. the saudies are not going to raise-- what is it? they're not going to lower production, they're going to raise it if they can because they want to see the price go down to beat up on everybody else. so you see, john-- >> stuart the iranians need $120 oil to pay their bills. 30 million barrels of oil-- >> they'll produce-- okay, john time is out. you're totally wrong. you've ruined the opening of this program. [laughter] utterly ruined it, but it was great to have you back and i'll wait-- i'm not taking a check either. i'm taking a $100. thanks for being with us. let's move on please the dow jones average will open dead flat. that's the prediction and we open up in 25 minutes. let's get to the campaign. real problems for hillary clinton. more of her e-mails will be released, 4,000 pages will be released later on today. let's see if the media notices the document dump. there's a poll showing she loses to jeb bush and members of joe biden's staff were seen. is it possible that president obama is behind joe biden's maneuvering? >> well they're a team. hillary and obama never really were. they've never liked each other. there's bad blood from the election. and biden wouldn't do this without. they wouldn't be doing it without checking with president obama or at least without his knowledge and approval i think. stuart: so, reading between the lines here you're saying that president obama might well be pushing joe biden? >> of course this gets out in the news and fascinating that a lunch happens to get in the news, right? and the comments afterwards i believe, that hillary is the candidate now. so, that was a public message, i think, to everyone else that there is some happening here. and this is what hillary has been afraid of. i don't think that joe biden is actually the strongest individual, but a message that the party itself and current leader barack obama is not necessarily behind her. stuart: the shift is in progress, but she is running a somewhat disorganized campaign it seems to me. she's got the money, got the political talent, but it's not working out, not coming through. >> she's doing the same thing, it's fascinating what happened in '08 as now. there's a presumption that things were happening in that way and she expected not to be opposed. she wanted to run as the incumbent and that this is going to be naturally minus the incumbent. that's a mistake in '08 and she's once again being abandoned by people she thought she could trust. that's a history of hers. she's not generally liked. ashley: she's a lousy candidate. stuart: and bill could go in a crowd and glad hand everybody and hillary cannot do that. >> her best was 2008 when she lost to barack obama, and she relaxed. if i was advising her. nothing to lose her, go ahead and relax and just go for it. this is it whatever it is that happens. she was fabulous when she had given up and that's the irony of this and that's the mentality. stuart: i've gotten seconds left, but i have a question for you. would you describe hillary clinton's campaign in crisis? >> i would. when she realizes she will have a genuine competitor whether it's joe biden or john kerry, there's blood in the water and there are sharks. stuart: and using something like that a giant drone, ashley, details please. ashley: yeah, drones about the size of a boeing 737. they will be launched by helium balloons, this is a great story. put high up in the air and fly lazy circles about 11 miles up. what they're doing is beaming down internet connectivey. they call it project latin for eagle. they're building this in the u.k., the united kingdom and it's a way to bring in more people to the internet and to facebook. stuart: they'll beam down a laser beam. ashley: that's a separate project you can buy now and send high speed data in a laser beam and that can be shot from the ground to a plane and another plane and-- >> that's a facebook project? >> yes. stuart: it's a social network, facebook. ashley: it's truly remarkable. stuart: a whole chunk of the planet which can't get fired up. a lot of people that can't get the information and wants to be on facebook they so make it available with a huge drone. >> it's the genius of what competition provides. it makes you move forward and it's the only way that things can work. >> you always surprise me. >> and i always surprise myself. >> i go home shocked. >> every time when i see you, it's like wow! >> well. >> how about this one, last week a lot of publicity when hackers drove a chiles car into a ditch. remember that video. and this time it's a general motors car. >> the connected car can be hacked. if you drive a general motors vehicle and have onstar it lets drivers control features of their cars remotely. be careful, a researcher warning drivers not to use onstar, hackers can hack it if you use it. it can find where your car is and unlock it and start the engine remotely that means potentially potentially stealing your wheels. they're working on a security fix and they feel it's unlikely. chrysler recalled a million jeeps after security aspects gained control of a car on a highway at 70 miles per hour. stuart: let's not give everybody the impression that this could happen to them. >> so is this. stuart: down the road when hacking is refined. that's when you've got a problem. >> and this concerns me in the other story. a large airplane the size of a small airplane that's unmanned and operating around the world by itself. what if it got hacked? >> what if medical devices got hacked. >> this is where we're going and there's a major hacking conference going on next week. >> wow. >> and it prevents this stuff. >> and it will probably be hacked. >> let me tell everybody what i always tell them every day you have got to get up early in the morning. lauren, nicole sandra at 5:00. >> bring us the coffee. stuart: the g.o.p. push to defund planned parenthood might not have the votes. we'll discuss that in a moment. people with type 2 diabetes come from all walks of life. if you have high blood sugar ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar, kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections changes in urination and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life♪ ♪yeah, you do the walk of life♪ need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga. and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. >> here is why you need to know why you should care about puerto rico's debt problem. if they default some investigators could take a hit. and adam shapiro has the story. who takes a hit? >> millions of retirees according to the u.s. department of treasury and that's the beginning. here is what's going on. take a look at this chart from morningstar. these are the muni bond funds and oppenheimer fund municipals, 5.7 billion, you can see them there. who knew that you had puerto rican debt and the rochester fund. take a look at what oppenheimer says. we've been managing investments and remain steadfast in determining the long-term interest of our shareholders the question is how big the default will be. >> and that's how big a hit will the investors take. >> no one knows the total ramifications it's drawn up through courts and legal processes and already the funds are down about 5% this year and puerto rican municipal funds and bonds in general are down 9% 9%. stuart: ouch all right, adam. thank you very much. the republicans want to defund planned parenthood, but do they have the votes to do it? and joining us is a barbara comstock from virginia. >> we're reading that in the senate there are not 60 votes required to get the bill through. they'll cut off the debate and can't get 60 votes. and you say what? >> i thought i was here this morning and talked about the iran deal which i'm very concerned about and i hadn't kept track of the senate deal on planned parenthood, but i know certainly in the house, people, they're having an investigation in the house and they wanted to have the people involved. stuart: i'm sorry i surprised you with this, but so many of our viewers are so concerned about defunding planned parenthood i jumped on it and i'm following up on a newspaper report, a reliable newspaper which says look they don't have the 60 votes. i'm pretty sure that you would be in favor of defunding planned parenthood and pretty sure you'll be disappointed if you can't do it. your reaction. i was springing this on you, but your reaction? >> no i think in the house there are the votes because we would like to see that money go to women's health elsewhere to do that. they're investigating, and what everybody has seen the videos and they're heinous and frightening and you know what's going on there is just beyond the pale of anything that anyone thought was going on there. so we need to make sure that we have resources to go to woman's health that could actually help women and children and not the kind of thing we're looking at. >> and the bill is not likely to be passed, but that's what the bill does it takes money away from planned parenthood. it diverts the money to other-- >> exactly, to things like maternal health to mammogram vans and things like that that we make sure it's going to women's health not funding an organization that really engages in behave that we've got seen in the medical world. stuart: barbara, i'm terribly sorry i jumped on you with this one and surprised you, but it's just so many of our viewers wants to know about this and there's extreme disappointment even with that money diverted elsewhere to women's health care it's not likely to pass congress. we're astonishing you. i'm sorry we jumped on our congressman there, i apologize for that, but you've got thoughts on this? >> i think someone in her position, she obviously knows what she thinks about that. for me my activism began on the abortion rights i was the president of n.o.w. and i'm appalled at what planned parenthood is doing. it's clearly, obviously horrendous. this is an issue involving, about humanity it's not even pro choice or pro-life. it's in the long run how we value individuals and what we do in the throw away society. the fact that congress that the house has left that the senator is having trouble on something that should be an automatically natural thing to do. especially with the enhanced bill, it doesn't cut the funds, it goes into an arena, and all of us could degree this is an imperative dynamic. >> and you're the president of n.o.w.? >> and all of my friends are equally as appalled. everyone in washington must know that this is nonpartisan. stuart: tammy bruce, thank you very much. sir richard branson says the reason he became a billionaire is simple. i'll let you in on his secret next. ♪ ♪ ♪ get excited for the 1989 world tour with exclusive behind the scenes footage all of taylor swift's music videos interviews, and more. xfinity is the destination for all things taylor swift. this is a great place to work. not because they have yoga meetings and a juice bar. because they're getting comcast business internet. comcast business offers convenient installation appointments that work around your schedule. and it takes- done. - about an hour. get reliable internet that's up to five times faster than dsl from the phone company. call 800-501-6000 to switch today. perks are nice. but the best thing you can give your business is comcast business. comcast business. built for business. >> sir richard branson in his latest book says he's rich a billionaire for one reason wait for it. the reason is he's happy. shah galani is here the first of many appearances today. i think it's nonsense. >> i think you're wrong. it's not about money, you're happy. stuart: you don't make a lot of money because you're oh so happy. you see an opportunity and you're a great business guy and shape the enterprise and then you're happy. >> this is the philosophy that i learned a long time ago. and most people if i have anything or do anything i can be happy, it's the other way around. stuart: you're wrong, but after the break. here comes the big gas plunge that i've been waiting for, $2 a gallon by the winter so says triple-a and listen to this there's a lot more coming for you in a moment. >> happening right now, the opening bell ringing on the new york stock exchange trading has begun. we're expecting a flat opening, maybe a tad higher. let's see how we're going, no big moves expected. up 31 as we speak. now i've got good news for your wallet and i'm going to run with this all day long. triple-a says $2 a gallon gas by the winter. that's on the card for the entire program. and along with the aforementioned shah galani we got it right and triple-a is going further than what we expected. $2 a gallon by the winter. man manna from heaven. >> we're going to make new lows in oil and the headlines are serious. i filled up for 2.45 a gallon. we're only 45 cents away from where i put in my gas. there's pressure on the gas price and oil price and slowly going to grind lower. i don't want to be too short because the risk reward gets bad down there. stuart: you traders, talking about should we be short or should we be long. your say that it's going down $40 a barrel and a happy guy. i'm paying 2.39 for regular in jersey as we speak and i want $2 a gallon before labor day, probably won't get it. i want to bring in nicole cheap oil, i think it's hurting the stock price, is that right, nicole? >> all right, let's take a look here. and what we're looking at here is oil right now is a the 48 and we've seen oil drop tremendously. oil this month dropped 18% and you have exxon and chevron out with the quarterly reports and with that those points are on the dow jones industrial average. as you see the earnings here and chevron had its own report and they're both to the down side. >> we're looking at it right now. exxon is down two bucks, that's 2%. look at linked in here is the bad news on that stock. the displayed ad sales down and shah galani. ashley: 15% after hours when the earnings came out, up 13%. stuart: and now down 10%. what's going on? >> they beat the expectations and they did a good job beating that except when the investors looked at that all of it came from the indications and a new acquisition. what's wrong with the stock, they have limited visibility on advertising in the future. they're talking down the numbers in the next quarter, it's not pretty. >> would you dump it? >> if i owned it i would dump it, yes. >> a nice run up and-- >> take your profits, absolutely. >> it's interesting that the company is 70% of its members of its customers are outside of the united states. >> yes. >> i did not know that. that's interesting. they're focusing on china. >> they're trying to be a social media site, but they're the least appreciative. >> they're described as the ones that ranked the lowest. >> i constantly getting e-mails please join so-and-so on linkedin. i never do it because if i do to it. >> you get sucked in. >> overwhelmed with e-mails coming at me all day long is that true? >> yeah a lot of complaints about their advertising in terms of bringing in people and they've tamped that down and little bit and they need to do it more because people are upset with it. >> i'm going to get to facebook in a moment. you're telling me that facebook is the only good social network stock and wish you were in it? >> and a good bit lower when he came out and i missed the boat and kicking myself because of that. and you have to be in it. if you own it, you have to love it. it's performed, and i think it's going to continue to perform. stuart: now look at fireye that's a computer company. sales growth strange slowing, the cfo leaving. there's another headline here the ceo of fireye says there's an on-line cold war heating up. china, u.s. russia and-- >> he's calling it a super power struggle that's being waged in the cyberspace out there and he says don't forget syria north korea and iran are players in this, but the big super powers are backing it out through hacking, through cyber hacking and trying to get in and we know the chinese are doing it and russians are doing it and likelihood that we're doing it it's part of the deal, but it's a cold war stipulate of situation on-line. >> the stock is down significantly. is that because the cfo is leaving? >> he's moved around a lot, it's been a long tenure for him four plus year. i don't think that's the reason they're doing. >> they are. >> that's surprising to are a security company. >> they're doing a lot of deals with government agencies and with visa this summer. i think there is potential there. >> long-term potential, but in terms of visibility. >> expedia, of course that's an on-line travel booking site a big one. higher profits, more booking. the stock is a winner. that's a near 10% gain. you like this one, don't you? >> i love this one. i'm also kicking myself on that one because we had a nice ride in and i got out of it soon. >> would you get back in? >> i'm getting back in. it's a new high i like it being a competition-- >> complete with or orbitz. >> and you say the stock didn't go higher and it does. >> and google, side bar on the stock it's having no impact at all. they're rolling out a new version of google glass, this is for businesses think hospitals and use in factories and google stock is not reacting to this at all. i'm intrigued by them continuing on with this-- you're laughing. >> i bought the original one and gave it as a gift. stuart: you bought it for your he have is and gave it away. >> i'm sorry. stuart: but google stock, not comments around google glass. >> the stock is fine it's a great company. stuart: now i want to get to facebook. we got to it earlier and we'll get to it a little late. they're providing or want to provide internet service to remote parts of the world and we've got video of this coming up for you. again back to you, this is an example of another company branching out. that's not a network stuff. that's scientific innovation to everyone who doesn't have it. >> that's not the background story. the story is they want to create access for internet folks to come on and be facebook members and subscribers and a lot of folks don't like it. what they're going to offer is perhaps maybe very limited. >> what we were looking at there for a second. looked like a v on a factory floor. there's other shops available, you can see this thing is a gigantic v. ashley: the size of boeing 737. extremely light. launched through helium balloons and doing circles around the areas that don't have internet connection. it's kind of low tech. >> as much as the helium filled balloons and nearly impossible. stuart: you know what i should have gotten into years ago, the drone business. india invested a billion and i think they've got a million rides a day. i can't buy stock in this thing. it's totally private. i can't get into this. >> i think it's a mistake, that ubershould have gone public now. they're creating jobs and by 2016 creating 200,000 jobs in india and so they create jobs around the world wherever they open stock. it would be nice if people around the world could invest because they're job krauters. >> i'd think twice before i went public. i don't want the rules and regulations and the dodd frank and all of that. i don't want that lot sitting on top of me. i've spent my life listening to regulators. >> that's the trade-off. having stock is a currency and the opportunity to grow the business is beneficial. >> you can have a piece of private stock and use that as currency to buy somebody else. >> everybody in this business are looking for an exit strategy. and the best fastest way to do that is to go public. stuart: i hear you. let's bring in scott shellady left out totally. new concerns that farming causes global warming and that we are literally farming ourselves out of food. the reason the farmers uses a lot of fossil fuels and the fossil fuels-- oh, dear. it is by the way, a british study. come back in scott shellady. i can't believe you have any concerns whatsoever about the future supply of good food do you? >> no, i don't. i'll give you a couple of reasons why. number one, i'm a techno geek stuarts we can't talk about the story without talking what the science and technology has done to bushels createser. >> there's a different way of measuring that since 1930. and the effort and now there's 170 and they're going to give it in the future because if you put the governor in charge of sahara desert we'd be out of sand. stuart: i've heard that one before. you get outside there and get out in your car and pay $2.45 a gallon for gas and enjoy yourself. thanks, scott, thanks to everybody. hillary clinton's foundation gets donations from swiss bankers after the state department made a legal settlement over secret swiss bank accounts. and author of clinton's cash. >> whenmesh-- when american is strongments. i did not have sexual relations with that woman. >> what difference at this point does it make? . so you're a small business expert from at&t? yeah, give me a problem and i've got the solution. well, we have 30 years of customer records. our cloud can keep them safe and accessible anywhere. my drivers don't have time to fill out forms. tablets. keep them all digital. we're looking to double our deliveries. our fleet apps will find the fastest route. oh, and your boysenberyy apple scones smell about done. ahh, you're good. i like to bake. with at&t get up to $400 dollars in total savings on tools to manage your business. super poligrip seals out more food particles. so your food won't get stuck. and you can enjoy every single bite. eat loud. live loud. super poligrip. seals out more food. ♪ ♪ super poligrip holds your dentures tightly in place. so you never have to hold back. laugh loud. live loud. super poligrip. get strong all day hold. >> all right. we are basically looking at $2.66 per gallon gasoline as we speak. down another penny, a penny a gallon a day it's dropping. we'll take it. we've got the dow industrials down 45 points. two investor favorites that developed recently are hitting new highs, under amour hit 99.40 and it's right there now. earlier chipotle was up a little bit and that was a new high, but those two stocks new highs of the morning. some stocks that we cover every single day, all day, one is netflix it has an incredible run and it's up a bit more today at 112. facebook, another extraordinary run backed off, 94.50 is where we are now. amazon, the star performer, it went up 50 bucks in one day and it held that gain and gained some more and amazon is now at 538 per share, up $2 right now. and legionnaire's disease outbreak in the south bronx section of new york city. contaminated cooling towers to be the proud. 46 sick and two are dead. and legionnaire's disease i thought that was gone forever. >> no, we have 10 or 20,000. stuart: 10 or 20,000? >> in united states. it's in the cooling system inside the water in air conditioners and it's not contagious in the way you might think. i can't cough it on you or sneeze it on you, you can get it from drinking water and especially hits smokers and those with chronic lung disease. you can get pneumonia from this and in the intensive care unit from this and you can die from this. antibiotic treats it. i remember back in the day, in the late '70's, there was an outbreak in the legionnaire's convention, many people got sick in a hotel. how did you get this? there's almost a panic. and i can't get it off you or you from me. >> you can get it from an air conditioning system or cooling system. it looks like in the bronx it's dispersed isolated sporadic cases not like you said a bunch of people in the convention center all get it and then you start to get concerned. it has to be tracked, the outbreak in the bronx. antibodies can track it and use it. >> and erythro my sin. it's been around for a long time and the ones we're using now are effective. you've got to catch it early and get the people in the hospital and treat them for pneumonia if that's what they have. this is a very very serious infection. >> okay, it's a serious infection and i can't get it off you and you from me. that's what down grades the seriousness of it. i'm looking around and walking around the streets from the south bronx, and get it? >> no, no if you were in the center of the south bronx where one of the cooling systems is, public health is right to be checking the cooling system in the bronx, it can spread from air conditioner to air conditioner rather than from person to person by the cooling system. >> and the air conditioner to air conditioner, within the same building? >> and it can get into vents. >>, but it can't slip from one building to another. >> no it's not crawling along the concrete, but it is in the cooling system. >> what happens to you when you get legionnaire's disease? >> you get headaches, diarrhea coughing, you get fever, you get fatigue, you get high fever. >> is it a bug in your lungs? >> absolutely it's a pneumonia, but parades through the body especially for people with chronic diseases and smokers. smokers have a problem because you could drink some water and then they cough it up into the lungs. >> and we missed it ashley, we missed this i think this. we're not guessing for it doctors tend to miss this and that's when someone gets sick. >> am i a danger or is this bigger commercial buildings? >> bigger commercial buildings. i haven't been there lately. your home is probably safe. it's the home state. >> reassurance. and dr. segal. >> only in isolated areas. not going to get you unless you're in the south bronx and even if you are, you're probably safe on the street. >> doctor i feel better already. >> hillary clinton's foundation, gets donations from swiss bankers after there was a settlement over secret bank accounts. that subject is next. can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive? you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™ you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> very interesting story developing about swiss bank accounts and hillary clinton and hillary's foundation. joining us is peter swietzer the author of clinton cash joining us now, hi peter. here is the story as i understand it i want to make sure i've got this right. america wanted the names of 52,000 people who have secret swiss bank accounts. there's a furious backwards and forwards between the two sides. the swiss eventually cough up only 4,400 names, a deal favorable to them. right after that deal goes through $600,000 bucks appeared in the hillary clinton foundation. it looks like a quid pro quo. is it? >> you know it's hard to say, but it's a very very troubling pattern and this relationship between ubs and the clintons is fascinating stuart. go back to early 2001 you remember the name marc rich the international fugitive that bill clinton pardoned on his last day in office. one of a handful of people who wrote letters pleading for president clinton to pardon marc rich was a senior executive at ubs. bill clinton pardoned marc rich. days after that the new york times because of the uproar in the story, reports that ubs had been negotiating to give bill clinton a series of lucrative speeches and those negotiations were cut off because of the marc rich scandal. fast noored now to-- fast forward now to 2009. hillary clinton is secretary of state and they don't want to hand over the names and hand over a fraction of them because of hillary clinton's intervention. which is unusual. this is a matter that the irs has been looking into and ubs is let off the hook and what happens? $600,000 to the foundation. and 1.5 million in speaking fees goes to bill clinton. they had not paid for a speech before that because of the marc rich scandal and on top of that, they also back millions of dollars of loans for clinton foundation project around the world. so it's a very very troubling pattern. stuart: it's a pattern developing. it looks like this foundation is a multi-million dollar slush fund where you pay into it you play the game and you get favors in return. i mean that's just the way it seems. and i guess there's plausible deniability built into this? >> that's the beauty of the system that they've established. first of all, we obviously don't have access to e-mails. there's a big, big curfluffle going on about that. and you don't have a look at matters handled by the secretary of state. this is one of the problems raised by secretary of state john kerry, and richard luger, the ranking republican when hillary was appointed secretary of state. as secretary of state, you can't recuse yourself from things. there's a lot of secretive things, and it looks bad for taking money you were doing favors for. stuart: the author of clinton cash. peter out of time. thank you. next case billionaire mark cuban says he would consider running as donald trump's vice-president. ashley: can you imagine that? boy the egos. he said that donald trump was probably the best thing to happen to politics in a long time. when asked would you be vp on mr. trump's ticket? absolutely, i would, he later went on to say i'm probably not cut out for politics. stuart: i wonder if any leading business guy is. >> no that's not politicians and that's part of their attraction right now. stuart: and cannot say that? >> no there has to be diplomacy and compromise. ashley: they're not used to that. stuart: the sharing economy under attack and this time outside of lux valet, an app that gets people to park your car for you. and employees, not contractors, it's an important development. we have looks value-- we have that on. and debby wasserman schultz, you really can't make this stuff up. second hour of "varney & company" is on its way. ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar, kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections changes in urination and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life♪ ♪yeah, you do the walk of life♪ need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga. and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. >> hour two here we go. the head of the democrat national committee speechless when asked what's the difference between democrats and socialists she had no answer at all. 53 million american adults have some sort of disability. some of it is fraudulent. our fraud investigator is going to be with us from the front line. how does he catch fraud? interesting stuff. an on demand valet app will consider its workers as employees not independent contractors, that will put some pressure on uber. here comes hour two. ♪ we are waiting for the third batch of hillary clinton e-mails set to be released today by the state department. either 4,000 e-mails or 4,000 pages of e-mails, here they come. meanwhile the wall street journal report says a spike in donation from swiss bank ubs to the clinton foundation after hillary helped the bank cut a deal with america. the report reviving questions about a possible connection between actions she took as secretary of state and donations to the foundation. clinton, inc. author daniel halper joins us with that story in the next hour. aircraft debris washed up on the island in the indian ocean sent to france for testing. the results were within days some believe it was a part of the plane from malaysia airline flight that went missing. and it went off course and missing all of that time. and a malaysian airlines flight is the only one to have gone missing i believe anywhere in the world and certainly in that part of the world. check the big board. lows of the association, we're at them right now. they're down 49 points. expedia reporting higher profits and linked in they've got a problem with their advertising revenue. linkedin way down and expedia very good profit. they're way up about 10%. oil oh that's not the story of the moment. the price of oil is around $48 a barrel. here is the story of the day. the price of gas. down another penny. triple-a says now, here is the whole ball of wax. here we go. triple-a says $2 a gallon gasoline by the winter. $2 a gallon. by the winter. >> yes. so bad. and the former president of shell oil poured cold water all over that last hour. watch it. >> triple-a said in a movie called punked and this was filmed two years ago, that the u.s. will never see prices below $3 a gallon ever again. guess what they were wrong. everyone making predictions, including me, will be wrong because you cannot predict the unpredictable, well i will. i think that gas is going down and i think it's going to stay down and i think i'm right so there. however, the price of oil is dropping so fast it's taken a toll on the big oil company stocks. look at exxon down 3% now 4% it's down and chevron is down another 4%. >> liz. a group called ihs agrees with you. it's saying that oil prices are poised to drop even lower, and it's from ihs. >> i'm so glad you joined us all right. the story of the day. gas is cheap, get out there and drive. okay. how is this for a headline president obama wants to build the world's fastest supercomputer. this is coming from tech firm iron source is with us. i'm told this is in the early stages of development. that it could profit a billion, billion calculations per second. is that true? >> that's what it says. in theory it makes a lot of sense you want to compete on a global scale. we want to look at china and what other global companies are doing. the reality is we haven't proven in washington we can actually make people work together. so if we're going to build a super computer that's going to solve a lot of problems. shouldn't we rely on silicon valley versus trying to do it out of washington. >> wait a second the background to the story is this is a big push from president obama, get the science moving put the money out there to get the science moving. and it's moving already. >> yes, i don't think that he wants to create a government department of super computing and we'll build a computer with the government we'll build. i don't think he wants to do that. >> no, i think he wants us to be part of the legacy it makes sense that he's putting it on the agenda. i think how it actually gets executed and how well it gets executed the big question. the fact that he's putting it out there putting a lot of attention against the subject makes a lot of sense. >> i like the idea that you can have a super, super, super computer that's capable of doing this kind of thing at some point in the future. and that's a huge development. >> yes, and i think-- >> it is and i think the big question is what's going to be the focus of the super computer, is it going to be solving the-- >> it might give us a good prediction on global warming. >> a predictable one. and the battle over planned parenthood after a video is released. gabriella gabriella, you're a millennial. your demographic group, how are you reacting to the planned parenthood story? >> stuart i think it's important to reiterate that these stories and videos shouldn't serve to divide americans based on party lines. what they should be doing is prompting a discussion about women's health about the callus attitude we've seen among planned parenthood officials who are discussing the harvesting of fetal body parts. and it's now upset millions of americans. millennials, including myself as we mentioned, grown up in a society where planned parenthood is a wonderful organization for women and what we've seen in the aftermath is many young americans beginning to question that reputation. stuart: when i first saw the videos and listened to what was being said i thought it crossed a line. to me it wasn't about abortion or anti-abortion, it wasn't that, it's about our treatment of humanity our concept of human life whether it's sacred or not. and how we should discuss that human life. >> i was appalled and disgusted when i saw the video, i'm an old guy, well into my 60's is my reaction the same as the reaction of someone in their 20's, i wonder? tell me. >> not based on the attitudes of the millennial generation. we saw a poll back in april that move that are half of millennials view abortion as morally disgusting and they're more pro-life than their parents. >> we saw this week pa gathering of young americans at the capitol urging lawmakers to defund planned parenthood. they are so pro-life it's a very pro-life generation and looking for lawmakers to share that belief and candidates who share those-- >> are they going to take this politically? are all millennials going to say, yeah this is a war on women? 'cause they will be told that. will they accept it as such? what do you think? >> millennials are sick and tired told that they're victims victims of the war on women. victims of others, you know democratic initial tis. they're looking at it as not a pro-life issue, they're looking at the kalascallus attitude that some have on life and unborn children. i think it will affect their voter attitude and we can expect to see a shift. >> very interesting, glad to have you on the show we want your point of view from your demographic, it's very important to us we appreciate that. thanks indeed. >> thank you, again. >> let's head back to the stock market and take a look at the cyber security firm fireye. the cfo is leaving and fireye's chief says an underlying cold war is heating up the u.s. russia, china all involved. chris is coming home brilliantly staying the course here, and talking super computer and now talking fireye, what is going on? >> it's going back to a common subject the countries have been keeping close tabs for years now and fireye is in a great position given the fact it's helping companies with security and this is a growing segment this company is going to do exceptionally well. you need this service. stuart: the chief says there will be a cold war, china, russia and the u.s. >> i think that's-- to this extent this is the best statement possible to feel interest in your company given the cfo just left. stuart: here is my problem with the security companies. it's not working. everybody r everybody has been stocked from the office of personnel management 22 million people's information lost, target you name it. it's not working, come on. >> that's a valid point. how many opportunities have been avoided as a result of the services? we know the targets and others but how many instances where there could be a compromise on date 0 or e-mails or credit card. so they have to exist. it's an important segment. and cold war is a bit dramatic but at the same time the chinese are an interesting place to watch. you know what i'd like to know? do we know the names of all of their government employees? >> and it's the population of england. >> i want to know. >> if they can do it to us can we do it to them and why don't we do it? >> we probably are. >> tax back. >> i'd like to know frankly, i'd like to know. you can't answer the question. >> that's a tough one, i'm going to surmise that they have information that's not on the public. stuart: our computers are better than their computers and i think we've got everything we want to know out of them. >> absolutely. [laughter] the american feeling today. thank you very much. appreciate it. beijing will host the olympics again 2022 i think it is. >> yes. stuart: lauren it's the winter games, 2022. >> that's correct. hi again. beijing hosting the 2022 olympics, the first center to host the winter games, moving it has the infrastructure to handle large events. major health concerns about the summer olympics and the analysis of water quality, there are dangerously high levels of viruses and bacteria from the venues where the athletes will compete. more bad news for game of thrones lovers the popular show has only three seasons left. they're working on season six and the h.b.o. programming show says that prequels are popular. 24 nominations for an emmy and it will go up against downton abby, just so you know. and the airlines sued by a man who says he suffered permanent back pain after being by a passenger. he's suing for 166,000 for medical expenses and lost earnings. a judge ordered a medical assessment and so far the airline has failed to get this case thrown out of court. >> welcome to america where you can sue anybody for anything in the any time. >> what are the chances of winning? >> i would give him 166,000. >> don't worry, they may do that. >> 5:00 monday morning, tune into the fox business network and look what you will see. lauren, sandra nicole bright and early, good show too. >> thank you, stuart. >> good guy hackers, i repeat good guy hackers take control of a general motors car through the on-star system. we have the video for you, the full story and we'll bring it to you next. and the head of the democratic national committee at a loss for words. look at this. >> what's the big difference a socialist you're the chairman of the democratic chairman tell me the difference between you and a socialist. >> well i'm not going to call it a go nowhere friday morning, but we're not going far, are we? we're down 20 points at 17-7 got it. now, let's go to facebook. they want to bring the internet to everyone around the world and use high flying drones to do it and we've got the video, too more in a half hour. now this new video is showing hackers taking control of a gm car through the on-star system. not a very good video. doesn't tell you much. the bottom line the gm car is hacked through the on-star system. gerri willis knows more. >> 3 million vehicles have the on-star, the number of vehicles that could be compromised. it's not as dangerous as it sounds. the hacker who did this he used a small device this big, a small computer, locate unlock remote start the car. that's what he was able to do using this technology. >> what you're looking at is a chrysler hack. stuart: that was last week. >> they recalled 1.4 million vehicles. what they did, they took over the control of the car and can do that at 70 miles per hour this is different, this is giving the hacker access to the car and let me tell you, you can actually start the car without the key and of ten minutes it shuts off. this is much less dangerous than the hack last week. but it's hacking into the computer systems of the cars and as they get better. >> they can't take the car away, can't drive-- >> as they get better though. stuart: as the who canners get biller, it's a lot-- >> there are many openings for the hackers. >> with this hijacked with the lock button and the lights. gm issued a fix and that's an issue too. >> it shows you that there are many openings for the hackers. >> we've got you. the problem with everything all all. and you've got to watch this debby wasserman schultz the head of the democratic committee. she had a problem answering a question about her party. >> what is the difference between a democrat and a socialist. i used to think it's a big difference, what do you think it is. >> the difference. >> a democrat like hillary clinton and-- >> what's the difference between being a democrat and being a republican? >> what's the big difference between a democrat and a socialist. you're the chairman of the democratic party tell me the difference between you and a socialist. stuart: oh. ashley: oh. stuart: didn't have much to say and tried to change the question. liberal commentator is here. >> hello, mr. varney. stuart: are you ready for this? >> i am. tell me the difference between a socialist and a democrat. >> i can answer the question and i think she could, too. stuart: go. >> i think it's like milk and cheese. you have the same ingredients, but one is more extreme than the other. both believe in government and are not sad, think they're unregulated government. >> not bad, not bad. we'll call bernie sanders inside the conversation. >> i think he considers himself a socialist. stuart: how close is hillary to being a socialist? >> i would say she's not close, but bernie is. >> is she closer to bernie sanders closer to being a socialist? >> the problem with wasserman schultz you don't want to call anyone a socialist because you could be an extremist. stuart: we're hearing stirrings about joe biden. you like this? >> yes. stuart: here is a split in the democratic party you're not enthused about hillary clinton who is a front runner. >> i love hillary. >> but you'd welcome joe biden for this? >> i don't think that the country is ready for another bush clinton race it's a country that likes change. i think they're going to be a front runner. joe biden is going to get in on this? >> you know what they're saying, that the president obama doesn't get along with hillary clinton and joe biden would be in the race. >> i think that trump is going to drop out like perot. stuart: and the democrats. >> bush and -- i think that biden and hillary will fight it out and he's going to win it. stuart: i want you to repeat it, clean cut on tape. go. >> i don't know what i said. oh. [laughter] . stuart: that biden is going to-- >> i think you're going to have a bush and a clinton fight and i think that there's going to be so much wreckage and someone to make it through the wreckage, come out clean and slow and sure wins the race and i think that obama is going to get behind biden and biden is going to win it all. stuart: that was a fine save. and it will be run for the rest of the day you promise you. >> see what happens. stuart: did you wear a red dress because you knew we were talking socialism. thanks, kathy, he zoo you later. a dentist spends $50,000 to shoot a lion in africa. do dentists make that much money? yes, they do. when a moment spontaneously turns romantic why pause to take a pill? and why stop what you're doing to find a bathroom? with cialis for daily use, you don't have to plan around either. it's the only daily tablet approved to treat erectile dysfunction so you can be ready anytime the moment is right. plus cialis treats the frustrating urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision or any symptoms of an allergic reaction stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. wh . . . . ♪ stuart: a whole town turns against a neighbor, maybe it has got something to do with his cessna parked in the driveway. more on that in a moment. plus big shift in on demand economy. a tech company is turning its independent contractors, no, none of that, turning them into employees. that is a big worry for the likes of uber. dentists make more than doctors. $181,000 a year on average. with a specialty like cost metric dentistry it is close to $300,000. why is this news? it is not news but it is in the headlines. why? because the killer of the african lion was a dentist from minnesota. headline in the "washington post," affording a $50,000 lion hunt is plausible if you earn as much as a dentist. the lion killer opened up a pandora's box. who knows what will jump out of it. the wave of outrage at cecil's killing has brought the dental industry into a most unwelcome financial spotlight. these guys are 1%, a very unpopular group these days. when one kill as lion for sport they have all got a problem. let the high again nists and dental technicians do more at lower prices. in minnesota they have dental therapists who pull your teeth at half price. all across the country high price for dental treatment sunday scrutiny and therefore under attack. there is the chain of event. outrage over 50,000-dollar african lion kill, crashes over the dental industry here. rolls all over it. high incomes in the spotlight and under attack that minnesota guy had no idea what he started. people with type 2 diabetes come from all walks of life. if you have high blood sugar ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar, kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections changes in urination and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life♪ ♪yeah, you do the walk of life♪ need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga. and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. stuart: debt flap, to nowhere friday morning the dow is down a mere seven points but look at amgen. new high there, $181 a share. that was reached earlier. higher profit and a lot of cost-cutting plus strong sales of enbrel. that is the rheumatoid arthritis drug phil mickelson, the golfer, uses it. amgen, big gain for a very big company. look at this. facebook's new drone. they're going to develop it and use it, not that one. there is a much bigger one, much bigger one out there. it's a huge thing. it is the size of a boeing -- >> 73. stuart: 47? >> 37. stuart: it's big. they plan to fly this thing in circles, all around, basically underpopulated areas. >> doesn't even need an engine. stuart: that is in the factory. that is the thing in the factory. just building this thing getting it together. they want to fly it around in circles. so you can beam down internet to those who currently can't get it. standing in the middle of the sahara, take your pick and have access to the facebook profile this thing goes around. already most widely used tech product. this could help them expand further. the stock is done a little, no up a buck now. they're watching the show, i can tell. closing in on 100 buck as share, we think. we shall see. now this. there is a company that is part of the on demand economy. it is called lux valet. they are making major change. by the way they park your car for you. big change coming. they will designate their workers as employees, not independent contractors. that means, more spending on things like health benefits, for example. curtis lee is the ceo of lux valet. he joins us now. why did you do this, curtis? why did you make people employees as opposed to contractors? now you have to spend more money on benefits and all the rest of it. >> yeah, i mean we did it because we want to improve the user experience. it starts with users for us and so the valets as they become employees, now we can actually train them and actually asked all them. provide career development that is necessary for them to become the best workers as possible. so really starts with the end user and -- stuart: i understand. look, very interesting development. what your company does is, i could be driving along, i'm circling, can't find a parking space. i hit the app. one of your guys comes, takes my car, park it for me, i do what i have to do and your car brings the car back to me, for a fee. that's what you do, isn't it? >> that's right. stuart: okay. i just gave you a chance to tell everybody just how wonderful your company is and what it does, go. >> yeah. i mean effectively, only thing you do on a frequent basis when you drive your car you drive it or park it. the thing that everyone hates the most is parking, right? you're circling around, looking for parking. people think there has been studies made, people look on average 20 minutes for parking. that causes 30% of total urban congestion. not good for anybody when anyone is circling around looking for parking. using our app, as you point out pick the location. valet picks up the car and takes it to one of our lots and securely parks it. stuart: changed the whole system. you have gone from independent contractors to employees. now that raises your costs obviously. you're prepared to do that? >> right. stuart: which means you probably will have to charge me, if i use your service, a little bit more, is that accurate? >> we are a little bit more. but at the same time i mean i think there is a lot of costs that are not directly correlated with the increase. so you think about benefits of you know, employees actually staying with the company longer, and not churning through as much. you think about the efficiencies along the entire supply chain that we run. it is much more enhanced using a trained workforce. stuart: yeah. >> these are things we couldn't have done earlywer a contractor model. when we did our analysis it was better. stuart: what was your churn rate? how many employees do you use any given time. >> it is churn within valets. not we actively share. it is below the on-demand company average based on our own analysis. we having already compel. that makings it compelling for future employees. stuart: curtis lee with luxe valet. thanks for joining us. interesting move. i have a headline for you, it's a number too. 53 million adults suffer with some kind, suffer with, i should say, some kind of disability. doesn't mean they're all collecting money from the government. doesn't mean they're all fraudulent. one in five million americans have a disability. that is huge amount. we have a private investigator with cpi investigations. he uncovers disability fraud. i'm not saying 53 million are fraudulent or on the make. i'm not saying that at all but there is a degree of fraud in disability and you're the guy who goes out and catches them. so i want you to tell our viewers, how do you catch them? give me two examples of going after fraudulent disability people and getting them. >> we use their social media footprint to discover things that they're doing, and people tell on themselves. i had one gentleman, he is about 40 years old. supposedly suffering from back issues. he puts on facebook he is a member of the 300-pound. meaning he is lifts 300 pounds. he lists the gym he goes to. we go to the gym. we have hidden cameras. we get the guy. he is definitely a member of 300-pound club. but he didn't have have a issue. stuart: what did you say when you walked in. >> no, we don't talk to them. stuart: we just take the videotape. >> we just take the videotape. stuart: do you go to court. >> we two to the insurance company. stuart: rule number one, don't go on facebook if you have a back problem say you're a member of 300-pound club at gym? >> no, you don't want to did he that. stuart: another example of fraud. >> another woman, supposedly it was physical, i don't know if it was back or leg or anything. she posted they were going on, family was going on vacation up in the catskills. we get them in the cat skill mountains. she is rock climbing and she is jogging and all this stuff. so it was a, not a vacation from me. i got evidence i needed and worked out. stuart: you didn't confront lady. >> no, we don't confront them. stuart: you took videotape. you're a big guy. you could confront somebody. >> i could but consider do that. stuart: is business booming. >> business is good. stuart: insurance companies hire you? >> absolutely. stuart: main way you catch people are social media. >> if it is not facebook, it will be twitter or instagram. they will continue to do it. stuart: really. >> absolutely. stuart: they just can't help themselves? >> i don't know why. >> what is the worst, most egregious example? >> they're all bad. they're all bad because they're all fraud in the system. so it is all bad. i think we had on the show one time a woman was claiming to be disabled and she was on the price is right or something like that. she is running down -- >> come on down? >> it is all bad. >> she claimed like back pain or leg pain? >> yeah. stuart: esaw pinto, everybody. don't want to see this guy on your tail because he will catch you. you just warned our entire audience what not to do. >> i'm not going to lose any business. stuart: you're not. too much business out there, i know it. as always, thank you very much indeed, sir. appreciate it. time for the sector report. cheryl is watching something. what is it? >> i know that you've been celebrating, stuart, these lower gas prices predictions we'll go delow two dollars, but that is never good for energy companies especially big energy companies that reported earnings this morning. look at exxonmobil. the stock is down 4 1/2%. they disappointed on numbers. i want to show you chevron. both companies came out, big issue for chevron for the second quarter. the stock is down four%. bad for the companies. great for americans. as you say oil prices staying lower. but here is other side of that story. stuart: there are two sides to it, cheryl, that is the truth. cheryl, thanks very much. mark cuban says he would not rule out running as donald trump's vice president. i got the story for you coming up. another hillary clinton email dump could come as early as noon eastern time. watch out. can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive? >> i'm nicole petallides with your fox business brief. stocks mixed right now. the dow jones industrial average down 15 while the s&p 500 is gaping almost two points. -- gaining. mixed today, higher for the week for all three of the major indices but we're seeing some dow laggards. exxon, profit was cut in half after the quarterly earnings report. stock down 4 1/2%. chevron down outlook there. two weighing on the dow. apple, jpmorgan, goldman sachs unpressure the turns out u.s. labor costs rise at slowest pace in three decades and some traders are saying that brings focus to the fed and that pushes off the possibility of a september rate hike. maybe more to the december month when we talk about a sluggish wage growth. twitter down 12% this week. another new low today. there were concerns about its user growth slowing. royal caribbean, well, boosts its outlook, that stock is up 8%. make sure you get all the news you need at 5:00 a.m. ♪ stuart: check out video please. embarrassing turn of events in lottery chiefs in serbia. the winning numbers were on before they were drawn. the head of lottery commission resigned ahead of scandal but still smiling. pilot on long island, new york, public enemy number one. neighbors turning against him because of this. his cessna plane parked in the driveway. it is an eyesore they say. had it there about a month. he doesn't want to shell out 150 bucks a month to put it in storage. the neighbors called town officials of the called the police. he could be hit with a fine. got it. is a donald trump-mark cuban alliance in the works? when mark cuban was asked if he would consider running as donald trump's vice president, he said, yes. later he said he would likely not accept because he isn't cut out for politics. liz harrington from the "washington free beacon" is here. liz, i see this as reaction to the frustration with pool tish shuns. -- politicians. some people think if you bring in dramatic businessman, outspoken business commands, who do this do that that will solve our problems. i think that is utterly wrong. what say you. >> mark cuban accepting vp would be a step down after playing the president in "sharknado 3". cuban's comments get to the heart of what the appeal of donald trump is which is, he says what he thinks. he doesn't sound like one of these poll-tested politicians where everything they say is approved the by a consultant. that definitely is the appeal of donald trump. it remains to be seen how far that can take him. stuart: it is unrealistic, isn't it? it is absolutely unrealistic. it may be unpopular at the moment but politics is the art of compromise. there is no compromise in donald trump and mark cuban. they make commands. it is entirely unrealistic a business guy can run the country as if he is politician. it is not going to happen. >> i think it is unrealistic. i think donald trump said it best in his book, "the art of the deal." i play to people's fantasies. that is why he is successful marketing himself and getting all this attention because he knows how to make people pay attention to him. and says what people want to hear. whether, but that changes all the time. he has been a democrat most of his life. used to be a huge fan of hillary clinton. once he is under scrutiny at the state department, oh, she is the worst secretary of state in history. now he is pandering to gop voters. what he has concerns about immigration but saying what people want to hear. that is what he always done and why he is somewhat successful early on. stuart: would you want him to drop out? >> i would think he probably will drop out at some point. stuart: do you want him to? >> i think he probably should because it is really -- stuart: do you want him to? do you want him to? >> yes i do think he should drop out. stuart: because he is just like the cat amongst the pigeons in the republican party. no, go on. keep talking. >> no, i think, i mean he should drop out. the one good thing that he has done that other politicians in the gop can learn from him to talk like a normal person. act like you don't care what people think, what the pollsters think, what the consultants things. that is helpful. but his policy positions on things are not actually conservative. i think that will come out when you see the first debate. stuart: heaven forbid he should become the ross perot of 2016. you agree with me on that one liz? two lizs here. liz macdonald. liz harrington you would agree with him on that one? >> definitely that is the biggest fear he will not get nomination and run third party. same thing like perot, clintons win. stuart: you got it. liz, thank you very much. now you have 10 seconds, liz macdonald. >> call me emac. makes it easier. the donald trump, the lady is right. he is not a conservative. he is more i don't know what. stuart: another story for you, liz, listen for a second, irs, health exchanges, medicare medicaid, you've all heard about this. they got an "f" on a new government report card. >> this proves -- stuart: hold on a second. >> go ahead. stuart: you're saying you have another angle on this. it is a calamity, that's what you're calling it with the irs. tell me about it. >> health reform is turning irs more into museum of mass confusion. the gao effectively is saying, listen, 15 1/2 billion dollars worth of tax credits went out the door for health reform mining people use the credits to buy insurance at exchanges. watch this, the irs is not getting all documentation in the door in time to make sure those tax credits were given out appropriately. in fact just four of the 50 exchanges had given proper information to the irs just, four of 50, by march 21st of this year. they needed it back in january. this is money right out the door, stuart. this will be a story ongoing. i will stay on top of it. stuart: it will never come back. it will never come back. >> it is a avalanche of force irs has to deal with, paperwork all over the board. stuart: liz, thank you. >> emac is easier. stuart: governor jerry brown of california asks residents to use less water. and they did. thousands of clinton emails about to be dumped. team hillary worried worried about this won. more "varney" a moment. alright, let's take a look. the one on the right just used 1% less fuel than the one on the left. now, to an airline a 1% difference could save enough fuel to power hundreds of flights around the world. hey, look at that. pyramids. so you see, two things that are exactly the same have never been more different. ge software. get connected. get insights. get optimized. technology empowers us to achieve more. it pushes us to go further. special olympics has almost five million athletes in 170 countries. the microsoft cloud allows us to immediately be able to access information, wherever we are. information for an athlete's medical care, or information to track their personal best. with microsoft cloud we save millions of man hours, and that's time that we can invest in our athletes and changing the world. stuart: quick update for you from the west coast. california regulators say water conservation in the state has passed goals set by governor brown. water use in june falling by 27%, despite it being hottest june on record. the water conservation goal was set at 25%. the savings are compared to 2013 which was year before governor brown declared a drought emergency. we're awaiting the state department's third batch of hillary clinton emails set to be released today. peter barnes in washington with more on what we can expect. peter? >> that's right, ashley. we are expecting another dump of hillary clinton's private emails today. they have pie agency's worried. the inspector general for national intelligence warned last week of the 30,000 emails clinton turned over from her private server, there are potentially hundredses that contain classified information. ig says his limited reof emails showed secret information was not marked as classified but should have been. information came from the cia, the national security agency the defense intelligence agency and two other spy agencies. the controversy dogged clinton on the campaign trail yesterday. >> i think we have been proceeding in a timely fashion and indeed the vast majority of the emails that i turned over and that are being turned over by others were already in the state department system. so this is really a question for the state department. >> the inspector general said the state department has agreed to take some steps to try to protect classified information in these released emails including using screeners with top secret security clearances but the internal guidelines at the state department also forbid the release of any information that is classified. ashley. stuart: we'll see. document dump friday. peter barnes, thank you so much. hour three of "varney," three minutes away. 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[announcer]stay in the flow with quickbooks self-employed. start your free,thirty-day trial today at join-self-employed-dot-com. stuart: i think this is the best possible news for everyday people. listen to this from aaa. the price of gas will fall another 20 cents a gallon by labor day. by winter in some states the price will be under $2 for regular. that is aaa saying that. that is very unusual for them to come out with such a bold and precise forecast. they're saying the price decline we've seen this month will accelerate through this summer and fall. i hope they're right. i know cheaper gas means fewer jobs in the oil patch, got it and tougher times in parts of texas and dakotas. for the rest of us it means more money in the pocket. maybe we can drive instead of buying very expensive plane ticket. you can get out there and enjoy america and america's terrific roads. you're not used to hearing that, are you. we're supposed to be guilty about the carbon we're emitting. guilty about the crumbling infrastructure. lighten up. drillers and frackers in america are giving all a gift, cheap affordable gas. it's friday, within two hours i shall behind the wheel of chrysler van driving deep into the country. when i get there i will drive in my dodge pickup truck and listen to fine country music and do serious logging. a affordable, guilt-free pleasure. the american way, i love it. ♪ >> movie called, "pump." this was filmed two years ago, the u.s. will never see prices below $3 a gallon ever again. guess what? they were wrong. anybody who makes predictions, stuart, including me, will be wrong because you can not predict the undedickable. stuart: that was former shell president john hofmeister raining on my chinaer gas parade. we'll see in larry levin is on my side. he is from the cme in chicago. he trades oil, he trades gasoline. you know i'm right, don't you? the price of gas is going down big time. >> you would be heart h hard-pressed to be against us stuart. aaa and analysts say $30 oil. from technical sand point they all seem to be right. market is very weak. wti oil, certainly important as well, has -- is at seven-year, the worst, pardon me, stuart the worst move we've seen, worst month we've seen in seven-year period. that is obviously very negative from a technical standpoint. the stocks for gas and oil are at all-time highs. mix the two things together, drillers, frackers, people like that are giving us a gift. i couldn't agree with you more. prices keep going down and $2 by winter. stuart: $2 a gallon gasoline by winter would not surprise you? that is big drop coming. that wouldn't surprise you? >> anything can happen in these markets. commodities are really supply and demand situation. oil, gas, certainly that way. we're seeing that quite a bit. as supply keeps coming up, obviously price has to reflect that we're seeing that quite a bit. as price gets keep cheaper and cheaper, you may sigh frackers and drillers backing off a little bit and may equalize prices. pressure is on the downside. hard to find somebody around here that wants to be long oil even with high prices. stuart: larry levin, come on here anytime you like. seriously, larry. see you later. >> sure. stuart: check out the big board. the dow turned positive, not much but beginning to inch up a little bit. some stocks are going down. in particular i'm looking at linkedin. it is display ad sales, down i believe about 30%. that is not going down well. the stock off 8%. big move in a big name social network stock. electronic arts is another one. it has a disappointing forecast. it is not down too much, down one 1/4% but it is down. any minute now, hillary clinton will take to the podium in miami calling for the embargo against cuba to be lifted. campaign is taking another hit dealing now with news that joe biden, may, repeat, may, where the speculation is, may get into the race. come on in, daniel halper, author of the book "clinton, inc.." daniel i say hillary is in real trouble here because president obama, there is bad blood between obama and the clintons. i think president obama is probably encouraging joe biden to get into this race, to be his guy in the race. what say you? >> that may be the case. joe biden, there isn't really compelling reason for him not to run. only one perhaps slightly he might embarass himself by losing very badly. he has run twice before. not gained any traction. so that may be holding him back but that is probably the only thing. so i think he will run. as far as president obama is concerned, a lot does lay on his plate. he can make, he can be the king-maker in his party. he has to decide, i think, who is going to win the election? who has the best chance of becoming the next democratic president because he really needs a democrat. he has done a lot of governing by executive action. republican comes in, he can reverse a lot of that, not all but a lot of that. he needs a democrat. that is the calculation president obama is going to be making, you seems to us hillary clinton is not running a very good campaign. there is all kinds of obvious examples where the campaign is falling flat. whether a $600 haircut or roping off the media. and email problem which may get worse this afternoon. we don't know that. we don't know that but may get worse. one analyst was on the show saying the campaign is in crisis mode. would you go that far? >> not yet. i wouldn't go that far. she is still in a very, very good position. in terms of she has a huge infrastructure. she has a lot of organization around the country in various early states and she has a lot of money in bank. that is hard to replicate even if al gore, john kerry, it would be hard to replicate her organization at this moment. that gives her a better standing in the field. you're right, long-term outlook is not great for her. she is not popular. she is not well-liked. joe biden has more favorable ratings which is another compelling reason he might run. i wouldn't call it crisis yet but they should be on edge, for sure. stuart: what has gone wrong? she has hired what she thinks is the best political talent in the country. she has a left host of advisors. she has 400 people. she has a ton of money. what has gone wrong? >> it is her. her campaign is decent. her people she has seem to be very good. she is not a good campaigner. she is not a good grip and grinner. doesn't charm audiences like the way her husband is able to do. that is problematic and very hard to overcome if you're the problem and not some other problem with, in lower rungs of your campaign. stuart: i think it is different in a presidential campaign. you've got to be personnallable is the expression. you have to glad hand and get the crowd with you and feel that crowd and get the crowd going. i think that is particular i important in a presidential election. and you're telling me that hillary doesn't have it? >> well she's not, she is okay she is not good at it. that is a big hindrance. look back at last elections barack obama was better politician than mitt romney. barack obama obviously better politician than john mccain. george w. bush better politician than john kerry. now gore, better politician does win elections. we don't know who the republican will nominate. we don't know whether that candidate will be any good. in that side there is so much more going on and so much more uncertainty. so there is a lot obviously in the air as your previous guest said. it is very hard to make predictions about the economy. very hard to make predictions about the politics. we can notice certain trends and it is problematic. again president obama really holds the key to this election. he could do a lot of damage. if he decided to prosecute hillary clinton for these emails and not following -- he could take her down relatively easily. so he has got a lot of power. she is probably going to be sucking up to him quite a bit. stuart: joe biden, waiting right there. daniel, thanks very much for joining us, appreciate it. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: here is the latest on the planned parenthood story. there is fourth video showing executives at planned parenthood trying to sell baby parts to researchers. listen to what tammy bruce had to say on this issue earlier on this program. >> i think all of us can agree this is an imperative dynamic. stuart: you're the former president of now, saying that today. >> as all of my pro-choice friends, and everyone watching in washington must know this is non-partisan. stuart: cheryl, you're here with me now. outrage on both sides of the aisle actually about the morality of chopping up babies and selling the parts. what were you just telling me about the vote? doesn't look like it will go through congress. >> here is what the republicans are trying to do. some very powerful people that want to do this. besides ted cruz, john mccain. i'm talking about orrin hatch. attach defunding of plan the parenthood in the fall. that is new strategy on republican side to get this bill through. it is politics. stuart: the bill before congress now would take money away from planned parenthood and give it to other women's health organizations. that bill is likely to fail because it won't get the 60 votes required to get the debate going in the senate. >> right. stuart: so that bill is not off the table but it will fail. >> it isn't look good. stuart: now you're saying better chance to attach to spending bill which doesn't require 60 votes in senate. only requires majority. and you can't pull it apart, can you. >> if you attach it within the spending bill it becomes one big gigantic bill and showdown begins. that would be this fall. stuart: that would be the way this defunding of planned parent could still happen in different way. >> in a different way. stuart: this fall. >> interesting, john mccain, arizona, he won't have any challengers for his primary. they believe, this is becoming political strategy. whether or not, the morality of the story on one side it will end up being a political story which is something that you and i have talked about before. stuart: yes, we have. >> republicans are grabbing on to it. stuart: yes, they are. thank you, cheryl. we have big money news from the world of sports the russell wilson, quarterback of the seat tell seahawks just signed, i'm told this is a huge contract extension. how much money. >> four-year deal, 87.6 million. >> wow. >> averaging right around 22 million, just shy of 22 million a season. he gets a nice signing bonus of $31 million. he is now almost on par with aaron rogers of the green bay packers who is the number one top paid quarterback in the league. >> would you say he is big star for seattle, ashley? is he like the guy? the patriots won but -- >> had 42 wins in three seasons. six playoff wins. two super bowl starts. they blew out the broncos in the season before the patriots. the guy is terrific. they have been in a bit of a stare down, wilson and seahawks. he said i'm absolutely blessed being with this organization four more years. that is serious money. he is a great, great player. stuart: what proportion of 80 odd million dollars is guaranteed. >> 60 million. stuart: whatever happens he gets 60 million? a lot of money. >> he is 26 years old. this will take him to 30th. he continues to go at this pace could probably get another big deal before that is over. he is in big money for a while. stuart: good stuff. will we see a economic pick me up before the next election? there is new congressional video out on obama recovery or lack there off. congressman kevin brady is here to talk about it. that will be 11:35 this morning. this video by the way just out. republican debate less than a week away. donald trump will steal the show. there is a an interesting prediction. more "varney" after this. stuart: will you look at gopro? the stock is heading higher after an upgrade by citi. it is telling investors to go out there and buy gopro. that works. up two bucks at 63. hillary clinton making a speech in miami. she is calling for the embargo against cuba to be really lifted. the real story about the clintons her staffers are getting worried that joe biden could, could, jump into the race. white house fox senior correspondent ed henry with more on that. ed, what have you got. >> hillary clinton about to speak in a moment. pardon me if i have to sit down couple minutes. with we learned, one of joe biden's top aide sat down with major fund-raiser for breakfast. i was tipped off with clinton insider that raised eyebrows in clinton world that maybe joe biden was having some of his top aides to sound out big money folks, people from wall street or elsewhere to see if he could get into the race late and raise some big money quickly to take on hillary clinton. the bide encamp confirms the breakfast took place. says it was personal meeting. there was no fund-raising discussed. and too early to decide whether joe biden will get in hire because of his son tragically passing away a fuse weeks back. why conversations are happening, why there is speculation about this, because hillary clinton is having commanding lead but not putting this away. getting a surprisingly strong challenge from bernie sanders on the left. there are surprisingly strong questions about the emails. knew questions about the intervention and secretary of state on behalf of ubs, the massive swiss bank in the tax evasion case, but then after her intervention as you know hundreds of thousands of dollars flowed into the clinton foundation. $1.5 million flowed to bill clinton in speaking engagements from ubs. hillary clinton had a news conference yesterday denying there was anything improper about that but what is interesting, we have 1:30 p.m. eastern, state department putting out more of hillary clinton official emails. you know there is controversy there as well about intelligence information, classified information winding up in the server. with these lingering questions out there, you will hear more speculation whether biden or other democrats might get in stuart. stuart: we have a lot of speculation about that, believe me. ed henry in miami. see you later, thank you. next thursday, right here, fox news, the top gop candidates face off in the first 2016 republican debate. no question who will be the big draw. listen to this. >> as far as preparing for the debates i am who i am. i don't know. i never debated before. i'm not a debater. i get things done. stuart: okay. i get things done. >> not going to prepare. stuart: we heard that one. joining us is heritage foundation's genevieve wood. look, it will be will for fox news because the ratings will be spectacular. i got it. but you know, i'm not sure i'm going to learn that much about where the candidates want to take policy in america because everybody is -- everything is going to be about trump. not sure this will be success but those who want to hear policy as opposed to theater. >> yeah. i think you're right on that stuart. that's challenge even if trump wasn't in this, to have 10 people on a stage talking for an hour or 9-minute debate. it will be tough to get a lot of details period. look benefit here with trump that you will have more people watching than would ever watch something like this probably this early on. the downside is for those other nine that will be standing up there, they have no idea how to control this thing. that is what obviously makes it a bit engaging. stuart: you follow politics very, very closely, economic policy in particular. you're with heritage, i got it. what do you know about donald trump's policy positions? anything at all? >> well that's the big question. i mean donald trump frankly, if you name the issue been on multiple sides. he is talking about immigration. throwing that out there. obviously an issue many are concerned about. very unclear how he would tackle it. i understand of appeal of people saying we're done with politicians. look at polls. donald trump is doing very well obviously, but one out of three republican voters right now are supporting somebody who is not a politician. that is donald trump, carly fiorina and ben carson. so one out of three. i think that is because people think politicians aren't getting it done. they're frustrated with republicans they sent to office who have come up here and not gotten it done. donald trump says i'm a businessman, i can. as you well know the government doesn't run like that. i think trump might be a little frustrated if he were sitting in oval office. stuart: absolutely. politics doesn't work like that. >> that's right. stuart: in politics, you have to compromise, talk to the other person. work out some kind of a deal. give that and take this. >> can't just fire everybody. stuart: you can't do it. in business you command. do this. you're vice president. do it. >> that's right. stuart: it is not like that. you can't do that in the real world. many ways -- >> i think trump would enjoy running for president actually more than he would enjoy being president. we're going to see. what will be interesting to see if the other candidates can tap into the debate what he has tapped into. which is a passion out there for people to speak their mind, say it with gusty. not be willing to cower down when the come after you when other people do. be able to stand by your guns. anybody can capture the kind of passion he has and has policy bonefides think they can do very well. stuart: is it possible that you and are totally wrong and this country really wants and yes needs someone like donald trump, who says do it? and america's great, get on with it? maybe we are totally wrong, have you ever thought about that? >> well, anything is possible. i've been wrong before but i don't think is anything wrong the thing he is saying with sense of his tone at times. sometimes his tone is off. the idea that washington is broken. that these other folks say what they want to hear. they all talk a good game and then get here and don't do anything. i think he is right about that. other folks could say the same thing, might have better policy ideas how to implement change. stuart: do you think they're saying exactly same thing on other side of the aisle? people are just fed up with hillary clinton because she is done naystic politician, never does anything really? is there same frustration among democrats. >> there is a reason bernie sanders is at 20% at some polls because there is a base not overly happy with hillary. in earlier segment i think this draft biden movement is a real movement. i was talking with a guy working very closely with them. they have been talking with a lot of big donors. people are interested. they are worried she will not catch on. they're worried there are scandals out there and they're not comfortable with bernie sanders being backup. so they want somebody like biden in the race. that is all legitimate and real. stuart: personally i love the stuff. it will be a great 16 months. >> it is fascinating at times unless you care about the future of the country and you get a little bit nervous at times. it will be something interesting to batch. stuart: genevieve, we sure you will watch with us over next six teen months. >> thank you. stuart: the nfl made history hiring the first female church. the nba is following and one upped them. deal with it next. you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™ you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. stuart: well the market is dead flat but there are some individual stocks which are clearly moving. among them is western union. better profits, forecast. up it goes 6 1/2%. not bad. look at columbia sportswear. they make the columbia and sore l brands of outdoor gear. smaller loss, better demand for product and touched a new high, 74.72. that was earlier. backed off a little bit but still off. sacramento kings basketball team, so everybody knows what i'm talking about, they hired this lady, nancy lieberman assistant coach. the nba second female coach. >> assistant coach. first female hired by believe it or not san antonio spurs. i don't know how much you're into basketball. stuart: well -- >> she will definitely bring a lot of fire to the team. the kings have had a lot of struggles last couple years. anyway, brand new partnership. second time we had a full-time assistant coach in the nba. this is rare. you would think with all strides women have made in the last 20 years, all that good stuff, when it comes to professional mens sports in particular, nba, baseball, basketball. rare to see women's like this. stuart: how much does the authority assistant coach have? >> quite a bit. stuart: head coach says you're playing here, you're playing here, here is the play for next 30 seconds. i got that. what does the assistant coach do. >> think about your number two man, producer jeff -- stuart: he is my number one guy. >> i thought ashley was your number one guy? yeah, right. kind of that thing you really depend on that person to really have your back. assistant coach is crucial crucial position in any professional team. stuart: this is not just symbolic gesture. >> no, no. it already happened in the nba. saw it with the nfl this week with them hiring the first female. that was a big move in the nfl in particular. you he see a lot of female sports reporters, stuart. but really to have women in positions of power like this in professional sports, is really a new trend. nice to see, i guess, i speak as woman. great to see ladies coming in taking positions of power. stuart: there by merit? >> in the kings have a bad season as cardinals -- stuart: there it is. another big sports star, jim craig, goalie from the miracle on ice team, the 1980 u.s. hockey gold medal winners, remember that? i remember it very, very well. he is joining jim, i'm sorry liz claman this afternoon. jim craig, 1980 hockey team goalie. 3:00 this afternoon. good stuff. next, facebook's latest venture. it is a giant, i mean a giant drone. it will beam the internet to remote corners of the globe. on the drawing board, big stuff. plus the obama recovery, versus reagan recovery, tale of two presidents and two recoveries. ain't no comparison. more "varney" after this. running my own shop has been brutal. but then i got a domain and built my website all at godaddy. now i look so professional i just got my first customer who isn't related to me. get a domain website and email starting at $1/month all at godaddy. are you moving forward fast enough? everywhere you look, it strategy is now business strategy. and a partnership with hp can help you accelerate down a path created by people, technology and ideas. to move your company from what it is now... to what it needs to become. stuart: sticking with my story. it is a dead flat, go nowhere friday morning. the dow up a mere seven points. however look at oil. it is down78 cents. the big story is the price of gasoline. it is now dropping a penny per gallon a day. we're down to 2.66 right now. get this, here is the headline. aaa says $2 a gallon gasoline yes, yes. >> i should buy a car. >> bring it on. stuart: don't say that. buy a big gas guzzler. >> f-150. >> striving around -- driving around manhattan. stuart: look at facebook. the company is spending a lot of money. one of the things they're spending on is a massive drone that will beam internet service to remote parts of the earth. it is on the drawing board. that thing will be huge. the size of a 737. >> 737, huge. stuart: ang chief investment officer hilary kramer is here. i'm not suggesting that drone has impact on the stock right now, it doesn't. >> but ultimately, stuart, it could because what facebook wants to do is bring internet service to 10% of the world absolutely has no way of having access to the internet as well as those where it may be too expensive. also leads to the question, what about those if they can't afford connection activity how do they afford the device? facebook needs to make a switch from advertising revenues and social network company to compete with amazon. it is very smart move. investors like me on wall street looking yes, at short term but we look look at the long term. where was $2.8 billion spent? expenditure was up $2.8 billion. they were taken out to the woodshed. data center, artificial intelligence. stuart: investors didn't like it because they spent all this money but some investors you think will love it when some of those investments pay off down the road? >> it is a necessity. amazon has been doing it. google is doing it. apple does it. they're a little more quiet what they're doing. they just introduce new products. this is the these companies get ahead. look at stock like twitter. twitter hit 52-week low today. it is vital that the social internet companies find ways to monetize catching all of these users. still have to make the cash. stuart: facebook as 968 million people who use facebook at least once a day. that is astonishing amount. they found out how to get money out of the 968 million people. they have a quarter of the entire global online advertising, smartphone advertising business, something like that. >> mobile. stuart: are you saying to our viewers and our own clients, get out there to buy facebook and put it in the portfolio, don't even think about selling it? would you say that? >> if you're going to hold it for the next 10 years. if you want to hold it less than the next 10 years wait for facebook to come off levels that are a little more acceptable. we're expecting some kind of adjustment to the market. doesn't mean i'm not a bull long term. i'm a huge bull and optimist. you do want to own facebook. i think it belongs in everyone's portfolio. stuart: it is 95 now. maybe you missed your chance, it dropped to 92. people saying don't buy until it is 85. >> there are certain levels, once facebook gets over 100-dollar level we might see on technical side more buying. stuart: that is my question. do you think they go to the races? they cross 100 and do same thing as amazon and google, they will really take -- you think that? >> we do that with many companies and look at technical analysis and i do fundamentals and macro which are trends and tastes and regulation, it still comes down buy into new highs and that makes stocks go up. stuart: would you be surprised if facebook were $150 a share one year from now? >> i would not be surprised. stuart: really. >> our market is biased towards going higher. think of the fed. stuart: hillary, welcome to the program. good to have you back. see you again soon the thank you very much indeed. have a look at this chart. i hate charts but this is particular good one. shows jobs recovery under president reagan and jobs recovery under president obama. there is a huge gap. shaded in gray. there is quite a difference. congressman kevin brady, republican from texas an on the joint economic committee. come on, kevin, tell me, put your finger on it, the one big reason why the obama recovery is appeal shadow of the reagan recovery? what is that one significant reason? >> i think the answer is business investment. there is no question compared -- look, president reagan or president obama inherited a tough economy. president reagan did as well. right now, six years later we're missing about five 1/2 million jobs out of the economy. we have a whole the size of canada's economy should be back. families missing $1000 a month out of their paychecks. with the reagan comparison it is even more dramatic. the big reason is businesses are not reinvesting back in the united states. that drives job creation. i think washington frankly is responsible for a good deal of that. stuart: really? that is interesting. i have thought you were going to say ronald reagan cut everybody's taxes and got the economy a shot in the arm. >> well, i'll tell you -- stuart: you said no, business investment is the big deal. that's interesting. >> because of the lack of that. because we have not cut taxes but increased them. president reagan shrunk the size of the government in comparison to the economy. those two things drove business investment. what washington is not doing right now is reason we don't have that job growth. stuart: do you that we'll get some of the money currently parked overseas, i think more than $2 trillion in american money, parked oversees -- overseas, not coming back here because we have the highest corporate tax rate in the world, it brings up, we said no corporate tax for five years would we get a $2 trillion shot in the arm for this economy? do you think we would? >> absolutely and especially if you allowed companies that compete and win overseas to bring those dollars, those stranded profits back to the united states and invested here. that is the focus of the ways and means committee how we fix the tack code. there is an opportunity this you fall i know chairman paul ryan who chairs the committee who is looking at bigger picture package off highway funding, eliminating that barrier. allow profits not come back temporarily but permanently flow back into the united states. we think very critical to job growth. stuart: yes indeed sir. kevin brady, sorry we're short on time. thankthank you for your expertise on the subject. see you real soon. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: next, debbie wasserman-schultz left speechless, head of the dnc after being asked this question. >> difference between democrat and socialist? you're chairman of the democratic party. tell me difference between you and a socialist. ing you think about. that's where at&t can help. at at&t we monitor our network traffic so we can see things others can't. mitigating risks across your business. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. >> nicole petallides with your fox business brief. off session highs. they have gone back and forth. winning week and winning month as well. the dow is up 18. nasdaq also posting gains. you see down movers, pfizer and mcdonald's. pfizer best performer of the week, up about 70 cents hitting a new high. mcdonald's new high on the downside. chevron, exxon weaker quarterly results. with that you're seeing them under pressure hitting new 52-week lows. quarterly results weighed on linkedin, taser and fireeye. dramatic moves. taser and fireeye dropping more than 5% each. linkedin down over 5%. expedia hitting new high. they have seen bookings on the rise. in fact hotel bookings did very well for them. up 10 1/2. hitting new high. start your day, fox 5:00 a.m. lauren simonetti sandra smith and me. hi. hi. hi my name's josh. kelly. my name is raph. steve. my name is anne. tom. brian. krystal. and i am definitely not a robot. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. whether it's for your business or your personal life, don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up. because we're here. we're here we're here and we've got your back. legalzoom. legal help is here. stuart: look at fireeye. that is a computer security company. the former wall street darling that is what it was. it's a tumbling, 4 1/2% down. the cfo is leaving. that is one of the stories relate toed fireeye. the other one is this. the ceo says, an online cold war is heating up between china and, the u.s. and russia. making money's charles payne is hire. i'm inclined to ask you about cold war but i want to move on. i have a problem with security companies. they don't work. everybody has been hacked, haven't they? who has not been hacked from the government to private enterprise and everybody. they are touting private security on your computer. don't work. >> i had one of the top officials on fireeye says they work great but no one is paying for it. you can't have security, can't blame security company if you haven't installed security systems yet. that is one of the big problems. particularly corporations want government to pay for it. the government wants corporations to pay for it. meantime we're losing this cold war big time! think what china just did, right. you go after united airlines. why? number one hub, number one flyer into dulles. what is next to dulles? langley. what is next to langley? cia. 600 corporations. they are winning and crushing us yet -- >> how do snow what we've done to them. >> don't know what we've done to them but they're crushing us. stuart: how do you know china hacked unite the airlines? >> i whittled down to china, russia or stuart varney and -- stuart: you're a conspiracy theorist. >> we know united airlines was hacked. we know office of personnel management was hacked. anthem was hacked. 600 corporations have been hacked. >> chinese or russians to your point. >> we're losing big time. not only are we losing, what are we losing? they're isn'ting together incredible dossier on most powerful people in this country and it is scary stuff. stuart: you don't think we're doing it to them? >> well -- stuart: head of dnc national committee, head of that is debbie wasserman-schultz. she is really stumped on the nature of her party last night. watch this. >> what is difference between a democrat and a socialist? >> i -- >> i used to think there was big difference. what do you think it is? >> the difference between -- >> democrat like hillary clinton and socialist like bernie sappedders. >> what is the difference between being a democrat or republican. >> what is the big difference between a democrat and socialist. you're the chairman of the democratic party. tell me the difference between you and a socialist? stuart: didn't get very far. >> i'm shocked she didn't embrace this. socialist equity party. tell you what their demands are and you tell me if there is difference between them and democratic party. they demand access to jobs. what did hillary say, don't let anybody tell you corporations and businesses create jobs. everybody should have access. demand for liveable wage age who is pushing $15 minimum wage. hoe demand health care. ever heard of obamacare. demand education and elimination of debt. hillary said not measure much wealth americans have, how many young people go to college without drowning in debt. they demand we withdrawal all u.s. troops from abroad. what is president obama's crowning achievement? we withdrawn all the troops from abroad. you tell me what the difference is between the socialist equity party and democrats? stuart: number one i never heard of the socialist he can quilt party. they're not big, are they? they represent socialist ideas. what is the difference between the socialists wand democrats a want or achieved already? stuart: i'm surprised debbie wasserman-schultz didn't take this to her advantage. >> in my mine two socialists, he laid the carpet out we're running on this. negative connotation, they still want the same things. they still want the same things. >> appearing on msnbc which of course is very friendly to her. they have also laid out red carpet. chris matthews giving her is bawls. she blew that. stuart: he think used to be communists. that didn't work. they used to call them socialists. that didn't work. now they call me environmentalists. i shouldn't have done that. democrats have gone hard left over past eight to 10 years. they shift toed the left and they ain't coming back. >> give bernie sanders credit. he is not afraid to call it what it is. stuart: this is why you don't want to miss charles payne. program is called "making money with charles payne." on 6:00 at night, five days a week, eastern time. every night, five days a week should say. charles payne, great show. thank you, sir. if you have a car with onstar, you have to see this hackers able to take control. details in a moment. a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive? you pay your car insurance premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it? if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™ you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. stuart: new video shows, kind of shows, hackers taking control of an onstar-equipped gm car. fox's gary gas tell -- gas till low is here. i don't know if i have a gm car and somebody can hack in, not worried, are you. >> i think you should be worried. not just onstar. works with phone apps that let you start the car, shut the car off to certain extent. earlier this year onstar was hacked. disabled brakes. general motors would not confirm they fixed the problem yet. now they have new problem. this will happen to every automaker. stuart: you think as hackers get better they exercise more control over a car that you may be driving down the highway? you think that is going to happen? >> as they get better to put more effort. why would we even do that? what is the point. if you run a security company you hack a car you get national exposure. bad guys will see that. if we start crashing cars we'll get national, international exposure. now worth effort to go after car companies. stuart: okay. move on to another subject. you spent time driving, what looks like a pretty cool three-wheeler, no, it's a bike there it is. you were driving that thing. two wheels in the front, one wheel in the back. polaris, make atvs. what do you think? >> sling shot. not a car, it is a vehicle let's call it. selling thousands of these. motorcycle alternative. three wheels. fed calls it motorcycle. every state regulates it differently. texas, indiana had to make laws to make it legal. >> keep your hands on the wheel. >> very stable. drive dry it normally feels like a car. dynamic micks are a little bit different. compared to motorcycle can't fall off it. compared to car, doesn't have all safety equipment. they made it smaller, lighter, open-air experience you can not get in refined car. stuart: how much? >> 21,000 to start. over 25,000 for some models did. adding models. can't keep up with demand. if you order now lucky to get by fall. stuart: kidding me. >> runaway success. stuart: look at that polaris has a stock. $137 a share as we speak. you liked it? >> i did. . . stuart: hillary clinton at a campaign event right now in miami, florida. what she's said is interesting. she said more people should be allowed to travel to cuba. i'm sure there are a lot more coming out about that speech, and by the way, several thousand of her e-mails will be released. that will make more headlines. my time is up. neil cavuto, it's yours. neil: thank you very much, my friend. stuart is right, we are minutes away from getting a clarification on the security-compromised e-mails. remember when we were told there were four secure e-mails that maybe got out that shouldn't have got out, sensitive information that got out that shouldn't have got out? it could run into the thousands or the hundreds. we just don't know. we will know later on in this hour. peter barnes in washington with more on that and what is at stake, peter? >> reporter: the last dump at end of june was about 3,000 pages. we're going to get a similar dump this afternoon sometime. but the private e-mails have spy agencies worried, according to sources. the inspector general for the national intelligence warned last week that of the 30,000 e-mails clinton has

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