Transcripts For FBC Mornings With Maria Bartiromo 20170802

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shanghai composite down a quarter of a percent of the nikkei in japan up one half of 1%. escalating tensions to report to reappear the united states will test an unarmed ballistic missiles today days after north korea's latest launch. rex tillerson calling on china once again to take action. >> we certainly don't blame the chinese to the situation in the reappeared only north koreans are to blame, but we do believe china has a special and unique relationship because of the significant economic activity to influence north korea and regime in a place no one else can. maria: the very latest developments coming out. take a look. set to report after the closing bell tonight. what to expect coming out. looking at the numbers, amazon is going on a hiring spree expected to offer jobs to 50,000 people today at warehouses across the country. getting set up for back-to-school and holiday is. when it comes to millennial debt, who has more? men or women. spot if i set to hit the public market. the streaming giant as 10 million subscribers in less than five months. all the stories coming out. join a talk all about it, and dagen mcdowell. market strategist kevin kelly confirmed that romney direct air, hoover institution research fellow is with us this morning. good to have you. >> thank you, good to have me on train you. >> this is a tendency to be in after the ceo was here yesterday. everybody in the press was talking about how it is such a hard environment for these cable companies and talk about their vision for the future. it was a phenomenal interview appeared maria: away from the big deal announced yesterday, which is 20% of viewership in the u.s. >> that is right. business is acting in their best interest in the best interest of their customers regardless of what's going on in washington. i think we all can potentially lose focus. certainly the other cable networks do that. to just get down to the brass tacks of running an operating and tiring. the economy is holding up as well. maria: today 50,000 jobs on deck. they whipped us. during the conversation from a bridge messenger founder ceos with us this morning. plus, 32 advisers and fox news contributor rob are woeful way in. free square market is here. todd west in senior judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano. ceo calling dunlop with a lot of emerging business as well after the big small business yesterday. top story right now is marka. record territory once again. dow industrials lead to open at an all-time high once again this morning. we know this because it is up 25 points, just shy of 22,000. apple came out with much better than expected numbers. we came within 10 points at 22,000 yesterday. this will help today. apple is up 6% right now. the stock rallied on the news or join us on a talk more about it is chief market strategist senior managing director tony dwyer. good to see you. you are pretty bullish the last time you joined us. put money into this market now. and for that. you're about to hit all-time highs. maria: would you do it again? are things getting -- how do you see it? >> i see little bit of a correction. we are all looking for a friend. [inaudible] what is interesting is historically volatility is very low when people look at that like a sell signal, but it not. it is actually a buy signal that is longer. when you look for a correction come you have to identify what causes a major correction. that is the current fear. you have to have a recession to be a significant seller. the sustainable seller of equities. the only thing that create that as a negative credit environment and we are so far from the negative credit environment at this point that all you say is the market can correct because it too good. the fundamentalist wing vector earnings correlates with collection of earnings. train to a earnings up 11%. dagen: which is a major side in terms of growth rate. too bad the backorders in earnings growth in six years and 2011. just yesterday because i'm a nerd i was paying attention to inflation indicator. the personal expenditures that came out with 1.4% year-over-year. incredibly low inflation which again gives the federal reserve released a little bit of wiggle room. >> such a good point because it creates the length of the credit cycle that ultimately have to invert the yield curve for short-term interest rates higher than long-term interest rates would shut down lending. you have to have the yield curve to go in recession. it's not anywhere near a diversion. >> it's not flap which participates. >> correct. going back to our volatility comment, when you go from where it is now to inversion, is a signal. you can have a correction. if you put the last two cycles from 100 basis point on eight to 10 spread to the inversion, the market did not attend significantly from the inversion to the bull market peak. >> one of the things we miss in this narrative is we have to go back to the federal reserve and because of the lower for longer policy, the recent rally was kicked out by janet yellen favorites are anywhere near historical novels. that means earnings are worth more. that's why you have apple trading at 15 to 18 times earning is supposed to 12 to 15 times. it has expanded in so you can't give credit to this administration for the market highs. you have to give credit to our credit soon. the federal reserve low interest rate policies the dollar goes down 6% in the beginning of the year. you can see technology is leading the way. 47% of revenues. the economy getting better locally. >> just for a quick sec income if you take ge out of it, the drop in earnings that would actually be closer to 13% earnings. once it's having a dramatic effect. 6% from a year ago. maria: apple has some good stuff to talk about the revenue $45.5 billion. earnings per share $1.67. the company's earnings call, tim cook dodged a question about whether apple plans to build a big beautiful plant in the u.s. donald trump has told us recounted to "the wall street journal" last week. the company would have some things we will say about that later in the year. waiting on that. cash increased in the quarter overseas. 11.4 million were shipped. buy phones, 41 million high foods. good quarter. >> better than we thought. we raised our estimates today. if you're worried about the economy, apple is telling you the economy is okay. trained to your say of may 15 to 17 times. not bad. >> what is happening with apple is the core focus is on trying to capitulate to the chinese government about encryption. tim cook essay in six quarters ago that he focused on the chinese consumer because there's going to be more than the population in the united states. they have to go over there and get their sales. they fallen in china. revenues down 14% over there because china is focused on applications. they are not focused on the hardware. they needed, and they need wealth to be created and for china to spend a lot of money. they are not doing that. the problem is you look at from apple. this isn't peak revenue. these revenues are lower than in the past. they are going to need to deliver because their expectations for the full quarter high because they need to deliver in the third and fourth quarter. dagen: but they delivered in their weakest quarter. they had the best growth in revenue in seven quarters and they actually are selling more high patent and more macs. ipad sales they were up six flights 7%. the first time in 14 quarters. maria: said i was a surprise. >> a huge surprise. up 15% because they are selling to schools and businesses. i think that shows that we always focus so much on the iphone. she admits there were up slightly .6%, which is decent considering you're moving into the quarter before the upgrade cycle before the rollout the new iphone. the fact they are finding areas where they can sell ipad. >> the reason that is important is because we built this ecosystem. everybody focused on their fitness. if you have an iphone because you are built-in to the ecosystem and services, apple music, apple tv, get an ipad. you are built-in to their system. >> we need to see legislation out of washington to see the market hold onto the game. they can come you pointed out in the "washington post" earlier this morning doubtless somewhat troubling. >> trade to either golf i believe it. dagen: gop tax package can be delayed. are we surprised? i wonder how much of this that we see in the market is riven by the assumption that something will happen. apple is a ton of money parked overseas. one of the biggest attacks upon as let's figure out a way to bring the money back. >> i love this question because it goes to something we were talking about earlier. the market is not a because the fiscal change and expectation. every time i give a talk to a client or a group of people, asked the question would you like for regulation and would you like for taxes? i've yet to see him go out. the animal spirits are not about the president right now. you're not going to have increased regulation. knock would not increase taxes. you actually get tax-cut. dagen: the market was up solely because of what my what washington might do. trade to instead we're talking about dollar 22,000. the "washington post" story does go through. it is very fact-based. what does the gop -- what are they facing before september? talking about having to raise the death to keep the government funded, get a budget passed in order for them to even do tax reform. that is a lot of heavy lifting if you've got marks are predicting they will have tax reform in front of the senate and voted on in november. >> emmaus backpedaled that. i'm talking leadership. kevin brady ended the year. paul ryan said end of year. i think they'll get it done because they know they have to get it done. it could be tax cuts. >> we need to focus that the net effect of tax rate of s&p 500 companies we are all talking about is 25% or lower. what are they paying? 12% and then they are going to get a bonus by repatriating taxes by 10%, 12%? we'd taxes for small businesses in the american consumer and not the s&p 500. >> they did a study and found a few cut the corporate tax rate by 27% retroactive increases earnings estimates by nine points at 10% come in next year would be named by 4%. that is not my numbers. 10 seconds job number. >> we expect a good number friday. >> thank you so much. i render friday at 8:00 p.m. eastern. jobs in america identifying where are the opportunities right now? 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[inaudible] it's a different type of system. pandora has had a lot of issues you just saw them strike a recent deal with serious accent. they are more radio as opposed to curated playlists. it's a different business model in a sense. fascinating to see within the music space because the royalty payment. and if payment. amazon now giving away music for free. it is a battleground. maria: take a break to prepare their financial future. a surprising study in how much does the one else have right now. looking at men versus women. a breakfast treat with a twist. unveiling a limited edition peanut butter doughnuts. where you can buy it straight ahead. be smart i no longer live with the uncertainties of hep c. wondering, what if? i let go of all those feelings. because i am cured with harvoni. harvoni is a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. it's been prescribed to more than a quarter million people. and is proven to cure up to 99% of patients who have had no prior treatment with 12 weeks. certain patients can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. before starting harvoni, your doctor will test to see if you've ever had hepatitis b, which may flare up and cause serious liver problems during and after harvoni treatment. tell your doctor if you've ever had hepatitis b, a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv or any other medical conditions and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni can cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni include tiredness, headache and weakness. ready to let go of hep c? ask your hep c specialist about harvoni. casper makes one perfect supportive and comfortable. premium foam layers. breathable for airflow. perfect rebound, plus perfect lift. pick your size, you get 100 nights to test it out. test the layers, be a layer, casper. what should i watch? show me sports. it's so fluffy! look at that fluffy unicorn! he's so fluffy i'm gonna die! your voice is awesome. the x1 voice remote. xfinity. the future of awesome. maria: welcome back. #-number-sign death among one else. tracee carrasco with the details now. first look at the survey, tracee. reporter: lending tree recently surveyed 1001 amended with and then found that melania women had much higher student debt, credit card debt and debt in general with an average of more than $68,000 compared to $53,000 of debt for millennial men. on the flipside, women carried higher credit scores than men, suggesting they were more responsible in paying down the debt. the survey found the gender wage gap is significant. 57% of millennial men have been manual in the $50,000 higher compared to 42% of women. interesting survey. maria: so what are they doing in terms of the data. >> i think it is student loans for both men and women. >> we see that actually play out to more women are enrolling in going to school and getting a college education. somewhere in 52% to 40%. dagen: much more in terms of getting medical degrees. dagen: i was going to make a joke about women being educated about but i'm just going to stifle. maria: south idea? [laughter] >> it's interesting because of millennial generation, there is actually a greater or better understanding of just how badly they are going to get hosed on the road comes to things like retirement savings in the social security program. the students that i teach all the time, none of them on social security. and maybe that drives -- i think it's good because it drives their desire to use private vehicles, various private sector saving vehicles to save up the money. otherwise they may be hosed. dagen: here is the problem with the entitlement culture that has developed that is growing in this country. when people start working, students say that they might say i don't think any of these entitlement programs will be there for me when i retire. when you start working and paying in, it develops the attitude of that is my money. where is my money. >> it doesn't say social security. it says fica. who am i paying? we need to educate students that their salary isn't actually their salary. their employers take it back down. that goes back to the complicated tax code that they don't know they are paying taxes as well. between two yeah, it's a good point actually. dagen: where's my money? >> we talk about this all the time about medicare. you are taking out more money than you ever paid in. you get the benefits i'm paying for. the companies fund the people -- >> it knows what to do and how to spend their money better than we do. >> nice change. they see they are paying in. >> which people want to pay more taxes has been the biggest movement. dagen: my friend said they wouldn't mind paying taxes. >> because your friends are liberals. coming up, how senators are responding to premium hikes from obamacare providers. that is next. keeping america safe coming details on the customs enforcement operation. 650 illegal immigrants were arrested. we have got the story next. . . maria: good wednesday morning, everybody, welcome back. thank you so much for joining us. wednesday august 2nd. dow 22,000 is in reach. the reason apple last night stock rally. set to open at all-time high. this should take this market above 22,000. the technology titan topped expectations, sold more iphones than expected and they sold i pads more than expected as well. we will tell you why. take a look at the u.s. market, the european markets are under pressure. take a look at the ftse as cac quarante and daxindex. in asia overnight, markets were mostly higher after big rally yesterday, the exception was china, shanghai composite down a quarter of a percent. the white house is setting sites in protecting borders this morning. president trump set to allow major immigration reform. the details on the plans moving up. lawmakers are struggling to control rising expenses. the cost continues to spiral out of control. obamacare providers are raising premiums by nearly 30% in some states. >> continue to score some of the options on health care. there's still an opportunity to do that. >> health care is not dead. the issue is not going away. right now it's a different strategy. >> if we can get health care right in this country or semiright where both sides with agree on it, that would be a wonderful thing. maria: groupon, second-quarter earnings this morning. what you need to know ahead of that. 387 after massive collapse it's had. kanye west is a gold digger after melthdown. we have a look at krispy kreme peanut butter doughnuts this morning. department of health and human services, major obamacare providers are raising premiums on exchange by 30% or more in idaho, iowa, south carolina, west virginia, wyoming while several other states are looking of increase of 20% or more. top story in the journal this morning. big issue is turmoil in health care. senators are grabble with -- grappling on what the best move is for had been i'm care. >> this is going to be was and we have to fix it. right now it's a different strategy. we came up with three different proposals po vote on last week, none of which got 50. we have to get to the magic number. we knowthat it's an issue that we need to respond and try to spare the american people from a program that's failing. maria: joining us this morning tom. >> good morning. maria: former associate director of omb under george h.b. bush, i want to get that straight so people understand context. >> it's it continue go away. people most in this debate the big issue is medicaid, medicaid is an enormous program that's growing shockingly fast. exchange are a huge problem. the front of the paper says this morning. the real goal was to try to rein in medicaid and get it under control, whatever happened in the senate seems to have dropped off the radar. maria: the republicans in the house try today slow down the growth of medicaid. we know that this is the fastest growing entitlement program. these programs are going bankrupt so we do need to slow down the growth, but i guess when you give somebody something you don't want to take it back and the senators right now are having trouble doing it? >> once you start giving medicaids it's tough. >> 77 million. 98million people. when i first got, 1989, we had 26 million people in the program. maria: wow. >> 77 million. maria: obama opened up the program to include people weren't necessarily under the umbrella of poor, pregnant? >> complicated issue. expanded to poverty with 100% federal money. there's many other problems. most states don't kick any money. the funding stream is broken. to give you one example, new hampshire hasn't put a penny. medicaid 6 billion-dollar a program. the financial rules are a mess. that's kind of dropped off the radar with this whole debate. maria: was there ever an idea to get the states involved so the states pay more to medicaid entitlement program? >> 56 states, you know, the idea of going per capita cap, it's exactly what paul ryan are trying to do. look, we are going stop the financial gains, if i were to stay, i would do the same thing. you are going to do it. the match rates are a mess and the idea to say let's stop the musical chairs per person over the next ten years. we are going to try to rationalize the program and that in itself will raise money. maria: in the fall when we start hearing on both side maybe the democrats come in and come up with a solution? where is this going, tom? >> i think republicans will have to get 50 votes. i would worry about bipartisan from the beginning. my primary part of the administration was passing medicaid part b and advantage. 12 democratic senators that voted for it. they started for better or worse partisan. schumer, i wouldn't have done that. i think hard to see democrats wanting to do anything bipartisan. maria: that's what's happening and the american people are left holding the bag. >> the house still and the senate could have gone. i think they have no choice to keep coming back to get 50 votes. you can't do tax reform. the money is all in health care. medicare, medicaid, taxes and defense are the moving pees of budget, period. that's where the money is. nobody is touching medicare, social security, medicaid. it's the right thing to do but, you know, it's not easy. maria: really nice assessment, tom. let's talk about big businesses of micro hospitals, facilities that are urgent care, micro hospital, in-patient options, surgical procedures, locations in more than a dozen states including texas, colorado and arizona. one of your clients is a micro hospital operator, tell us about the benefits here. >> we own it. there are a bunch of different type of micro hospitals, good ones and bad ones in our view. you know, essentially if you're in san antonio where we happen to operate in south san antonio there were basically in hospitals, the hospital chain in san antonio, south of town, you build a 100-bed hospital, 10-bed hospital with great emergency system. that's basically what we are trying to do. when there are gaps in the city, we have done in colorado, a bunch in texas. micro hospitals, it's not a good idea if you're in a rural area or expanding suburban area. you want to build a 110-bed hospital. joint venture with the system. we will build you a hospital, baptist or baylor, sisters of charity, whatever. maria: i love it. you have technology enable lg things. people can be doing things at home talking to a doctor. there's also that part of health care. there's the innovation of technology advancement going on including micro hospitals within health care to try their own way to -- to come up with controlling costs. >> yeah. it's happening a lot better because massive advances in manage care and the more the government gets out of fixing prices which they did and gives market a chance to work which is more manage care, both medicare and medicaid, the market responds, you get more out-patient care and more efficient care and that's happening. maria: on the medicaid story the best way to slow down the growth or would you do something more severe? >> i'm not afraid of what president obama tried to do. even the house bill 17 million people in medicaid. ten years 77 million and in senate 83, 84. under obamacare goes to 97 million people. nobody is thinking about the cost of that. it's enormous and some of the southern states don't want to do that. would i slow it down, yes, i would. fundamentally incredibly complex but the financing mechanism of medicaid is basically broken. the states have huge incentives to add people and not put money in. at some point the second biggest program, $600 billion a year. new york's alone is 60 billion. it is the single broken thing in the country. you have to take care of people but rationale to do it. maria: great to have you on the program. come back soon. tom joining us there. reforming legal immigration, president trump's to overhaul the system with help from two senators. kanye west is lawyering up. 10million-dollar lawsuit because of a tour that he canceled straight ahead i like russo. his on/off splits are the best here. yeah, but his offensive win shares didn't even break 4. come on, check out that stop-and-pop! what do you think? my trade-off analytics indicate no one creates more space on offense. this allows him to nail a jumper from a densely populated urban area. what you're trying to say is from way downtown? i am still learning. i can see that. maria: welcome back, we are in territory watch. dow 22,000 watch. check out futures indicating a higher opening for the broader averages. you have to believe it hits 22,000 today after what happened with apple last night after company reported better than expected revenue. a couple of name that is we are watch asking groupon, set to report second-quarter earnings, revenue of $700 million. the stock is down nearly 25% in the last year. we are watching shares of fitbit, schedule to report second-quarter earnings, analysts are expecting a loss there. fifteen cents, down 60% -- better than 60%. cheryl: we got word an hour ago, a suicide bomber has targeted a convoy of nato troops in afghan province. a statement from the u.s. military says the attack did cause casualties. it's not immediately clear if u.s. troops were part of that convoy. the airport, though, is home to major military base for international troops. the taliban claimed responsibility for that attack. well, president trump set to announce a plan to overhaul legal immigration today with tom cotton and david perdue, lawmakers have been working with the white house on the bill which would restrict and reform overall the immigration system and propose to cut about half by the year 2027. meanwhile 650 people have been arrested nationwide in raids by federal immigration agents. four-day operation last week targeted families and unaccompanied children who had entered the country illigalyy. -- illegally. remember eight weeks ago kanye west canceled tour because of breakdown. the single has called a lawsuit to collect the funds. reports are blaming marijuana use. west was hospitalized at ucla neuropsychiatric hospital and forced to cancel 21-tour date and insurance company saying, not so fast. maria, i always say this, never underestimate the power of the doughnut. krispy kreme has gone out of this world, teaming up with rees es. it's got peanut butter chips and peanut as well. i don't have one yet. it is a limited time situation, though, so if you can resist it, good luck. maria: all right, good to know. only a limited doughnut there. cheryl: i have to protect myself. dagen: i will get fat if i ate that. maria: it has to be like 2,000 calories. dagen: i can't eat one. give me a dozen. i will sit down and destroy them. maria: how do you feel after a dozen doughnuts? dagen: i have eaten the glaze. maria: glaze are really good. kevin: i wonder kanye west has eaten after breakdown. if you saw adidas was killing it. maria: adidas is killing it. they are still going. take a break, when we come back. an app for that. a ceo of brand messenger, back in a moment. record-setting watch for stock prices. stay with us you always pay your insurance on time. tap one little bumper and up go your rates. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it? for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. liberty mutual insurance. track your pack. set a curfew, or two. make dinner-time device free. [ music stops ] [ music plays again ] a smarter way to wifi is awesome. introducing xfinity xfi. amazing speed, coverage and control. change the way you wifi. xfinity. the future of awesome. maria, so do you need an employee platform. enables workers to swap shifts. catching the attention of retailer target. pilot program in 130 target stores, joining us right now founder and ceo of messenger. >> thanks for having me. maria: tell us about it, what is the advantage to use branch messenger? >> sure, employee self-service platform for hourly shift workers to allow them to manage work life and realtime. what that means for employees, they can swap, trade shifts, communicate all on a private network. for large enterprises like target, it allows them now to tap into this elastic workforce that can scale up and down across locations and really communicate to front line workers at scale. maria: everybody knows where everyone is because the employee can be dealing with that with another employee and it's right there on the system. >> that's correct. to give you an example on how the system was managed before at target before branch it was a series of paper on the back wall that they would take days or if an employee calls in and manager needs to get somebody in a store, they would get 30 to 40 people. kevin: is this wasn't thing that you bolt to hr systems and how do you generate revenue for your company? >> that's correct. so we integrate with system, typically a workforce management system. there's really no switching cost for the enterprise. it allows them to maximize value and the way we charge revenue and make money we sell the premium feature like the integrations, back-end systems as well as administrative control, overtime, certain aspects of the application as well as provide data and analytics and tracking. >> if you have people at different wage levels as an employer, you can control, i only want certain people to be able to swap with one another? >> that's xctly -- exactly right . managers have full control of the app and reject or approve changes. dagen: when you introduce the messenger service at companies, do you have organizations that basically install it system wide or is it really kind of -- we were looking at some of the statistics on say dominoes, for example, ultimate that would be your goal, how are you seeing companies roll this out? >> what's interesting to note we have a free application available for employees and managers, so they can download it on app store and get started with it and for enterprises when, say, they have a large amount of employees on the platform they opt for some of the premiums features and provide to employees an it's all opted for the employees. if they don't have a smartphone, they can access it from the web and install on on sight tablet at the physical occasion so they still have full access to the platform. maria: are staffing creating some problems because managers are not approving the changes? that's what the critics were saying, managers are not approving this and so it is causing higher expenses. >> so really all the alerts and advantages that we have seen working with enterprises building those controls in place so managers get on branch if it's going to put employee into overtime and they can approve and reject changes from the web. maria: great to see you. thanks so much. we will be watching. branch manager. still ahead flying for less than $30, offering cheap airline tickets but only for today. that's next hour. 30 bucks. back in a minute. to folks everywhere whose diabetic... ...nerve pain shoots and burns its way into your day... ...i hear you. when that pain makes simple errands simply unbearable... ...i hear you. i hear you because my dad struggled with this pain. make sure your doctor hears you too. so folks, don't wait. step on up. and talk to your doctor. because you have places to go... ...and people who can't wait for you to get there. if you have diabetes and burning, shooting pain in your feet or hands... step on up and talk to your doctor today. maria: welcome back, good wednesday morning, everybody, happy friday, i'm maria bartiromo, thanks for joining us. wednesday august 2nd, top stories right now 7:00 a.m. on the east coast. we are on dow 22,000 watch. the dow is eyeing another record high this morning due to apple. stock set to open at all-time high this morning due to strong earnings, the results beat analysts expectations and the guidance calmed investor fare over iphone, they sold more iphones and ipads than expected. that should empower dow industrials to reach 22,000 today. we are looking at selling in europe this morning. take a look at the european indices across the board. ftse down a third of a percent. cac quarante down fractionally. in asia mostly higher except shanghai. best performer japan. earnings in focus once again. the profit came above expectation, the insurer raising full year guidance on capitol hill, recalls for bipartisanship, lawmakers on both sides of the i'll say that it is time to work together particularly on tax reform. >> again so leader mcconnell can hear it, the best tax reform is bipartisan tax reform aimed at helps the middle class and not the top 1%. >> to actually fix the problems and gave the economy some needed growth that would enable us to get wages up. maria: before they work together, democrats have a list of demands, we will tell you what they are. final alabama fugitive captured. we will tell you where authorities found him. he's back behind bars this morning and a burn threat from your cell phone case, details on new recall affecting hundreds of thousands of cases, that's coming up. eye-popping discounts across the country, frontier airlines offering tickets for $29, there's a catch, we have the details. our the stories and joining me to talk about it fox business dagen mcdowell, kevin kelly and hoover research lanny chan. >> good to be with you. maria: what's your take on that? >> policy differences, republicans could not agree with each other on what they wanted to do, medicaid, subsidies for the poor to purchase health insurance. nothing has changed with the fundamental dynamic. maria: really no argument about the size of medicaid and the need to stop the growth, right? >> no. dagen: 75 million people roughly. enrollment went up. largest single insurer in the world. >> yeah. dagen: ultimately going to lead in part to the bankruptcy of the united states. >> the frustrating that the people were calling foul, if you think medicaid is going to be the same in ten years as it is today without any changes, i've got land to sell you somewhere. the republicans are doing responsible thing to reforming but they never got there, never made the right argument. kevin: essential plan that limits growth and stifle innovation. that's tend of the story. dagen: republicans who literally voted to keep this entitlement in place and keep tax increases in place. maria: we have a lot lot to talk about. issue on the table. todd is with us, judge andrew napolitano and ceo of stone lock, we are talking with small business today, some of those people joining us were with the president yesterday on his small business day. the host of varney & company stuart varney weighs. do stay with us this morning. top story this hour. senate democrats are laying out conditions for working with gop on tax policy in a letter democrats argued against tax cut ifs for top 1%, they also say republicans should not use reconciliation, this is republican lawmakers say tax reform is a must. watch. >> we have to do it, a lot of the economic growth we are seeing now is because expectation of tax reform is already built into the growth, they are anticipating it and that's why it's growing, if it doesn't happen we could see reverse effect and we will be the blame. we have to get it done. >> we will need to use reconciliation because we have been informed by the majority of the democrats in a letter i just received today that most of the principles that would get the country growing again they are not interested in addressing. maria: joining us right now the ceo of 32 advisers, fox news contributor robert wolf. robert, good to see you. >> great to see you. hello, everyone. maria: we are happy you are here. robert, we just heard obviously chuck schumer say we want tax reform to be bipartisan but we don't want taxes to go down for the top 1%. robert, if you don't cut taxes for everybody including the rich then you're in the for cutting taxes, the rich pay all the taxes, how do you see it? >> well, first, i think we would love to see bipartisan. i think senator mcconnell said the right thing. reconciliation again. incredibly disappointing that we can't figure out tax reform after not figuring out health care, i guess that's where we are at politically. i think tax reform is going to be difficult. i think we are going to see more of a tax cut. i think it's going to be across the board. my concern is actually we don't get into the personal tax side and it stays mainly at the corporate tax side because i think that's the easiest to pass. with the reconciliation, you're not going to be able to increase deficit. it's going to be very difficult to find out where they are going to find out revenues coming in and so i think we are up for a long fog. i was listening to you talking about the timing of it. i kind of agree with you, maria, that i don't think we will see it in november, it will probably be if at all around year-end and i'm not feeling to do good about it because i think there's going battle on debt ceiling and shifting from discussing agenda. kevin: i'm glad you brought up the revenue neutral and deficit. the problem that we have is the tax code is over 75,000 page, complex and lawyers and lobbyist who is are going to protect special interests so i don't know how you can make it revenue neutral. what are some areas that the democrats could capitulate on and are they willing to bend in regards to talking with republicans and trying to get it done, are there certain points that they are willing to work with republicans on? >> no, on the republican side, listen, there are some democrats that are coming up in '18manchin and others that absolutely are for not only tax reform but for working with the republican party and i think right now you have the republican party that hasn't shown any cards with respect to what tax reform is going to be and you have the democratic party that's saying no without even seeing what tax reform is going to be, right now, you know, just opposite sides, i do think they will start to slowly come together on corporate tax reform. some of the things the democrats are willing to give in, they will wait to see what's cut. certainly i don't think they are going to give on medicare, medicaid and social security, that leaves a lot of the things that are probusiness, whether it's depreciation, capital investment or r&d and there are not that many things to get revenues from. maria: yeah. >> i think we will be in a pretty difficult thing. maria, we have been speaking about this for about eight years on the need for corporate tax reform and, you know, you just can't find the loops holes that anyone will vote on. we have been speaking -- let's do this, let's put 20% and let's have every senator vote up and down on loopholes and we will see where we end up. my guess unfortunately everybody is going to vote on loopholes that are important to them and end up in the same place. maria: of course. >> we have to figure that out. maria: the story in the washington post rather as dagen noted earlier is talking about the potential delay because of the current budget set to expire in september unless congress approves new funding the treasury says that the debt ceiling must be raised and scheduled to be in sessions 2 days, that's the issue. >> robert, first of all, how realistic that this gets done certainly with agenda and the other issue that we haven't talked much about is how do you harm onize the tax code when it comes to small businesses and big businesses, right? one of the challenges with the tax code now is we have a lot of people who file who are small business who file in individual code, if that doesn't get touched, how do they avoid the gaming that happens in the tax code already? >> people aren't calling it tax reform anymore. it's business tax reform. a way to get a broader umbrella. i think getting legislation passed this year would be difficult because you will use funny money with respect to modeling, they are going to have the use growth projections to get through a nondeficit reconciliation that, i think, none of us would agree with. there are some things we definitely don't agree but none of us agree that gdp is 4 to 5, 6%. i think it's going to be incredibly difficult for this year. what we hope on the business side is let's get a clean debt ceiling passed immediately and then we can talk about the legislative agenda that we have to come together on. it's amazing to me that we can't get tax reform done. maria: ridiculous. >> the small business people are getting hurt the most and large companies have so much money oversea that is we could reinvest there. both sides are just, you know, putting their feet in cement. dagen: politicians should be banned from -- maria: they keep telling us the reasons why. dagen: the republicans who left employer mandate in place that hurt small businesses. they have been talking about that for seven years. that hurts people. robert, do you think that anything in terms of tax reform needs to be permanent in order for businesses to step up and act on those tax code changes? >> i do. i think we have to figure out what to do with overseas. i'm certainly for having repatriation that makes sense, infrastructure fund. right now having money sit overseas not being utilized, we are all moving our books around to make sure we understand what is the best way to arbitrage a system. i think that doesn't go well for anything. maria: yeah. >> i think right now we are in a situation where we are sitting on, you know, trillions of dollars that we need for infrastructure and we could be using it. maria: that's where the common ground is. they both agree on that. have you spoken to your friend, barack obama? >> i'm on the obama foundation. when i'm in the foundation he's active with that. maria: i ask you because this morning president obama is push ing patrick to run, could duval be the new face of the democratic party and what about joe biden? >> you know, it's interesting, if you read that article that whole rumor started when i was interviewing bush and jeb bush, who do you think will be the 2020 candidate for the democratic party, he said biden and valerie jared said patrick which in many way shocked the entire audience. it proliferated from there valerie is a cautious individual unless people wanted it out there. deval was a great governor in massachusetts and to lany i thought governor romney was good orchor to massachusetts. maria: what do you think about that? dagen: i called that. i think who is going to come out of private business. >> the thing is democrats, if you look at the bench, deval patrick is one of those names on the bench that's credible. i still think joe biden gives them the best opportunity. he is somebody who is just a great a politician, he's able to get out there and make a case about working-class agenda which democrats have not had for sometime, i would keep an eye on him, i'm not convinced of deval patrick. maria: real quick. >> i think a couple of things, we are going to start with over 20 democratic candidates running, if bide -- biden, warren. i'm not so sure delal will even run. maria: we will be right back maria: manhunt is over. cheryl casone with the story, which i recall. cheryl: it all started with peanut butter, maria. last of 12 prisoners who used peanut butter to escape from alabama jail has been captured. remember the escape was on sunday night. brady was caught in martin county, florida yesterday, the only one to make it out of the state of alabama, tin mates used peanut butter to trick a guard into opening a locked door. well, the senate has confirmed christopher wray to be the next fbi director. most democrats actually voted for wray who was president trump's pick to replace james james comey who was fired by trump back in may. now wray is a former federal prosecutor in atlanta before he joined the george w. bush justice department. that happened late yesterday afternoon. shine iphone cases that contain glitter, they are pretty be chemical burn and irritated skin. recalling 263,000 iphone cases following reports users being injured after being opened and began leaking, now 24 people around the world including 19 here in the united states who have had burn or skin irritation as a result of being exposed to, we are not sure what the liquid is inside of the case. again, fun not but fun when you are burned by them. low-fair carrier frontier airlines offering flight deals, cincinnati to atlanta, nashville to orlando, salt lake city to denver, you have to act fast, flights must be booked by today, maria, a lot of them are soldout but give it a shot. maria: how far would you go to make life easier at the office, we will take to ceo of wisconsin company who is offering to implant microchips into his employees' bodies. celebrity ad campaign bliss back in a minute. who's the new guy? they call him the whisperer. the whisperer? why do they call him the whisperer? he talks to planes. he talks to planes. watch this. hey watson, what's avionics telling you? maintenance records and performance data suggest replacing capacitor c4. not bad. what's with the coffee maker? sorry. we are not on speaking terms. i'm the one clocking in... when you're clocking out. sensing your every move and automatically adjusting to help you stay effortlessly comfortable. there. i can even warm these to help you fall asleep faster. does your bed do that? oh. i don't actually talk. though i'm smart enough to. i'm the new sleep number 360 smart bed. let's meet at a sleep number store. maria: welcome back, now this, the crisis in venezuela, president nick olal maduro say it is government is close to convening a essential assembly with powers to rewrite the constitution and override other branches of government. day after two leading opposition members were dragged from homes and thrown in military prison after the country supreme court accused them of violating the terms of their house arrest by criticizing maduro. the white house condemned what are called the, quote, maduro dictatorship for the arrest, the united states holds maduro who publicly announced just hours earlier that he would move against his political opposition personally responsible for health and safety of mr. lopez and mr. ladezma. judge andrew napolitano. the country supreme court is at the heart of political crisis in venezuela. >> right psmght they actually end up with two supreme courts in venezuela, the one appointed under the old constitution and one under the new. this would be akin to congress we writing the constitution n. america the constitution is the supreme law of the law theoretically. it doesn't always happen this way. theoretically it's subject to constitution and can't change its terms but in venezuela they elected a new congress with expressed power with changing the constitution so that maduro can become a legal dictator, that is dictator under the laws of venezuela. so can you imagine donald trump arresting hillary clinton and chuck schumer in the middle of the night and putting them in a military prison because they went on a youtube and criticized him? that's the functional equivalent of what just happened in venezuela. maria: you're right, that's incredible. >> look, we have something called natural rights which understand that our rights come from humanity. i say to law students. if the first amendment were repealed congress shall make no law bridging the freedom of speech. do we still have freedom of speech, answer yes, because it's a human right. constitution doesn't grant it, the constitution just protects it. not so in venezuela. maria: yeah, not so. >> where do we go from here, that's the main question? >> you know, the secretary of treasury steve mnuchin announced a lot of very heavy sanctions on them. i happen to think sanctions don't work even though the sanctions are targeted at maduro and individuals that work with him and support him, i don't know what -- i don't know what the president wants to do, oil is always implication with venezuela. i really don't know what the answer is. there's probably even a suggestion of military action against maduro out there. dagen: i was going -- it already is a humanitariancrisis. it has been for months if not years. >> socialism eventually ends. as margaret thatcher eventually said, the problem with socialism sooner or later you run out of people's money and that's what they are learning there. dagen: the wall street journal editorial page was advocating tougher sanctions in terms of targeting the nation's oil, state-own and run company, exported to refineries along the gulf coast. >> i understand what the wall street journal wants to do and colleagues and i happen to agree with but sanctions hurt the people that you don't want to hurt and the elite, ruling class manages to evade them, how much has effective had for castro brothers that lasted 50 years? kevin: we are having problems with north korea, we are having problems with the middle east. who can step in here? >> no push from anybody in the republican party or the trump administration as i can dye tect it for military action in venezuela because this is not a direct immediate threat to the united states unlike crazy person in north korea who is a direct threat to the u.s., venezuela is not. maria: long-time seventh circuit judge richard suggested that the supreme court here in the u.s. should have 19 members not nine. he also says judges should retire at 80 year's old. >> he's 78, i guess he's not talking about himself going to the supreme court. he is arguably, if you ask him, he will tell you, the smartest federal judge in the country. he's the most frequently cited by other federal judges including the supreme court of the united states. he teaches full-time at the university of chicago lawsuit arguably a top 5 law school while still a federal appellate judge. i think that this suggestion would go nowhere, i think the suggestion is born out of his frustration that the supreme court seems to be 4-5, 5 to 4. they are effectively his bosses. if you begin tinkering with the constitution, where do you stop? right now federal judges including justices of the supreme court sit till they decide to leave. it's a life-time appointment. you seem to be producing a book or two a year, how do you do it? >> i fill 14 pages with pencil, six days a week, i take a break on sunday. [laughter] dagen: i know you don't want the supreme court justices retire in 8, it includes them to make decisions that they might not make decisions based on the law. >> yeah. dagen: they make decisions -- >> i didn't know about the suggestion until your producers sent it to me a few hours ago. every once in a while a suggestion bubbles up. i don't think this is going to go anywhere. maria: judge napolitano there. coming up, would you let your employer plant a chip in you? one wisconsin company are embracing this morning. we have it here. taken travel easier than ever, back in a moment she's nationally recognized for her compassion and care. he spent decades fighting to give families a second chance. but to help others, they first had to protect themselves. i have afib. even for a nurse, it's complicated... and it puts me at higher risk of stroke. that would be devastating. i had to learn all i could to help protect myself. once i got the facts, my doctor and i chose xarelto®. xarelto®... to help keep me protected. .. .. .. in rare cases, fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you've had spinal anesthesia, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle-related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures... ...and before starting xarelto®-about any conditions, such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. it's important to learn all you can... ...to help protect yourself from a stroke. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. there's more to know™. .. .. .. welcome back good wednesday morning everyone. thank you so much for joining us. your top stories right now 7:30 a.m. doubt 202000 now and reach. apple is set to arrive this morning about 6% currently. following a strong supporting report. they topped expectations with the company selling more iphones than expected. the earnings continue on wall street this morning. modulate the companies that had reported that as well. it's better than 1%. off also announcing that the ceo is pleading to step down. we have some selling going down in europe this morning. that is the worst performer. they closed mostly higher with the exception of the shanghai composite. the details after he opens an emergency exit and jumps out shortly after landing. we have the top travel tips. it is eyeing another record high. it set over 202000. in the next 45 minutes we are also waiting on the adp report. the private sector is expected to add hundred 85,000 jobs last month. it could be a market mover. were also waiting for a job summer at the end of the week. and people are expecting close to 200,000 in terms of jobs for the last month. the actual official jobs numbers. look at where the unemployment rate is right now. we have almost a full employment when you look at where the unemployment number is. but wages are just stubbornly flat. the federal reserve has been focused on the wealth effect. they said that time and time again. they even touched on earlier. the personal consumption expenditures is at 1.5 it's been missing there. it's gone down. the monthly increase has actually gone down since the beginning of the year. so inflation pressures are peeling back. they are lessening. it gives the federal reserve a room but again it does mean that anybody that is getting a wage increase the dollar goes lower. for so long we talked about jobs numbers. that is to continue as long as we don't see growth in wages. a whole group of people who are not being able to find quality jobs. or what they think they should be doing. we are to regarding an indicator yesterday that personal income was flat. that came and disappointing. the job summer friday when we look at hourly wages we can see that actually coming down and it's disappointing. how do you explain to them that confidence is relatively strong. based on the number it was up. and even business confidence. and this is with washington doing nothing. people have discounted a washington already. i think they expect a lot more out of their state capitals and local governments. i think there's an aspirational element to this. people want to believe that things are can happen. the reality may be different but i think there's an aspirational element to it as well. we are seeing an improvement on the business aside for the last ten years businesses have been sitting on the cash. we are beginning to see that loosen up a little bit. i know they were agree on one thing. when the president talks about the stock market being in the record i think it's easier for the commander commander-in-chief to talk about the economy but when you start talking about the markets that are at a record high kelly in conway said it last night we talk about it. but when the president talks about it continuously then you also own the market when it falls. i said this about president obama. i always said this about any president. don't talk about the stock market because it will bite you. you have to admit that the initial rally after november when he was first elected that did trigger a huge stock market rally. i believe a lot of that rally was based on the hopes of a progrowth agenda which he had run off. and then it was clear that we weren't getting it done the first couple of months. but then profits came in. and the prophets are holding this together. him taking credit is like none of this rally has to do with his administration and their policies because when you look at what's happened with the global growth story. it's gotten better. if you look at the s&p 500 a lot of those companies earned money overseas. they rollback regulations. that's why businesses have began to spend money. you allow energy companies to produce more natural gas and oil in this country. that's one of the reasons that i think i've seen oil prices come in check. he talked about it enough in the stock it -- in the stock market being high enough. with president trump as well as the republican congress. the regulatory piece is so important and so undercovered. we talk about it here. but so undercovered if you look at what is dragon on the economy of $1.6 trillion in economic drag because of regulatory or overhang. and as part of this rally. they are expecting washington to get things done. but also yes but why would you do that if the dollar is getting weaker. they are doing share buybacks or increasing their dividends. you need the dollar to get stronger. this goes back to the fed and exactly what this administration has for a policy. the dollar did not we can because of anything significantly weaker in the u.s. it is down because the euro is up. it should be getting stronger because they are increasing interest rates. now there are worries about december. it goes back to the global growth story. everybody is focused on december. they are anticipating that the fed is going to on -- unwind. in terms of the mainstream media not covering what's going on in the white house because i'm a nerd, i have all of these articles this is an article. the myth of trump and the do nothing to presidency. it is about all of the regulatory rollback that has already been happening under the presidency in his first six months. they talk about what's going on with the labor roles and dropping efforts to tighten restrictions on banker pay. rescinding proposed rules on oil and gas fracking. that doesn't play out in the economy. we are exporting so much oil it is unbelievable. we are now dictating the price of oil and is coming from the over seas. the regulatory piece is important to for that. a teenager jumps out of the plane through the emergency exit door. back in a minute. 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(laughing) when you're clocking out. sensing your every move and automatically adjusting to help you stay effortlessly comfortable. there. i can also help with this. does your bed do that? oh. i don't actually talk. though i'm smart enough to. i'm the new sleep number 360 smart bed. let's meet at a sleep number store. i'm so fancy. you already know. welcome back. a teenager jumped out of a plane's emergency door. an airport spokesman said the 17-year-old opened the emergency door slid down on the the wing and then jumped onto the tarmac before anybody could stop him. it happened yesterday. the teenager who is a u.s. citizen was traveling alone and appeared to be anxious during the flight. he was not injured. they are teaming up with amtrak. think about use that up to access lift. its service reaches about 97 percent of all users across the country. the new customers can receive $5 of each of their first four rides. after years of comedians sitting in. the one the only the real colonel sanders. the magic of television. the grainy footage from the 60s and 70s is being used in the throwback commercials. he died back in 1980 but his secret recipe and has business lives on. he's doing very well. i would rather see him come back as a hologram. i really like all of the retro raining there doing. my childhood and teenage years are now more retro. there are some of these retro ads that one of our former coworkers here started as a child. like the air popcorn popper. at least there were referring to it as kentucky fried chicken. hitting the beach on the budget. how about the $29 airfare it's all back in a minute. 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and higher-quality beverages as well. you also qualify for priority boarding. and some airlines the difference between business class is almost indiscernible. they have an innovative product called the space seat. you can configure the seat if you're traveling with a couple or a colleague to dine together and face each other. and by initially a coach seat. it's about 50% the price of a business class ticket. what are all of the asks to get an airline credit card. civic you're already using it. your food your travel. why not also earn miles why what you are doing it. i have a delta sky miles card. it's allowed me to earn free upgrades and many of my flights not only domestically but also internationally. priority boarding. the bonus mile offers that you get when you sign up for a card get you very close to a free flight right off the bat. should you have loyalty to in a hotel is important but not so much the other wants. the marriott rewards program is also fantastic. you don't have to deal with it. you get access to hotel lounges and free breakfast. and these are free to sign up it's just people don't think to do it. we are talking this morning about southwest having this $29 flight we have to do it today. should you be traveling in the off-season to get the best price. if to buy it today. i'm not guarantee you are getting get that. but traveling in the off season is one of my favorite times to go. considerably cheaper prices for airport and hotel. those restaurant reservations that would take month to book you get right away. and staff and personnel are little bit more relaxed during the low season. not as much demand. in the off-season obviously. give us your three top destinations right now. i just got back from new zealand and our summer as their winter. direct flights from los angeles to auckland, new zealand. some of the more beautiful wine country. and also some beautiful things. one of my other destinations here the u.s. is the olympic national forest. you can also see will watching it throughout spring and fall. some of the most beautiful beaches in all of the pacific coast. don't miss those at sunset. always keeping it cool in san francisco. they are celebrating their 50th anniversary. jump in a hippie bus. with the rock 'n roll posters and all of the memorabilia on that. is it really a tourist spot for san francisco. it has enough to offer. courtney scott joining us there. nasa is searching for a planetary protection officer. it's pain been a six-figure salary. s on holiday. what do you need? i need the temperature for pipe five. ask the new guy. the new guy? jack trained him. jack's guidance would be to maintain the temperature at negative 160 degrees celsius. that doesn't sound like jack. actually, jack would say, hey mate, just cool it to minus 160 and we're set. good on ya. oh yeah. that's jack. bartiromo, it is wednesday, august 2, your top stories right now 8:00 a.m. on the east coast rally rolls on focused on dow 22000 this morning, we are expecting the market to open all-time high, above 22000, after apple surprise with a bret baier quarter stock set to open higher that is a dow component the results better than expected last night apple, the guidance comingo calming fears over delays for iphone sold more iphones ipads for the quarter. global market action mixed, yes you have a rally in u.s. but not so in europe, european indices down across the board as you see there in asia overnight markets closed most higher exception of shanghai composite down a quarter of a percent rising tensions with north korea united states launching a ballistic test this morning into pacific ocean after secretary of state rex tillerson called on china to take action. >> we certainly don't blame chinese for the situation in north korea only the north koreans for blame for this situation, but we do believe china has a special and unique relationship because of this significant economic activity to influence north korean regime ways no one else can. >> the very latest on the developments out of north korea, another busy day in earnings, time warner reporting last hour results helped by success of wonder woman the company reiterating it will expects deal with at&t to close before end of the year time warner up better than 1% amazon hiring spree expected to offer jobs, to 50,000 people, today. at warehouses, we are taking you live there, in -- coming up this hour. talk about an out of this world job nasa is looking to hire somebody to protect earth from aliens yes this is real it pays six configures details coming up, beyoncé to invest in sports when team reportedly interested in buying a stake in coming up all those coming up this morning joining me to talk all about it's business network dagen mcdowell market strategist kevin kelly former mitt romney policy director with us great panel thank for being here. >> awesome i am dying to know what team she is trying to buy part of beyoncé trying to get a stake? >> yeah, well -- >> we will have to find out >> coming up, dagen: not telling you now. >> part of brooklyn nets had to sell it roc nation. maria: not in a we will tell you about it it is a big week for earnings we are on dow 22000 watch take a look at markets, you we are right out of the gate likely all-time high for the dow industrials closed all-time high yesterday the markets higher this morning, apple reported a dollar 67 a share, on revenue 45.4 billion dollars, both for the third quarter, fiscal third quarter sold 41 million iphones last quarter joining us us michael nuñez with us good to see you. >> what did you think of apple numbers stock obviously coming up. >> right. >> on another all-time high. >> i think a lot of people surprised because the view that there is a lull in sales everyone waiting for iphone 8, 10-year advisory expecting rally changes expectation was that people would buy fewer heading into the fourth quarter, the reality that is not the case people are still buying a lot of iphones more than expected, and, you know, interest is strong heading into the last part of this year. >> ipads ji what do you make of comeback in ipads shipments on ipad up 15% also mac sales strong can that continue helps balance out -- >> i have seen warning calls that tablets dead you know, interest in ipod i am sorry ipad declined, but i guess you know, what i think what this shows is that the cheaper cost of the ipad is enough to spur sales people interested in this product might have been out of range. >> i think part of the ipad sales that cutting off software, upgrades for if you have older versions one of the original, so like i am not getting anies on that but i want. >> some is also sales into businesses and schools, so a proactive sales not just a behavior by -- >> you snow what not talking about apple 62 apple car wash. >> what is interesting trying to get everyone to focus on homepod i love your take what you think that could do, because apple was at forefront with siri now behind, alexa, the echo, what is your take on homepod. >> so artificial intelligence is going to be something that a continuously pervasive in amazon.com facebook, like you mentioned amazon echo, apple breath on artificial intelligence digital assistant they arey the form smart speaker no one has tested this out not in stores yet even with the initial launch people weren't able to play around with this we don't know how capable it is how help in every day life. >> only time i used siri last year is i literally to say to her i feel a little -- >> have you done that. dagen: lyrics. >> good for jokes buttive for you know every day -- sales to prove it's. maria: interesting that they were first and they got lunch eaten by amazon, with echo. that is amazing that is what happened to sony first with the walkman only to get -- >> really, they got lynch eaten by apple. >> how quick -- >> amazon tried coming out with their phone to combat and failed now leading in with echo, a.i. >> about michael do you have any sense what this new iphone will officer? >> yes, two of you, a few changes for iphone people are expecting is something called display a screen, a phone entire screen get rid of the home button, another is face scanning technology inning whether than fingerprint might use face, and also, august ament reality apple will add features possibly better camara to enable you to overlay digits on to real world sounds crazy you hold phone see things in real world not flel could be robot could be you know. >> buy the phone when first hits 2 market or should we wait to see if any you know -- things that they need to fix. >> i think the -- >> people are expecting iphone 8 to be a significant you know one milestone products for apple. >> in september. >> comes out in september i thinkall 26 or sorry first week of september is the -- >> tesla company reporting earnings after the bell stock is down nearly 10% just in last month, on tesla, the company rolling out model , what do you expect from earnings report given tesla difficulty in terms of meeting prediction. >> a good question, tesla much different scenario than apple, i think there is a lot of uncertainty with tesla, obviously they had rollout event last friday but i think people are still uncertainty about whether tesla will be able to ramp up production as significantly as they want to elon expectants exponential growth up from 100 cars this month to 20,000 cars per month by the end of the year. >> comes to model 3, 50,000 back orders the rave reviews unbelievable everybody lose this product for mass market so that is 2 point about this, so that is why you see tesla stock do so well forward-looking people want this, you have 50,000 back orders they do have to figure out production but people are willing to wait. >> what is the -- the hold up there. >> in other words, if you look at supply chain where is the problem they have to solve. >> there is a lot of things, i think just making a car in general is actually difficult the tooling, the machinery obviously billed their fa facility the battery is complicated i think the cautious view is that at the rave reviews from a lot of employees press members, and people that get early access to the model because they bought a tesla already so these are dedicated fans they are less likely to be critical or speak up about some of the mall funnions shorts accommodation of the model 3 skeptic would say maybe -- maybe look more closely who has this product who is -- >> i don't have a car i have driven plenty drove a tesla fell in love with it. >> if upper to get a car would be a tesla. >> you love it too. >> a great car. >> thanks so much appreciate it, immigration focused on capitol hill president trump will join republican senators dave perdue tom cotton at the white house to announce legislation callings for a new skilled base immigration system adam shapiro at the white house with latest. >> this is mart of president trump's promise to reform immigration system in united states, in the last week the immigration service is actually arrested arrested 650 people illegal immigrants into united states this morning the legislation describes where we would like to go where a the president wants to lead us as far as creating a skills base immigration system here is what he said when youngstown ohio last week. >> instead of day's low skilled system, just a terrible system, about where anybody comes in. people that have never worked people that are criminals anybody comes in, we want a merit based system, one that protects our workers -- [cheers and applause] >> our tax -- and one that protects our economy. we want it merit based. >> this bill that will be introduced was authorized going to be sponsored by snow tom cotton tennessee as well as senator david perdue from georgia, also white house later today regarding all of of this rob portman from ohio, but already senator's office put out a name the what we can expect in legislation quote the office is saying our current immigration system is outdated doesn't meet diverse needs of our economy right now only one in 15 immigrants come here because of stillsh skills we don't prioritizes we need a little immigration system that meets current needs of workforce encourages innovation, so that is what is on tap at the white house year going to be focusing on i'm saying, plenty of other things still going on, maria tax reform raising debt sealing part of discussion immigration front and center. >> adam shapiro at the white house still to come firing back, the u.s. sends a message to north korea with early morning missile test today. just days after the kim jong-un regime firediths longest range rocket yet heightened tensions with hermit kingdom next nasa needs hero to defend earth from aliens apparently the agency is willing to spend six figures on planetary protectoror, say with us, back in a minute ♪ ♪ u.s. assimilate test firing intercontinental ballistic missile the details. cheryl: yeah, maria u.s. air force launched icbm this morning in california. it few over 4,000 miles, out into the pacific. there is the video this was the fourth icbm test by u.s. military this year it happened less than a week after north korea conducted its latest missile test. meanwhile, secretary of state rex tillerson saying that washington is willing to sit down for talks with north korea. >> we are trying to convey to the north koreans we are not your enemy we are not your threat, you are presenting an unacceptable threat to us. we have to respond. and we hope that at some point they will begin to understand that and that we would like to sit and have a dialog with them about the future that will give them the security they seek. >> secretary tillerson saying u.s. is not seeking a regime change. in north korea. well, incredible video from yoom to show you cars underwater yesterday, as miami streets flooded after tropical department of transportation emily drenched florida. >> drivers continuing through areas in miami many ended up stranded thousands in miami-dade without power. and not over, an area of low pressure has now formed in the gulf of mexico. and is expected to bring more heavy rain to portions of florida and thursday and possibly friday. well president trump sounding bullish on foxconn's planned investment in united states trump says taiwan-based company apple's biggest part supplier could triple its commitment to 30 billion dollars the president says foxconn chairman made that comment to him off the record not clear whether that investment would be only in wisconsin or throughout the country, foxconn has planned to build a 10-billion-dollar plant in the state hiring up to 13,000 people. >> are you tired of 9:00 to 5:00 office job nasa has interesting job if you are interested needs to fill the job of planetary protection officer, basically someone can protect planet from aliens required to prevent alien microbes from the amount contaminanting the earth do not damage planets they travel to nasa offering six figure salary between 124 grabbed and 187,000 dollars per year if you are interested two weeks, headlines. >> headlined get to that is adp weaker-than-expected this is month of july 178,000 jobs created for the month, missing expectations, 185,000. obviously this is not a great number kevin. >> this is not a great number any time it comes underneath but it wasn't abysmal we have seen you can't look at one data point the problem with this number though is that it goes off the hills of last month's adp number wasn't as good as well a precursor but shows any time you add 178,000 jobs that is a good thing we have a tight label market so the thing we need to focus on for friday is wages. >> wages for sure they haven't moved june numbered revised upward 191 versus estimate 158. >> good 158 number was disappointing last month people worried about, seeing that revised up maybe gets help to this number. >> what does it take to get wages moving what do you think is there a magic bullet. >> i think the challenge structural issues one is skill gap the difference between opportunities that are available, what people have to offer for those opportunities, the or issue frankly of you go to automation continues to be a challenge in a lot of areas that is not going to end any time soon, then you've got global competition, right the question of whether the united states is going to procure a trade policy, that allows to us grow jobs here at home manufacturing is one of those areas with cheap energy could grow but he are we going to loi for that to happen. >> health care is a second largest cost to employer we have seen health care is now 17% economy five years ago 12% so when people are not getting paid in their salary they are getting paid through vis-a-vis through health care plans 56% of people in united states, have health care coverage through employers when that cost when health care costs rise the payor employees are pick it up. >> employers see that as part of overall wage, in package, so you don't get actual money in hand and your bank account that your wage increases essentially in your health care. >> all those lead to health care. >> yes. >> and, by the way, in terms of o importing jobs back into united states wage increases get offset by higher cost because wages are higher in u.s. than wages overseas where they are manufacturing a trade-off there. >> zhan going in hiring spree meanwhile, the technology titan wants to bring tens of thousands new employees onboard live with positions at jobs fair the nba could get into formation the basketball team beyoncé reportedly has her eye on this morning. back in a moment. ♪ ♪ take you where you wanna be ♪ ♪ it was always a dream of mine to become a professional soccer player, but i never imagined that i'd be playing in kansas city. when i was first elected mayor, they would talk about kansas city, kansas like... i can't wait to get out of here. through the years we lost over 30,000 people. we turned that obstacle into an opportunity. the speedway was the catalyst... and because of the speedway we now have a shopping area and a wonderful soccer stadium. and now we're starting to grow in population. it's extremely important to have financial partners such as citi® who believe in that same vision. this area is now a destination. there's people that come out here for entertainment. there's people that come out here to work...to raise families. and before the stadium was built it wasn't like that at all. i wouldn't trade playing in my hometown for anything. maria: workmen back we have been talking about all morning a wisconsin-based company is bringing much of their work force into future with them three square markets offering to implant microchips free of charge in each employee for purchase of the purpose of makingdale office he activities easier faster joining us right now ceo three square market, who was implanted himself what are practical uses when implanted how did it feel where is the chip right now in your body. >> i was implanted monday i had it both hands done. we are using them to enter office building to make purchases, in break room, and also to log in our computers and couple items right now as we speak. maria: what is the point? i mean, i know you are putting chips in people's bodies, what are the dangers here? and what else what kind of information can you get from having a chain in one of your employee's bodies you probably know what they are doing all time it right? >> well, we don't know what they are doing at all times no different than carrying around, proximity card to get in a doors around work there, we can't track them or anything. >> i can't not why can't you track them why can't you track them? >> because. >> because -- >> no different than a proximity card you carry or credit card when you swipe it, we don't gather that information, if submitted directly to the credit card company. >> socred card has information see how employees are spending money so do employees have to sign a waiver on privacy when it comes to that because could it i am curiosity in regards i have seen that on market side a lot of companies are selling data. so that is the curious aspect about implanting chips in yourself. >> yeah the credit card company looked at this chip as a credit card all we do share a serial number same as a credit card number much safer. >> okay. so. >> any -- >> sorry employees wave hand to purchase or how does it work? >> yeah, we just basically hold our hand in front of the door chip reader or in front of the credit card reader like you would hold cell phone to up it if paying at gas station. dagen: how many employees push back on this idea? are you hearing people because our kind of resident libertarian attorney judge andrew napolitano when we teased this story about fell out of his chair. >> we had several employees not choose to participate in this pushback wasn't great said at this point in time not for me however we have several fence civil rights that aren't sure most of them ended up getting this as of yesterday. >> so did you offer some kind of financial incentive for them to do this? and i mean is really the advantage of convenience you don't forget card get in and out of cards do what is the advantage here? >> hugest thing convenience last night 1:30 a.m. i had true jumped in my car half asleep, and then, all of a sudden i realized what piece passion of mind i have card reader in hand don't look in bill folder or remember password. >> is that enough to put a chip in your body so that you -- you may -- i mean have all of your life on display? all of this information? you are telling me that it is not even the company looking at this but american suppress gets the information? i mean, just i don't have to fidel around find id card? >> yeah, american express gets zero information all that happens our serial number on the chip will be tied to our credit card that is it as far as conveniences go, i probably got 15 different passwords for different applications, on my cell phone. and computer, now everything is encrypted when ilog into cell phone or computer with this chip. >> did it hurt? >> no, it is like somebody stepping on your big to honestly, the needle you know that sharp that just it doesn't really hurt at all. >> hm. >> i don't find anybody that would do it i did my own informal survey. [laughter] six reporters yesterday participated. >> six report%. >> yes. >> wands watch it two in then popped it right back out. >> why? >> yeah you can -- it is about removable when you choose not to keep it in you can actually push it out like a sliver more or less. >> all right great we are watching the developments thanks very much. >> thank you very much. >> we appreciate you joining us so much, i don't know something uncomfortable about this. >>. dagen: in our bodies he does make a point as any difference than carrying your card your id card around your carrying credit card around they still have information about you -- >> absolutely revving the engine of american dream we will talk with one at the white house yesterday. >> amazon delivers object jobs promise titan going on hiring sproo he to bring tens of thousands of jobs onboard, back in a minute. just like the people who own them, every business is different. but every one of those businesses will need legal help as they age and grow. whether it be with customer contracts, agreements to lease a space or protecting your work. legalzoom's network of attorneys can help you, every step of the way. so you can focus on what you do and we'll handle the legal stuff that comes up along the way. legalzoom. legal help is here. maria: good morning, everyone thanks for joining us. i'm maria bartiromo wednesday, august 2 your top stories right now 8:30 -- 8:31 east dow 22000 in reach at highs of the morning right here, and looks like we will hit 22000 on dow industrials right out of the gate this morning, one reason apple stock is higher by 6 1/2%, set to open all-time high, that is a dow component strong earnings last night technology titan fiscal third quarter earnings topped expectations with company selling more iphones, and ipads than expected. the earnings continues on wall street this morning, another big name reporting mondeléz topped estimates as well also announcing ceo rosenfeld plans to step down this year mondeléz up almost 3% global markets not so much, ft 100 down a third of a percent off the lows still lower across the board. in eurozone this morning, in asia overnight, markets closed most hive exception shanghai composite down a fraction, the white house is soekt sights on protecting boards president trump expected to announce major legal immigration reform this afternoon, announcement coming as commander in chief focuses on growth met with several small business owners why yesterday. >> america is on the rj verge of a golden age for small business we are unleashing, a new era of american prosperity perhaps like we have never seen before you see it day by day, you don't hear it too much from the media but i think the media is going to actually be forced to cover it. >> we will speak with two people, at that event they met with president trump coming up, amazon says you are hired details behind the plans to put 50,000 people to work. and nissan beating on state of automaker offering a tool to protect chrn from hot cars. all that coming up this morning, first though forget zhan, how about jobs day fox business correspondent jeff flock live in illinois this morning, to tell us about the online retail giant hiring spree an amazing day at amazon jeff good morning to you. reporter: baby this is 24-hour tv news thing doesn't work out, business news, there are jobs that amazon look at how many people are here they want to hire 50,000 people, well they have got hundreds in line here at this location. to look where they are hiring, all across the country maria we've got a map shows you 10 different locations, for amazon today they need 50,000 people, and i tell you may not get them all there are a lot of folks out there, in demand these days, at i got the first guy in line, tim clemens, you were you woke up 3:00 this morning to come outstand in line. >> yes, i did. >> you are number one. >> yes, i did. >> are you separate? >> uh -- >> i like to say i am not desperate, desperate but yes, i am desperate. >> i really need a job. >> you said you are a little older. >> right, right, and most of them it is hard also because, when you have to go for a -- interview all on the computer there is no hey, how you doing to the person going to hire you you know. and i like that about this place, here i am here, i want to meet you you want me i want you, that is excellent. >> to look at retail hiring maria this year, over the course of the past year, overly the retail sector general merchandise down 35,000 employees. today, we said 50,000 people, number two in line, you have been out you have work how long two weeks. >> about two weeks, recently let go from -- a facility in bowling brook i was there 20 years. so hopefully i -- will get a job today and i don't need unemployment. >> quick i want to bring hey shevon brown with them quick before we get away these are real jobs these people are going to have benefits what are they getting for benefits if they get hired. >> benefits we have medical dental vision 401(k) 50% match and o innovative progress career choice not -- amazon prepays 59% institution for associates want to go to school take courses like -- even if it doesn't apply to amazon. >> excellent, thank you. obviously they need people willing to pay for it, i leave you with the stock performance this is a growth company if you look at amazon compared is to competitors stock performance 31%, you know the numbers a lot of people looking for work. maria: that is right, you know jeff bezos was the -- richest man in the world a couple minutes last week stock continues to soar this is great we love it thank you so much jeff flock, there live on amazon jobs day, markets in record territory dow industrials expected to be up, this morning at opening of trading about 50 points, this is around hiegs of the morning right here quarter of a per cent higher, going to be another all-time high, 31 all-time highs year-to-date see number 32 today came within 10 points of 22000 yesterday, as president trump met with 100 small business owners at white house compromise commander in chief and daughter we had in on state of the economy the challenges that entrepreneurs small businesses are facing. >> america is on the verge of a golden age for small business. we are ending job killing regulation these folks know that very well we are really ending a record pace i tell you -- >> -- whether it be real -- challenges, with managing the competing demands of raising a family, and running a business, and working within the family business. >> joining us right now two business owners attended that meeting, colleen dunlap ceo, with founder owner northern star fire -- jeff dykes joining us your company designs manufactures biometric products favorable recognition intelligent us there about the meeting yesterday. >> yesterday i was invited a great honor to go. to go into this small business administration meeting, and understand what -- what opportunities are going to be enlight endz for small business -- lightened, small business, we had a chance to talk -- other owners kind of hear what things would benefit us, as a smaller company working. >> we want to ask you what you learned yesterday, and what is the administration doing jeff your company also produces a special compass for firefighters in unfamiliar territory you had opportunity to ask a question to small business administration head tell us about your experience. >> we were really humbled to be asked to go to white house. it was really something special to be able to hear the message from the administrative staff but also to rub elbows with successful small business folks around the world expand our network get the product out there. >> main question is that when you get if you get a tax break if small business taxes go lower what are you going to do with excess capital. >> for us you know the lowering of the burden allows to us bring more jobs into our company. you know we had one of the things we are looking to do is grow, in order to grow we need to bring in experts that understand how to help us design help us understand how to manufacture, how -- >> one of the things that strikes me that small businesses structural with most we talked about this is health care the cost of health care. and especially, with obamacare, especially small businesses that are participating in state exchanges trying to help their employees where they can you are seeing 20% year-over-year premium growth a huge strain on your ability to make ends meet working on from your perspective, colleen if you look at taxes you look at regulations health care, where does health care rank in all of that. >> health care is a dilemma for small of businesses. for us, really until last couple years we have -- to have small business plans every one of our individuals on exchange and then we pay for that anything that can help us be recognized as a group plan. >> how many employees right now. >> in kansas city we have around 15, collectively 40 to 45. >> under 50 otherwise even higher costs. >> yes. >> so jeff what was it like to be at the white house did you get a confidence feeling from the president and this administration that in fact your life as small business will change? absolutely, the message on white house to me was really throw things, fertilizatiirst np as entrepreneur most tell you as well not a gradual curve to success you have ups and denounce challenges pitfalls keep wushdz to overcome those you don't have to do this alone so many in different trades a teacher corporate america, when you are in your space, you are able to find that problem, that you that you can identify, usually have a pretty good idea no one takes next step hang hat in mantra takes money to make money the message out of the yesterday, was you know find those mentors in local area, lean on those seasoned biggestmen to help through it then find your local economic development centers your small business development centers lean on them to guide you through that process, and get your -- commercialization. >> great to see you both thank you for sharing stories we appreciate it coming up apple shares soar after solid skwl third-quarter earnings report stuart varney give us his take on numbers when we come right back, you and then beyoncé may be crazy in love with nba the team she reportedly has her eye on this morning, back in a minute. ♪ . >> welcome back to tennis channel court reporter for fox business, day two of open may have been interrupted by rain but took care of biggest opening set breaker world number two closed out in style -- in second, to book place in round two. >> close to number one, i lose points i win points so never there, built -- you know it is one of my goals to get to number one i am i am not thinking any more i did that french openly and in england i was so close i said okay. i still thinking will let it come in it going to happen. >> don't forget tennis channel live coverage from d.c. continues wednesday 1:30 pm eastern. ...it starts a chain reaction... ...that's heard throughout the connected business world. at&t network security helps protect business, from the largest financial markets to the smallest transactions, by sensing cyber-attacks in near real time and automatically deploying countermeasures. keeping the world of business connected and protected. that's the power of and. maria: dow could cross 22000 mark first time this morning when market opens that has been part due to apple shares up about 6% right now, that after the company reported better-than-expected earnings join us host of "varney & company" stuart varney to weigh in once again, your tech sector flexing muscle stu. >> let me talk to you about financial muscle shall we. maria: all right. >> did you see this maria i am sure you did. apple now has a cash hoard a giant everest of mountain of cash 261 billion dollars i don't think any company in the history of the world has ever accumulated a quarter trillion dollars in cash that is not fact trees that is cash what you do what do you buy what do you spend it on i haven't a clue you can buy almost any other company, in the world, outright and still have tense of billions left over after you made that purchase, so i don't know what they are going to do with all that money the second question. what would it take to get them to bring that money back to america? because 90% of that 60 billion is over there. -- 2 0 billion over there not here what does it take to bring it back 15% corporate tax rate a 20% corporate tax rate or what? i don't know. >> no penalty to bring it back that is what ken brady said this weekend on the sunday show paul ryan said last week as well, that there would be no penalty zero percent coming if you want to bring that money from overseas book o to the u.s. so i don't know what the rate would be, initially i was thinking 10, 12 percent as encouragement to get money here. >> they might consider a taxing holiday that has been done in the past kind of -- done in the past. zero tax if you bring it in within six months or one year something like that, but i believe tim cook very much favors a lower corporate tax rate and that will be the way that its brought back to america. just imagine what stimulus would that be? you've got five major technology companies with at least a half trillion in cash. you bring that back, put into it america's economy, and you've got a stimulus program like no other. >> you are absolutely right stuart i know you have more no 10 minutes see you top of the hour varneying varneying 9:00 a.m. eastern right after "mornings with maria" join stuart breaking us in. >> college football world jared max with latest in sports. reporter: good morning notre dame football coach has died at 94, you recall gave rudy chance on scout team, last -- learn whatted minutes ago death two-time national champ 11 years at note ♪. >> major league baseball a filed minutir fenway last night, jackson prevented ramirez from landing moon shot for home run watch this catch, whoop? he takes flight flipdz head over heels into red sox' bull pen holds on to bowl ball perfect 10 for catch, trailing 10-9 christian says welcome to the boston premartyr 3-run home run red sox walk off 12-10 victory first place a half game ahead of new york yankees al east, oldest wrigley field something never happened in any major league park home run for chicago, now that is second hit of the night the first momentum run of his career, celebrates like for audition for dance feverer, next first pit cheer to record strikeout, 16-4 cubs fly w, 14th win in 17 games since all registrarback would next nba oen be beyoncé bluebird reporting she is interested in houston rockets was born and raised in houston area husband jay-z former nba owner was minority owner for brooklyn nets, 1.65 billion dollars. hey, if you like it then put a ring on it nba championship ring. dagen: ownership stake less a than 1% count in grand scream. >> would probably bring in a lot of folks one way or the other. >> if he shows up. >> my lord i love it preventing hot card -- nissan debuting new technology to warn parents when they leave kids in the car how it works, next. is this a phone? or a little internet machine? [ phone ringing ] hi mom. it makes you wonder... shouldn't we get our phones and internet from the same company? that's why xfinity mobile comes with your internet. you get up to 5 lines of talk and text at no extra cost. [ laughing ] so all you pay for is data. see how much you can save. choose by the gig or unlimited. call or go to xfinitymobile.com introducing xfinity mobile. a new kind of network designed to save you money. maria: well back we are talking about protecting your children from summer heat especially in cars. 30 children have already died so far this year, in overheated vehicles, but now nissan says it has a solution, with new technology that will remind drivers to check the backseat joining us now to show how it works the first on fox interview nissan engineer thanks for joining us. >> a big issue, i was questioning you during the commercial break what do you mean a driver forgets their child is in the back? >> i am a mom two boys ages 3 and 5, and i would hear heartbreaking stories on news about parents leaving kids in a hot car can happen for any number of reasons i am not an expert in that field but i knew that as an engineer i work at nissan nissan makes cars something i can do to help. >> just not only children obviously that is a big risk but also can talk about pets being in the back you said earlier even computer. >> absolutely, i think anyone can find this technology helpful, for if you have kids pets laptop groceries. >> how does this technology did he tech a child in the backseat. >> doesn't detect if you drive somewhere don't open and close that rare door you get a message no dashboard check backseat before you leave if you are distracted don't see that message you get out of the car the horn will honk at you kind of alerting you hey get back to you may have left something in the back of your vehicle. >> wow, so are a parent did that motive you to come up with this technology you stayed earlier look i am a mom, and this is actually a big issue. >> yeah, i would never want that to happen to me it can happen to anybody, and nissan they innovate find need and try to find a solution, and i think that is what we have done here. >> a technology in this car is this an all -- nissan in this model. >> it will be standard on 2018 nissan pathfinder really important to myself and team that this be standard, because a lot of times higher technology you have to two to higher package spend money to get that technology, this to make sure standard comes with the car, and so available on 2018 pathfinder, hopefully a lot of models after that. >> demonstrate how it works tell us what we are looking at. >> absolutely okay, let's run through a normal situation. >> let's say i open and flip rare door putting in. >> when at home put everything. >>. >> put my son my groceries, laptop as we said pet anything we close that door, then we come over here, and we already have a driver i am not going to hop in simulate if i hopped in the car, closed the door again hoping in driver's set a ready to drive somewhere we're going to drive. >> okay. >> so just for demonstration purposes drive a little bit. are the. >> all right. >> now you are at your destination, you are now at another store. >> yep back at home where the store exactly -- and going to open as if driver were going to emcould out of the car and get the message in meter that says hey check the backseat, again. >> you have to close the door first then get the message; root. >> yep, is activated did you hear the hong. >> if you dent hope backseat get a honk. >> a distinguishable feature about this system because a lot of times you get out of the car, you know, and you don't you know -- >> you don't -- >> exactly. >> thank you very much. >> thank you so much for having us. >> we have final thoughts on all-star panel next. back in a minute. forget, trust angie's list to help. [ barks ] visit angieslist.com today. . . . maria: have a great day. stuart: half hour from now apple will likely push the dow industrial average above 22,000. good morning, everyone. let's start with money really big money. apple turned in another spectacular performance. world's technology is firing on all cylinders. we will tell you how many iphones and i pads are selling, a lot, and huge profit, staggering. here is the standout $261 billion. that's apple's cash, no company has accumulated a quarter trillion dollars in cash before

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