Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Your World With Neil Cavuto 2019041

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Your World With Neil Cavuto 20190417



much blacked out. difference -- as we've been saying here, the >> neil: might not but it's more that is blocked out, the consistency. you know, republicans have been more a lot of people that are criticized on this subject. concerned about secrets being but to be fair, they don't go kept, they're going to freak out. around advocating big obviously we have to wait to see government. even though big government has what's in the report. it's raising questions now. welcome. i'm neil cavuto. gotten bigger under their rules. this is "your world." do these guys have to practice what they preach? let's begin with eliza collins >> if you're going to talk to talk, you have to walk the walk. elizabeth warren giving the and john sale. so less than 24 hours away from most.she will milk this for all this. what do you anticipate will be its worth. i will say one thing. if people are going to fight redacted? judge andrew napolitano was against the republicans, they anticipating as much as half the need a stronger message, this report. >> neil, i was watching your social message give, give and show yesterday. i saw judge napolitano. big government is taking over. that is a problem. my friend, judge napolitano, i it's a problem. say trump wins in 2020, it's a think he said it may be whether problem then and in the next it's in the public interests to presidential election. reveal or the president's people, regular people believe the rich should pay more. whether it's to charities, interest to conceal. i want to take issue with that. whether it's on their taxes. it's not concealing. people that are not making mr. barr is going to do his job. that's going to result in a lot $300,000 a year feel that people should give more. i think republicans have to get behind and have a stronger of redactions. message to combat this or the government will completely take i worked in watergate. control of everything. i can make a comparison in the >> neil: when they have a book out or a very good time on the prosecutors. speaking circuit, they will give they were both 68 years old. more of a dollar amount. mr. jaworski took the job. you heard the ronald reagan tithing thing. he didn't tithe, right? >> no. but one of the things that i were a strategist on the d side, he said he knew it would be if i were advising these nothing but trouble and thought candidates once they're hit with it might destroy him. but he was going to meet the this, one of the things i would have looked at and said, i would have been like depending on what they gave politically, i would challenge. he and bill barr have a lot in have been like i may not have common. barr will put his head down, do been charitable, but i'm trying to help with my message by what the law requires. grand jury material has to be redacted. supporting xyz candidates. doesn't matter -- >> neil: but you anticipate as i believe in the cause and i much as half of it? believe in being a democrat and that seems like a lot but it being a liberal or whatever, so i've given to abcdefg could be. >> it's not a matter of quantity. candidates. so i'm still -- the question is whether or not mueller can actually tell his >> neil: and the ronald reagan view -- others have been very findings and barr still do his generous but they didn't get the tax write off. job. quite a few billionaires have barr has offered an olive branch done that. but i'm wondering where it slips to the chairman of the up on them. if you're making this a cause, committees that he will meet you have to be really vigilant with them, talk about ongoing about making it show up on your investigations. he can't negotiate grand jury tax returns. >> this isn't the cause. material. what is the most difficult area, they're not saying everybody needs to donate more money to the so called peripheral interests of third parties. charity. he's already said he's not going they think the government -- to use that to protect the >> neil: those in their league who we all have to pony up more president. but mueller conducted over 500 to the government -- interviews. >> that's a different point than i can tell you from representing the question of -- a lot of clients, people go in >> the democrats make the republicans feel like we're and voluntarily talk to the fbi, to prosecutors with an greedy capitalist pigs while expectation of confidentiality. they never expect it's going to they're help a brother in need kind of party. be revealed publicly. it's very interesting to see that area is what he will these candidates preaching that struggle with. message are not -- >> neil: if that's the case and so much is redacted for valid >> neil: they want others to pay reasons, as jon said, democrats money. top 1%, 5% or whatever, they're are going to seize on this as in that group and they're not they're covering something, doing it. >> if trump paid what he said to hiding something and demand the full release of the report. charities or donated or they already have. they can create a bigger whatever, even if he showed his tax returns, they would still firestorm. >> absolutely. yeah. criticize him and have negative some of this absolutely might be things to say. it wouldn't matter. for perfectly legal reasons. >> let's say he's a billionaire democrats say they're going to and he gives $100 million away hammer in on transparency and and it's a fraction of that. how long it took, they wanted it it's -- sooner rather than later. >> they'd still hate his guts. >> neil: would you call him a i was talking to a republican hypocrite? >> i'm not going to call anybody strategist earlier today who she was pointing out that some of a hypocrite. this is very valid. if they make $300,000 a year and she said that every black mark give anything to charity, good on that report democrats are going to seize on and sale bill for you. barr is protecting the president congratulations. you could have stuffed it under so whether or not there's thing in there that the democrats find the mattress yourself. >> neil: absolutely. salacious, they will definitely be pointing out the black marks. the more and more there are, if meantime, the polish prime it's half the report, you can minister is here in the flesh. he's making a push on europe and expect them to raise an uproar this european union making a about that. statement. it's not just britain that has a >> neil: jon sale said if you problem with that club. give jim nadler and lindsey so does he next. hopes you drive safely. graham a chance to look at this, but allstate actually helps you drive safely... including all the stuff redacted, i suspect that might with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... not be good enough. where do you see that going? ...and brake too hard. >> i think it's one of the few with feedback to help you drive safer. things that i can say with certainty, it's going to court. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. there's going to be a subpoena. the attorney general is duty unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. bound to resist the subpoena and it's going to wind up in the district of columbia. there was a case decided one now that you know the truth... week ago in which the court of are you in good hands? appeals in the district of columbia held that the court does not have inherent authority in the public interests of whatever reasons to release garage jury material. so i think people are just going to have to accept the court ruling. >> neil: it's not going to be easily accepted. i'd imagine, eliza. what are you hear something. >> we saw a monmouth poll that says 60% of the public wants to see the report. democrats feel that they have that on their side. they have to be careful in how they proceed. in that same poll, it said 54% of americans want congress to move on after the release of the report. >> neil: good luck with that. >> exactly. >> neil: eliza, thank you. good seeing you. tomorrow is the day this is due. we don't know what time it will be released. we've got a number of very, very speedy speed readers available to at least come through what they can when they can. in the meantime, you do know that a lot of those people will be angry in congress and demanding the president release his taxes. that is debatable it will ever happen. these democratic candidates, most of them have released theirs. the one thing we discovered outside the fact that many of them are very wealthy, when it comes to the charitable enterprises that they want the government to conduct, they're not so generous themselves. we decide. you decide. the lexus es. every curve, every innovation, every feeling. a product of mastery. lease the 2019 es 350 for $389 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. newith no down payment andts no closing costs.home now there's no reason to rent when you can buy. did you know comcast business goes beyond fast with a gig-speed network. complete internet reliability. advanced voice solutions. wifi to keep everyone connected. video monitoring. so, every day, that's huge. we put our latest technology did you guys know we did all this stuff? and unrivaled network to work. no. i'm not even done yet. wow. business tv. the united states postal service makes more cloud apps and support. comcast business goes beyond at&t. e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. start with internet and voice for just $59.90 a month. it's everything a small business owner needs. comcast business. beyond fast. >> neil: all right. to hear the britts tell it, they want out of the european union. i'm not saying the polish prime minister is in the same club but he does have problems with his european counter parts. he would regret seeing the britts leave. but if that would happen, what would happen to poland? the prime minister is going to be attending a confab on that issue tonight. very good to have you, sir. >> thanks for having me. >> neil: if britain did leave, prime minister, where would that leave poland? >> the united kingdom and poland were always advocating for more ♪ free market oriented to european union. less protection, less red state. corey is living with metastatic breast cancer, so with the u.k. leaving the which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance european union, we'll have more with an aromatase inhibitor, difficult to promote a free which is for postmenopausal women with market approach. hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer i regret the britts leaving as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective because this is a keystone for at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. trans atlantic and nato and the patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, united kingdom in between. so the u.k. is leaving the e.u., which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, but stays a part of europe -- chills, or other signs of infection, >> neil: but if the britts left, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. the fear is other countries common side effects include low red blood cell might follow. and low platelet counts, poland has mentioned. you've said some countries can infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, run these enormous deficits and abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, others -- vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. >> absolutely excluded that we corey calls it her new normal or some other countries from because a lot has changed, central and eastern europe will but a lot hasn't. ask your doctor fall on this. about ibrance. one of the most pro american the #1 prescribed fda-approved country in the european union. at the same time, one of the oral combination treatment for hr+/her2- mbc. most pro european countries. 75% american attitude and 82 purpose european. >> neil: but you don't get any >> neil: all right. respect. i know what you're going to say. there doesn't seem to be -- the tax returns are out, not the poland isn't treated and gets presidents. we can't comment to how much he the same attention as others. gave to charity. we can only go on the ones that >> if there is an issue in the we see released, including this european union, the issue with crop of candidates. some of them running for double standards to the central president arguing that the and eastern european countries government needs to be more charitable. but when it comes to their honey tax returns, do they practice and western european countries. this is right. what they preach? depends on the year you're but putting this aside, we have talking about. in beto o'rourke's case, not a very strong alliance within quite. he talks about sacrificing for a the so-called countries with the green new deal. but has in the best of years czech republics, hungary. given over 2% of his income to charity. all important issues which that was during a generous year. are -- we're able to deal with how much has he been them in -- >> neil: but you're not a fan of sacrificing? he's just one of many returns the euro, the currency and we're analyzing, not the fact everything else, right? >> in terms of currency, i would that they seem to be making a lot of money in the top 5% of not recommend joining the common the population. hillary vaughn has gone beyond that to see how much they give currency, the euro. away in the process. for two countries to join the >> 2020 democrats have criticized the wealthy calling them kings and queens and euro currency, every theory, two criticizing republicans over tax cuts. but it turns out, when it comes countries have to be relatively to their honey cash, they have a similar. pretty tight grip. relatively similar in stage of democrats running for president development. poland and germany, france is are below average in charitable not. by the way, the euro is probably giving compared to american taxpayers in the same tax bracket. the root cause of the two loss beto o'rourke gave just over $1,000 to charity. .3% of his income. of italy, problems in greece and irs data say people in his tax spain. so i'm not so sure that those bracket gave 20 times more than that. moments ago at a house party in countries do not regret joining euro right now. virginia, o'rourke defending his they cannot devalue their charitable giving saying not currencies, which is the best way to get out -- everything shows up on his tax >> neil: makes it tough. return and addressed this last let me ask you. you -- you have a good night. relationship with this country. >> there's charities that we the president is a big fan of the polish people. donate too, others that we >> thank you. violent threat no put on taxes. >> neil: you're fine country. >> senator bernie sanders that and i'm wondering how that led his campaign against millionaires and billionaires is relationship continues now? perhaps one of the president's a millionaire himself. best speeches is when he was in he gave $19,000 of his 2018 pola earnings, 3.4% of his income. poland. what is your session of that relationship now? he's encouraging -- compare that to average >> it's very good. americans. actually, the only thing where i senator kamala harris gave nothing to charity during her disagree with some hawkish first three years show served as attorney general. approach from the current in 2017, she gave less than 1.5% administration is for those people that wish the european away. turns out the most generous top union to fall apart, break down. i think the european union as a tier presidential candidate, huge is a huge value as an elizabeth warren who gave away american ally. 6% of her salary. i wish the european union president obama in 2007 gave transforms and goes to a better 5.7% of his income away. situation in terms of gdp growth, the economy situation. former president george bush but at the same time, we try to offered up 16% of his pay. be a keystone between the united in 1991, bill clinton gave away states and europe to maintain 6% of his income to charity. this alliance vis a vis other president trump has given gifts to charity saying he's donated huge problems like russia, russia's aggression or china. over $100 million in gifts to different organizations in the first five years leading up to . his 2016 presidential run. >> neil: all right. there's the russian probe, a he gives 100% of his report out in this country that the president and his attorney general exonerates him. presidential paycheck to you think he's tough enough on different agencies in the u.s. russia? >> i think he's tougher than his government. when bernie sanders was asked if he would donate more of his money to the government to back predecessor. there's things like the gas up his campaign pledge to raise pipeline between germany and russia and buying gas from taxes on millionaires, he mr. putin means paying for his laughed. neil? >> thanks very much. we do not have the president's weapons. >> neil: that's germany. >> this is what germany is taxes to know what he's donating himself right now. we know that he foregoes his doing. germany is spending 1.2% of their gdp on defense. entire presidential salary and gives that to charity. we know that ronald reagan >> neil: and they're not going famous for saying he feels it's an obligation to do the christian and the good thing, to to increase it. give 10% of what you make. >> just 1.4% the next couple his average during the 1980s was years. we're complying with this rule, around 3.6% of his high point. so calling them free riders is probably not pleasant, but this in 1983, 2%. is true. because similar countries of ronald reagan had said at the time that a good deal of that nato that spent 2 percentage money was not marked for points or more on defense. charitable donation. he would separately release the the others are not. >> neil: so the president is right about that. names of charities to which he >> he's right calling the others did give money that were not on the tax returns. you can get lost in the weeds. to catch up. but fair and balanced. >> neil: when you step back and they generally do a little less look at this, you're not afraid to challenge our president and than tithing. certain others like using huawei that will be big in 5g. you want to maintain that relationship. why? >> in particular, we want to maintain the strategic relationship with the united states. with other countries like china, we have good relationship, but they are quite limited in terms of investment, in terms of economy, tried. with china, we have huge imbalance. we export goods and services for only $2 billion. we import for amount of $24 billion. so it's a ratio -- >> neil: you have a trade problem like we do. >> i can understand president trump. >> neil: so you're hoping that if he gets an agreement -- >> we say the same. current account deficits with are almost permanent cannot be sustainable like in germany, like in japan, china. and here president trump is right in calling those countries to change their policies. >> neil: so do you think the president's approach, might be a little rough and a little tough, is right with china? that europe will benefit -- >> it is right. it is right. actually, it was a public information, so i'm not revealing any secrets. a couple months ago, we would have arrested two spies that were working with huawei. >> neil: you had a phone call with elon musk saying he might build a facility in poland. >> poland is becoming silicon valley of the european union. we have a very talented young people, software engineers. we have put lots of investment into the electro mobility. we have new investment in clean energy. in this area ask along those lines, i spoke with musk about his next investment in europe so i encouraged him to come to poland because we have great business environment. >> neil: is he going to come? >> he said he's going to take this decision the next couple months. >> neil: we'll follow closely. very good seeing you. have a safe trim here. americans enjoy seeing you and your people here. >> thank you. >> neil: more coming up, including new revelations we're getting from the attorney general bill barr and rod rosenstein. they are parentally set to hold a news conference around 9:30 tomorrow morning presumably over the release of the mueller report, what is redacted, what is not. it's an issue they're following all over the world. a live report coming up from the justice department after this. look limu. a civilian buying a new car. let's go. limu's right. liberty mutual can save you money by customizing your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. oh... yeah, i've been a customer for years. huh... only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. this and even this.hark, i deep clean messes like this. but i don't have to clean this, because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair, while i clean. - [announcer] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans, now cleans itself. onmillionth order.r. ♪ there goes our first big order. ♪ 44, 45, 46... how many of these did they order? 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(vo) go national. go like a pro. >> neil: they're not just going to plop the report on a desk. we're getting news that bill barr and rod rosenstein will have a news conference tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. about the report and key findings and why things might have been redacted. let's go to catherine herridge with the latest. catherine? >> neil, i just left the justice department where they confirmed to reporters where there will be a news conference with the attorney general and the deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein. what is not clear is whether the report will be public at that point or already delivered to congress or it will happen after the news conference. it's important to note the appearance of the deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein. it was attorney general barr and rosenstein that made the call on obstruction of justice. that was the open question for robert mueller. he said he didn't see evidence of a crime. at the same time, he couldn't exonerate the president. it was barr and rosenstein that made the call. they said there was not an underlying crime of collusion and had to find evidence of corrupt intent. a very high legal bar and showing that the actions were taken to disrupt or block an ongoing criminal procedure or one that was an anticipated litigation. so to me it's significant that attorney general barr and the deputy attorney general will be appearing. we hope to have more information on whether the public release of the report will come before, during or right after that event, neil. >> neil: thank you very much, catherine herridge. notice catherine pointed out 9:30 a.m. that's when the markets open. if you are sort of a trader that goes on minute by minute, tick by tick developments, you hold off on what you do? one of the world's most successful became a billionaire doing that. that could be a big problem for you. ken fisher is next. this is loma linda, a place with one of the highest life expectancies in the country. you see so many people walking around here in their hundreds. so how do you stay financially well for all those extra years? well, you have to start planning as early as possible. we all need to plan, for 18 years or more, of retirement. i don't have a whole lot saved up, but i'm working on it now. i will do whatever i need to do. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges. ♪ ♪ i can do more to lower my a1c. because my body can still make its own insulin. and i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release it, like it's supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it starts acting in my body from the first dose and continues to work when i need it, 24/7. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don't use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes, or if you have type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, you're allergic to trulicity, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your low blood sugar risk. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and decreased appetite. these can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i choose once-weekly trulicity to activate my within. if you need help lowering your a1c, ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. travel and dining now kayak and opentable let you earn travel rewards every time you dine. with just one reservation on opentable, you can start saving money on hotels with kayak. get started at kayak.com/diningrewards. >> neil: a lot of my wall street friends were e-mailing me, texting me saying did you say 9:30 is when the report will be released? they panic things about the impacted it would have. i thought it would be good to talk to one of the most successful investors in the united states of america, not the world. i'm talking about ken fisher of fisher investments that has always taken a big step back, 20,000 feet in the air view of the markets. not to get caught up in these gyrations. good to see you. >> thanks for having me. >> neil: all right. 9:30 tomorrow, what does ken fisher do? >> i'm thinking about the future. like when president trump was elected. 48 hours later. the fact is, the markets already told you what will happen about this. markets preprice all of these things. you think about how many people were part of the mueller investigation, whatever is there has already been leaked out and priced. just not officially. markets do this. >> neil: markets gyrate falsely. the night of the president's election, but futures went tumbling -- >> yeah, but unless you think you're the super trader that will make a huge about of money off of a tiny move that is fast, which very few people do and nobody, the best thing you can do is ignore that. >> neil: but it points to problems for the president. to your point -- >> the markets told you this. they already told you what will happen. >> neil: but they haven't read the report. >> the markets have read the report. that's the part that people miss. there's so many people involved in the preparation that went on for this, they have already talked -- the 40 people that mueller was working with talk to people that talk to people. even though they're not supposed to, just think about all of the leaks that have gone oncoming out of all of this. >> neil: you might be right. but the markets get ahead of themselves. >> the market will be nervous. yes. >> neil: in the middle of the free fall, you said everybody take a chill pill. you didn't say that. but you said you were still bullish through that. talking about a good 2019. a lot of people said we're in the cusp of a bear market. you said it would be great. it's been great. >> i'm glad you noticed. it's a great year and a great year in lots of places, a great year in europe, a great year in america. a currency albatross going on people don't appreciate. good things happening in europe people don't appreciate. the third year of a president's term. we haven't had a negative third year since 1929. the fact of the matter is that there's a normal progression to political risk aversion, which is part of total risk aversion in this period that we're in, that part goes away because gridlock ensuring no big legislation. legislation in a big way, in american history happens in the first and second years of a president's terms. it's like going through an obstacle course with big sharp heavy moving obstacles. it's scary. once you get the gridlock, it's easy for people to move their way through. the falling risk hurts markets. but i would expect the markets not to have the progress that they've had this year. normally in the back half of the third year, the progress slows down. >> neil: almost has to. 16%, right? >> slows down partly because you begin to start getting political fear associated with what might high pressure with presidential elections. >> neil: what if he's not re-elected? >> just let me say that's further off into the future. but in the back a of a presidential year, the fourth year, the second best of the four years, the market normally accelerates. you get falling uncertainty. the market the prepricing the election. we started seeing rising prices february on. what do you get? you get falling uncertainty. markets like that. we're going to get down in the middle of next year to two candidates. one of them won't be william weld. that's a joke. two candidates. the markets will win, we always get a winner and the one that wins tends to be the one that we end up liking although many of us don't. that process culminates with a victory. that's the american cycle. in europe, the five-year e.u. election has a parallel process and that is taking place right here, right now. >> neil: this continues through 2020. >> yeah. it will slow down some later this year, be slower and then -- >> neil: we're not going to have a melt down in the near term? >> that is fruit cake talk. as people talk about gee, loan growth is 4%. that is perfectly fine loan growth. the things that people complain about most people should pray for. >> neil: you think this president gets an unfair rap? or do you -- >> i tend to not want to go there. the fact of the matter is -- let's play it the other way. go back to the obama presidency. the stock market was great. people make too big a deal in my opinion about the president. >> neil: whose bull market is this? barack obama's or -- >> this is the world's bull market. this bull market started in america and outside of america at the same time at various points -- >> neil: quit playing politics. >> politics is important but people make too much importance associated with it when so many other things are also going on. you really need to think about the totality. my advise to people is think global first. you think the yield curve discussion. that discussion has been stupid from the beginning. what really matters in a world where big huge global banks and big huge global corporations can borrow in one country and lend in another faster than where we can have this interview, it's the gdp weighted global curve that matters. it has a positive slope to it. yield curve is important but only on a global basis. >> neil: okay. you like chinese stocks right now. you like -- china market has stabilized? >> the chinese market is doing great. it's great because people are pessimistic about it. the news on china day is note that great but better than what people feared. a question i don't think -- first off, their numbers are lousy. when i say lousy, i don't mean the quantity, i mean the quality of them. absolutely. the fact is that american numbers aren't so perfect either. ours are better than theirs are. the western worlds are better. but government data is imperfect. it wasn't really intended to be perfect. what i like to look at, what i prefer is to take lots of big global corporations that deal with trade and see what their actual experience is. while there's a fair amount of coverage like apple saying we got problems in china, you find more companies that are doing well in china right now than you find doing badly. >> neil: interesting. you wrote about a dozen books. i've read all of them. "the beat the crowd" one stands out several years back. you tend to go the other way. a lot of the world is -- most people are zigging with you. they're bullar and confident. >> we -- larry said this well yesterday in his description -- if i like melt up right now. i don't think we'll accelerate that much. the fact is that the john templeton phrase that i used forecast, bull markets are born on pessimism -- it doesn't always work that way. we're not clearly to euphoria. we're being optimistic after last year took all of our optimism away. that tendency -- >> neil: you agree it was -- the conditions remain good. >> the conditions do remain -- >> neil: you're not standing on it -- >> no, at this point in time we have a ways to go to get sentiment up. >> neil: thanks. ken fisher. we have a lot more coming up. at the corner of wall and broad, we were down three points today. but we don't know who will happen tomorrow at 9:30, do we? more after this. the matters.ar... introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger, it's the right gear. with a terrain management system for... this. a bash plate for... that. an electronic locking rear differential for... yeah... this. heading to the supermarket? get any truck. heading out here? get the ford ranger. the only adventure gear built ford tough. so, every day, we put our latest technology and unrivaled network to work. the united states postal service makes more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. >> neil: if you don't think there's an emergency at the border, go to yuma, arizona, . the mayor is declaring a state of emergency. migrants released into the community. god to do something. how much impact might it have on the border crisis? something that a number of prominent democrats have been raising is an issue, including cory booker. jeh johnson, barack obama's homeland security chief. brandon enjoyed on the phone with me. to your point and you are talking about this in the crisis and everything before so many others were and are and i'm just wondering, there could be more cities like yuma doing this. >> i would expect they would be a lot more cities during this. when president trump says were going to transfer these individuals to sanctuary cities, it is to relieve the stress and pressure that's happening on the cities that have absolutely no fault. yuma is not asking to harbor these individuals or protect these individuals, but they are getting slammed right now. they are spending thousands of dollars every day trying to support these individuals that we have to release for one reason or another. >> neil: one idea that's been advanced, you know and we've discussed it, send a lot of these folks to sanctuary cities were mayors and governors of states like california feel that they are due protection. how likely do you think it is he would deliver on that? >> i think it's very likely that he will deliver in the short term. in the long term, how viable that idea is is debatable simply because of the funds and how much it costs to transport these individuals. but let's face it. if these cities feel the same pressure that yuma, arizona, is feeling, there's a lot better chance the politicians are going to step up and do their job. that's the problem here. we have a dysfunctional progress and they refused to do their job for the american public. that's what we have to get at. >> neil: it has escalated, the 100,000 and the overruns of detention centers, there doesn't seem to be any ground either democrats are giving going back to the wall and funding for it to increase the man and woman power at these detention centers. don't get started on a be providing more judges at the border to deal with the population surge. what happens in the near term? >> what the administration has to do is they have to look at what they can do under the current authority. attorney general barr has said he's thinking about holding these individuals pending their deportation or asylum proceedings. that's a great idea. that's a game changer if we have the best space to hold these individuals. because i.c.e. only has around 45,000 beds, we can't hold even 10% of the numbers crossing. if we can't do that, it's not going to change the game. the ideas they are. >> neil: brandon judd, thank you for taking the time. speaking of time, we will know tomorrow morning. the mueller report will be out. how much will d be out, after t this. why rent when you can buy? 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"the five" right now. ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with dan bongino, marie harf, jesse watters, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and visit "the five" ." this is a fox news alert. a must-see tv moment set for tomorrow in washington, attorney general bill barr of the deputy attorney general rod rosenstein will hold a news conference at 9:30 a.m. on the dot on the mueller report. president trump that he may also do the same, having a press conference. barr has been facing scrutiny over his handling of the russian investigation. this is a moment we've all been

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much blacked out. difference -- as we've been saying here, the >> neil: might not but it's more that is blocked out, the consistency. you know, republicans have been more a lot of people that are criticized on this subject. concerned about secrets being but to be fair, they don't go kept, they're going to freak out. around advocating big obviously we have to wait to see government. even though big government has what's in the report. it's raising questions now. welcome. i'm neil cavuto. gotten bigger under their rules. this is "your world." do these guys have to practice what they preach? let's begin with eliza collins >> if you're going to talk to talk, you have to walk the walk. elizabeth warren giving the and john sale. so less than 24 hours away from most.she will milk this for all this. what do you anticipate will be its worth. i will say one thing. if people are going to fight redacted? judge andrew napolitano was against the republicans, they anticipating as much as half the need a stronger message, this report. >> neil, i was watching your social message give, give and show yesterday. i saw judge napolitano. big government is taking over. that is a problem. my friend, judge napolitano, i it's a problem. say trump wins in 2020, it's a think he said it may be whether problem then and in the next it's in the public interests to presidential election. reveal or the president's people, regular people believe the rich should pay more. whether it's to charities, interest to conceal. i want to take issue with that. whether it's on their taxes. it's not concealing. people that are not making mr. barr is going to do his job. that's going to result in a lot $300,000 a year feel that people should give more. i think republicans have to get behind and have a stronger of redactions. message to combat this or the government will completely take i worked in watergate. control of everything. i can make a comparison in the >> neil: when they have a book out or a very good time on the prosecutors. speaking circuit, they will give they were both 68 years old. more of a dollar amount. mr. jaworski took the job. you heard the ronald reagan tithing thing. he didn't tithe, right? >> no. but one of the things that i were a strategist on the d side, he said he knew it would be if i were advising these nothing but trouble and thought candidates once they're hit with it might destroy him. but he was going to meet the this, one of the things i would have looked at and said, i would have been like depending on what they gave politically, i would challenge. he and bill barr have a lot in have been like i may not have common. barr will put his head down, do been charitable, but i'm trying to help with my message by what the law requires. grand jury material has to be redacted. supporting xyz candidates. doesn't matter -- >> neil: but you anticipate as i believe in the cause and i much as half of it? believe in being a democrat and that seems like a lot but it being a liberal or whatever, so i've given to abcdefg could be. >> it's not a matter of quantity. candidates. so i'm still -- the question is whether or not mueller can actually tell his >> neil: and the ronald reagan view -- others have been very findings and barr still do his generous but they didn't get the tax write off. job. quite a few billionaires have barr has offered an olive branch done that. but i'm wondering where it slips to the chairman of the up on them. if you're making this a cause, committees that he will meet you have to be really vigilant with them, talk about ongoing about making it show up on your investigations. he can't negotiate grand jury tax returns. >> this isn't the cause. material. what is the most difficult area, they're not saying everybody needs to donate more money to the so called peripheral interests of third parties. charity. he's already said he's not going they think the government -- to use that to protect the >> neil: those in their league who we all have to pony up more president. but mueller conducted over 500 to the government -- interviews. >> that's a different point than i can tell you from representing the question of -- a lot of clients, people go in >> the democrats make the republicans feel like we're and voluntarily talk to the fbi, to prosecutors with an greedy capitalist pigs while expectation of confidentiality. they never expect it's going to they're help a brother in need kind of party. be revealed publicly. it's very interesting to see that area is what he will these candidates preaching that struggle with. message are not -- >> neil: if that's the case and so much is redacted for valid >> neil: they want others to pay reasons, as jon said, democrats money. top 1%, 5% or whatever, they're are going to seize on this as in that group and they're not they're covering something, doing it. >> if trump paid what he said to hiding something and demand the full release of the report. charities or donated or they already have. they can create a bigger whatever, even if he showed his tax returns, they would still firestorm. >> absolutely. yeah. criticize him and have negative some of this absolutely might be things to say. it wouldn't matter. for perfectly legal reasons. >> let's say he's a billionaire democrats say they're going to and he gives $100 million away hammer in on transparency and and it's a fraction of that. how long it took, they wanted it it's -- sooner rather than later. >> they'd still hate his guts. >> neil: would you call him a i was talking to a republican hypocrite? >> i'm not going to call anybody strategist earlier today who she was pointing out that some of a hypocrite. this is very valid. if they make $300,000 a year and she said that every black mark give anything to charity, good on that report democrats are going to seize on and sale bill for you. barr is protecting the president congratulations. you could have stuffed it under so whether or not there's thing in there that the democrats find the mattress yourself. >> neil: absolutely. salacious, they will definitely be pointing out the black marks. the more and more there are, if meantime, the polish prime it's half the report, you can minister is here in the flesh. he's making a push on europe and expect them to raise an uproar this european union making a about that. statement. it's not just britain that has a >> neil: jon sale said if you problem with that club. give jim nadler and lindsey so does he next. hopes you drive safely. graham a chance to look at this, but allstate actually helps you drive safely... including all the stuff redacted, i suspect that might with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... not be good enough. where do you see that going? ...and brake too hard. >> i think it's one of the few with feedback to help you drive safer. things that i can say with certainty, it's going to court. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. there's going to be a subpoena. the attorney general is duty unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. bound to resist the subpoena and it's going to wind up in the district of columbia. there was a case decided one now that you know the truth... week ago in which the court of are you in good hands? appeals in the district of columbia held that the court does not have inherent authority in the public interests of whatever reasons to release garage jury material. so i think people are just going to have to accept the court ruling. >> neil: it's not going to be easily accepted. i'd imagine, eliza. what are you hear something. >> we saw a monmouth poll that says 60% of the public wants to see the report. democrats feel that they have that on their side. they have to be careful in how they proceed. in that same poll, it said 54% of americans want congress to move on after the release of the report. >> neil: good luck with that. >> exactly. >> neil: eliza, thank you. good seeing you. tomorrow is the day this is due. we don't know what time it will be released. we've got a number of very, very speedy speed readers available to at least come through what they can when they can. in the meantime, you do know that a lot of those people will be angry in congress and demanding the president release his taxes. that is debatable it will ever happen. these democratic candidates, most of them have released theirs. the one thing we discovered outside the fact that many of them are very wealthy, when it comes to the charitable enterprises that they want the government to conduct, they're not so generous themselves. we decide. you decide. the lexus es. every curve, every innovation, every feeling. a product of mastery. lease the 2019 es 350 for $389 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. newith no down payment andts no closing costs.home now there's no reason to rent when you can buy. did you know comcast business goes beyond fast with a gig-speed network. complete internet reliability. advanced voice solutions. wifi to keep everyone connected. video monitoring. so, every day, that's huge. we put our latest technology did you guys know we did all this stuff? and unrivaled network to work. no. i'm not even done yet. wow. business tv. the united states postal service makes more cloud apps and support. comcast business goes beyond at&t. e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. start with internet and voice for just $59.90 a month. it's everything a small business owner needs. comcast business. beyond fast. >> neil: all right. to hear the britts tell it, they want out of the european union. i'm not saying the polish prime minister is in the same club but he does have problems with his european counter parts. he would regret seeing the britts leave. but if that would happen, what would happen to poland? the prime minister is going to be attending a confab on that issue tonight. very good to have you, sir. >> thanks for having me. >> neil: if britain did leave, prime minister, where would that leave poland? >> the united kingdom and poland were always advocating for more ♪ free market oriented to european union. less protection, less red state. corey is living with metastatic breast cancer, so with the u.k. leaving the which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance european union, we'll have more with an aromatase inhibitor, difficult to promote a free which is for postmenopausal women with market approach. hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer i regret the britts leaving as the first hormonal based therapy. ibrance plus letrozole was significantly more effective because this is a keystone for at delaying disease progression versus letrozole. trans atlantic and nato and the patients taking ibrance can develop low white blood cell counts, united kingdom in between. so the u.k. is leaving the e.u., which may cause serious infections that can lead to death. before taking ibrance, tell your doctor if you have fever, but stays a part of europe -- chills, or other signs of infection, >> neil: but if the britts left, liver or kidney problems, are pregnant, breastfeeding, or plan to become pregnant. the fear is other countries common side effects include low red blood cell might follow. and low platelet counts, poland has mentioned. you've said some countries can infections, tiredness, nausea, sore mouth, run these enormous deficits and abnormalities in liver blood tests, diarrhea, hair thinning or loss, others -- vomiting, rash, and loss of appetite. >> absolutely excluded that we corey calls it her new normal or some other countries from because a lot has changed, central and eastern europe will but a lot hasn't. ask your doctor fall on this. about ibrance. one of the most pro american the #1 prescribed fda-approved country in the european union. at the same time, one of the oral combination treatment for hr+/her2- mbc. most pro european countries. 75% american attitude and 82 purpose european. >> neil: but you don't get any >> neil: all right. respect. i know what you're going to say. there doesn't seem to be -- the tax returns are out, not the poland isn't treated and gets presidents. we can't comment to how much he the same attention as others. gave to charity. we can only go on the ones that >> if there is an issue in the we see released, including this european union, the issue with crop of candidates. some of them running for double standards to the central president arguing that the and eastern european countries government needs to be more charitable. but when it comes to their honey tax returns, do they practice and western european countries. this is right. what they preach? depends on the year you're but putting this aside, we have talking about. in beto o'rourke's case, not a very strong alliance within quite. he talks about sacrificing for a the so-called countries with the green new deal. but has in the best of years czech republics, hungary. given over 2% of his income to charity. all important issues which that was during a generous year. are -- we're able to deal with how much has he been them in -- >> neil: but you're not a fan of sacrificing? he's just one of many returns the euro, the currency and we're analyzing, not the fact everything else, right? >> in terms of currency, i would that they seem to be making a lot of money in the top 5% of not recommend joining the common the population. hillary vaughn has gone beyond that to see how much they give currency, the euro. away in the process. for two countries to join the >> 2020 democrats have criticized the wealthy calling them kings and queens and euro currency, every theory, two criticizing republicans over tax cuts. but it turns out, when it comes countries have to be relatively to their honey cash, they have a similar. pretty tight grip. relatively similar in stage of democrats running for president development. poland and germany, france is are below average in charitable not. by the way, the euro is probably giving compared to american taxpayers in the same tax bracket. the root cause of the two loss beto o'rourke gave just over $1,000 to charity. .3% of his income. of italy, problems in greece and irs data say people in his tax spain. so i'm not so sure that those bracket gave 20 times more than that. moments ago at a house party in countries do not regret joining euro right now. virginia, o'rourke defending his they cannot devalue their charitable giving saying not currencies, which is the best way to get out -- everything shows up on his tax >> neil: makes it tough. return and addressed this last let me ask you. you -- you have a good night. relationship with this country. >> there's charities that we the president is a big fan of the polish people. donate too, others that we >> thank you. violent threat no put on taxes. >> neil: you're fine country. >> senator bernie sanders that and i'm wondering how that led his campaign against millionaires and billionaires is relationship continues now? perhaps one of the president's a millionaire himself. best speeches is when he was in he gave $19,000 of his 2018 pola earnings, 3.4% of his income. poland. what is your session of that relationship now? he's encouraging -- compare that to average >> it's very good. americans. actually, the only thing where i senator kamala harris gave nothing to charity during her disagree with some hawkish first three years show served as attorney general. approach from the current in 2017, she gave less than 1.5% administration is for those people that wish the european away. turns out the most generous top union to fall apart, break down. i think the european union as a tier presidential candidate, huge is a huge value as an elizabeth warren who gave away american ally. 6% of her salary. i wish the european union president obama in 2007 gave transforms and goes to a better 5.7% of his income away. situation in terms of gdp growth, the economy situation. former president george bush but at the same time, we try to offered up 16% of his pay. be a keystone between the united in 1991, bill clinton gave away states and europe to maintain 6% of his income to charity. this alliance vis a vis other president trump has given gifts to charity saying he's donated huge problems like russia, russia's aggression or china. over $100 million in gifts to different organizations in the first five years leading up to . his 2016 presidential run. >> neil: all right. there's the russian probe, a he gives 100% of his report out in this country that the president and his attorney general exonerates him. presidential paycheck to you think he's tough enough on different agencies in the u.s. russia? >> i think he's tougher than his government. when bernie sanders was asked if he would donate more of his money to the government to back predecessor. there's things like the gas up his campaign pledge to raise pipeline between germany and russia and buying gas from taxes on millionaires, he mr. putin means paying for his laughed. neil? >> thanks very much. we do not have the president's weapons. >> neil: that's germany. >> this is what germany is taxes to know what he's donating himself right now. we know that he foregoes his doing. germany is spending 1.2% of their gdp on defense. entire presidential salary and gives that to charity. we know that ronald reagan >> neil: and they're not going famous for saying he feels it's an obligation to do the christian and the good thing, to to increase it. give 10% of what you make. >> just 1.4% the next couple his average during the 1980s was years. we're complying with this rule, around 3.6% of his high point. so calling them free riders is probably not pleasant, but this in 1983, 2%. is true. because similar countries of ronald reagan had said at the time that a good deal of that nato that spent 2 percentage money was not marked for points or more on defense. charitable donation. he would separately release the the others are not. >> neil: so the president is right about that. names of charities to which he >> he's right calling the others did give money that were not on the tax returns. you can get lost in the weeds. to catch up. but fair and balanced. >> neil: when you step back and they generally do a little less look at this, you're not afraid to challenge our president and than tithing. certain others like using huawei that will be big in 5g. you want to maintain that relationship. why? >> in particular, we want to maintain the strategic relationship with the united states. with other countries like china, we have good relationship, but they are quite limited in terms of investment, in terms of economy, tried. with china, we have huge imbalance. we export goods and services for only $2 billion. we import for amount of $24 billion. so it's a ratio -- >> neil: you have a trade problem like we do. >> i can understand president trump. >> neil: so you're hoping that if he gets an agreement -- >> we say the same. current account deficits with are almost permanent cannot be sustainable like in germany, like in japan, china. and here president trump is right in calling those countries to change their policies. >> neil: so do you think the president's approach, might be a little rough and a little tough, is right with china? that europe will benefit -- >> it is right. it is right. actually, it was a public information, so i'm not revealing any secrets. a couple months ago, we would have arrested two spies that were working with huawei. >> neil: you had a phone call with elon musk saying he might build a facility in poland. >> poland is becoming silicon valley of the european union. we have a very talented young people, software engineers. we have put lots of investment into the electro mobility. we have new investment in clean energy. in this area ask along those lines, i spoke with musk about his next investment in europe so i encouraged him to come to poland because we have great business environment. >> neil: is he going to come? >> he said he's going to take this decision the next couple months. >> neil: we'll follow closely. very good seeing you. have a safe trim here. americans enjoy seeing you and your people here. >> thank you. >> neil: more coming up, including new revelations we're getting from the attorney general bill barr and rod rosenstein. they are parentally set to hold a news conference around 9:30 tomorrow morning presumably over the release of the mueller report, what is redacted, what is not. it's an issue they're following all over the world. a live report coming up from the justice department after this. look limu. a civilian buying a new car. let's go. limu's right. liberty mutual can save you money by customizing your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. oh... yeah, i've been a customer for years. huh... only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. this and even this.hark, i deep clean messes like this. but i don't have to clean this, because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair, while i clean. - [announcer] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans, now cleans itself. onmillionth order.r. ♪ there goes our first big order. ♪ 44, 45, 46... how many of these did they order? 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(vo) go national. go like a pro. >> neil: they're not just going to plop the report on a desk. we're getting news that bill barr and rod rosenstein will have a news conference tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. about the report and key findings and why things might have been redacted. let's go to catherine herridge with the latest. catherine? >> neil, i just left the justice department where they confirmed to reporters where there will be a news conference with the attorney general and the deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein. what is not clear is whether the report will be public at that point or already delivered to congress or it will happen after the news conference. it's important to note the appearance of the deputy attorney general, rod rosenstein. it was attorney general barr and rosenstein that made the call on obstruction of justice. that was the open question for robert mueller. he said he didn't see evidence of a crime. at the same time, he couldn't exonerate the president. it was barr and rosenstein that made the call. they said there was not an underlying crime of collusion and had to find evidence of corrupt intent. a very high legal bar and showing that the actions were taken to disrupt or block an ongoing criminal procedure or one that was an anticipated litigation. so to me it's significant that attorney general barr and the deputy attorney general will be appearing. we hope to have more information on whether the public release of the report will come before, during or right after that event, neil. >> neil: thank you very much, catherine herridge. notice catherine pointed out 9:30 a.m. that's when the markets open. if you are sort of a trader that goes on minute by minute, tick by tick developments, you hold off on what you do? one of the world's most successful became a billionaire doing that. that could be a big problem for you. ken fisher is next. this is loma linda, a place with one of the highest life expectancies in the country. you see so many people walking around here in their hundreds. so how do you stay financially well for all those extra years? well, you have to start planning as early as possible. we all need to plan, for 18 years or more, of retirement. i don't have a whole lot saved up, but i'm working on it now. i will do whatever i need to do. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges. ♪ ♪ i can do more to lower my a1c. because my body can still make its own insulin. and i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release it, like it's supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it starts acting in my body from the first dose and continues to work when i need it, 24/7. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don't use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes, or if you have type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, you're allergic to trulicity, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your low blood sugar risk. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and decreased appetite. these can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i choose once-weekly trulicity to activate my within. if you need help lowering your a1c, ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. travel and dining now kayak and opentable let you earn travel rewards every time you dine. with just one reservation on opentable, you can start saving money on hotels with kayak. get started at kayak.com/diningrewards. >> neil: a lot of my wall street friends were e-mailing me, texting me saying did you say 9:30 is when the report will be released? they panic things about the impacted it would have. i thought it would be good to talk to one of the most successful investors in the united states of america, not the world. i'm talking about ken fisher of fisher investments that has always taken a big step back, 20,000 feet in the air view of the markets. not to get caught up in these gyrations. good to see you. >> thanks for having me. >> neil: all right. 9:30 tomorrow, what does ken fisher do? >> i'm thinking about the future. like when president trump was elected. 48 hours later. the fact is, the markets already told you what will happen about this. markets preprice all of these things. you think about how many people were part of the mueller investigation, whatever is there has already been leaked out and priced. just not officially. markets do this. >> neil: markets gyrate falsely. the night of the president's election, but futures went tumbling -- >> yeah, but unless you think you're the super trader that will make a huge about of money off of a tiny move that is fast, which very few people do and nobody, the best thing you can do is ignore that. >> neil: but it points to problems for the president. to your point -- >> the markets told you this. they already told you what will happen. >> neil: but they haven't read the report. >> the markets have read the report. that's the part that people miss. there's so many people involved in the preparation that went on for this, they have already talked -- the 40 people that mueller was working with talk to people that talk to people. even though they're not supposed to, just think about all of the leaks that have gone oncoming out of all of this. >> neil: you might be right. but the markets get ahead of themselves. >> the market will be nervous. yes. >> neil: in the middle of the free fall, you said everybody take a chill pill. you didn't say that. but you said you were still bullish through that. talking about a good 2019. a lot of people said we're in the cusp of a bear market. you said it would be great. it's been great. >> i'm glad you noticed. it's a great year and a great year in lots of places, a great year in europe, a great year in america. a currency albatross going on people don't appreciate. good things happening in europe people don't appreciate. the third year of a president's term. we haven't had a negative third year since 1929. the fact of the matter is that there's a normal progression to political risk aversion, which is part of total risk aversion in this period that we're in, that part goes away because gridlock ensuring no big legislation. legislation in a big way, in american history happens in the first and second years of a president's terms. it's like going through an obstacle course with big sharp heavy moving obstacles. it's scary. once you get the gridlock, it's easy for people to move their way through. the falling risk hurts markets. but i would expect the markets not to have the progress that they've had this year. normally in the back half of the third year, the progress slows down. >> neil: almost has to. 16%, right? >> slows down partly because you begin to start getting political fear associated with what might high pressure with presidential elections. >> neil: what if he's not re-elected? >> just let me say that's further off into the future. but in the back a of a presidential year, the fourth year, the second best of the four years, the market normally accelerates. you get falling uncertainty. the market the prepricing the election. we started seeing rising prices february on. what do you get? you get falling uncertainty. markets like that. we're going to get down in the middle of next year to two candidates. one of them won't be william weld. that's a joke. two candidates. the markets will win, we always get a winner and the one that wins tends to be the one that we end up liking although many of us don't. that process culminates with a victory. that's the american cycle. in europe, the five-year e.u. election has a parallel process and that is taking place right here, right now. >> neil: this continues through 2020. >> yeah. it will slow down some later this year, be slower and then -- >> neil: we're not going to have a melt down in the near term? >> that is fruit cake talk. as people talk about gee, loan growth is 4%. that is perfectly fine loan growth. the things that people complain about most people should pray for. >> neil: you think this president gets an unfair rap? or do you -- >> i tend to not want to go there. the fact of the matter is -- let's play it the other way. go back to the obama presidency. the stock market was great. people make too big a deal in my opinion about the president. >> neil: whose bull market is this? barack obama's or -- >> this is the world's bull market. this bull market started in america and outside of america at the same time at various points -- >> neil: quit playing politics. >> politics is important but people make too much importance associated with it when so many other things are also going on. you really need to think about the totality. my advise to people is think global first. you think the yield curve discussion. that discussion has been stupid from the beginning. what really matters in a world where big huge global banks and big huge global corporations can borrow in one country and lend in another faster than where we can have this interview, it's the gdp weighted global curve that matters. it has a positive slope to it. yield curve is important but only on a global basis. >> neil: okay. you like chinese stocks right now. you like -- china market has stabilized? >> the chinese market is doing great. it's great because people are pessimistic about it. the news on china day is note that great but better than what people feared. a question i don't think -- first off, their numbers are lousy. when i say lousy, i don't mean the quantity, i mean the quality of them. absolutely. the fact is that american numbers aren't so perfect either. ours are better than theirs are. the western worlds are better. but government data is imperfect. it wasn't really intended to be perfect. what i like to look at, what i prefer is to take lots of big global corporations that deal with trade and see what their actual experience is. while there's a fair amount of coverage like apple saying we got problems in china, you find more companies that are doing well in china right now than you find doing badly. >> neil: interesting. you wrote about a dozen books. i've read all of them. "the beat the crowd" one stands out several years back. you tend to go the other way. a lot of the world is -- most people are zigging with you. they're bullar and confident. >> we -- larry said this well yesterday in his description -- if i like melt up right now. i don't think we'll accelerate that much. the fact is that the john templeton phrase that i used forecast, bull markets are born on pessimism -- it doesn't always work that way. we're not clearly to euphoria. we're being optimistic after last year took all of our optimism away. that tendency -- >> neil: you agree it was -- the conditions remain good. >> the conditions do remain -- >> neil: you're not standing on it -- >> no, at this point in time we have a ways to go to get sentiment up. >> neil: thanks. ken fisher. we have a lot more coming up. at the corner of wall and broad, we were down three points today. but we don't know who will happen tomorrow at 9:30, do we? more after this. the matters.ar... introducing the all-new 2019 ford ranger, it's the right gear. with a terrain management system for... this. a bash plate for... that. an electronic locking rear differential for... yeah... this. heading to the supermarket? get any truck. heading out here? get the ford ranger. the only adventure gear built ford tough. so, every day, we put our latest technology and unrivaled network to work. the united states postal service makes more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. >> neil: if you don't think there's an emergency at the border, go to yuma, arizona, . the mayor is declaring a state of emergency. migrants released into the community. god to do something. how much impact might it have on the border crisis? something that a number of prominent democrats have been raising is an issue, including cory booker. jeh johnson, barack obama's homeland security chief. brandon enjoyed on the phone with me. to your point and you are talking about this in the crisis and everything before so many others were and are and i'm just wondering, there could be more cities like yuma doing this. >> i would expect they would be a lot more cities during this. when president trump says were going to transfer these individuals to sanctuary cities, it is to relieve the stress and pressure that's happening on the cities that have absolutely no fault. yuma is not asking to harbor these individuals or protect these individuals, but they are getting slammed right now. they are spending thousands of dollars every day trying to support these individuals that we have to release for one reason or another. >> neil: one idea that's been advanced, you know and we've discussed it, send a lot of these folks to sanctuary cities were mayors and governors of states like california feel that they are due protection. how likely do you think it is he would deliver on that? >> i think it's very likely that he will deliver in the short term. in the long term, how viable that idea is is debatable simply because of the funds and how much it costs to transport these individuals. but let's face it. if these cities feel the same pressure that yuma, arizona, is feeling, there's a lot better chance the politicians are going to step up and do their job. that's the problem here. we have a dysfunctional progress and they refused to do their job for the american public. that's what we have to get at. >> neil: it has escalated, the 100,000 and the overruns of detention centers, there doesn't seem to be any ground either democrats are giving going back to the wall and funding for it to increase the man and woman power at these detention centers. don't get started on a be providing more judges at the border to deal with the population surge. what happens in the near term? >> what the administration has to do is they have to look at what they can do under the current authority. attorney general barr has said he's thinking about holding these individuals pending their deportation or asylum proceedings. that's a great idea. that's a game changer if we have the best space to hold these individuals. because i.c.e. only has around 45,000 beds, we can't hold even 10% of the numbers crossing. if we can't do that, it's not going to change the game. the ideas they are. >> neil: brandon judd, thank you for taking the time. speaking of time, we will know tomorrow morning. the mueller report will be out. how much will d be out, after t this. why rent when you can buy? ÷/2@v;eeówuòr@ the doctor's office might mejust for a shot.o but why go back there when you can stay home with neulasta® onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. in a key study neulasta® reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1% a 94% decrease. neulasta® onpro is designed to deliver neulasta® the day after chemo and is used by most patients today. neulasta® is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta® if you're allergic to it or neupogen (filgrastim). an incomplete dose could increase infection risk. ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems allergic reactions, kidney injuries and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious, sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. if you'd rather be home ask your doctor about neulasta® onpro. pay no more than $5 per dose with copay card. state of the art technology makes it brilliant. the visionary lexus nx. lease the 2019 nx 300 for $359 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. >> neil: herman cain is not taking himself out of consideration for the federal reserve post despite the fact that four republican senators are not going to vote for him. herman cain will be my special guest tomorrow on the show by which time we will know what's in the mueller report. the fallout from that from so many. "the five" right now. ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with dan bongino, marie harf, jesse watters, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and visit "the five" ." this is a fox news alert. a must-see tv moment set for tomorrow in washington, attorney general bill barr of the deputy attorney general rod rosenstein will hold a news conference at 9:30 a.m. on the dot on the mueller report. president trump that he may also do the same, having a press conference. barr has been facing scrutiny over his handling of the russian investigation. this is a moment we've all been

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