Bring in show music, please.
Hi, i'm cnbc producer katy cramer today on squad pod. Did you hear about the martial law in south korea? The weird lessons we can learn here from global economies and handling crisis?
C. N B, C. Contributor macal caruso kara spending the world today going .
to a vote in france where that the government may collapsed gona have a no confidence vote to the prime minister.
How ultrasound in mi maker royal phillips is using artificial intelligence in health care? Don't worry, it's not coming for doctors.
We are very passionate, giving time back to the careers. We are not competing with. People care. There are a huge shortage of those.
Plus campus spilling the soup early as their CEO heads to a new job, sales force driving the down and president electrons s pick for defense secretary may be in jeopardy.
I never understand. I'm on T, V. I not ready. I don't think to join .
the cabinet. IT is wednesday, december fourth, twenty, twenty four. Squared begins right now.
Stand back to buy. And three, two, one. Cute.
please.
Good morning, everybody, and welcome to school box right here on cnbc. We're live from the asean market. I in times square. I'm Becky quick along with joe kernan.
Andrew is hosting the new york times deeply ook summer today, and he will join us a little later in the show. We up across the board sales force is the big gainer in the door. It's pushing the dow up by about two hundred and thirteen points above fair value.
S, P, futures are up by fifteen, the NASA up by one hundred and two twenty five. IT does come after a mix session for the major averages. You had the S M P and the nasdaq both closing at record high yesterday.
In fact, for the for the S M P, that's fifty five year. The dow close slightly lower. It's been down for a couple sessions in a row, but the door is less than one percent from an all time high as well.
Do you do address you to address the questions about your character problem? You responded .
new yo article .
about you today.
President electrum is considering other options for the cabinet position of running the pentagon amid republican senators concerns over mounting allegations about pete higgs personal life. Multiple reports say trump allies are increasingly concerned that hegyes nomination might not survive further scrutiny. What can you lose three at most republicans if democrats, which they always do, stay solid with the the block yeah.
The wall journal reports the trump has floated floor a governor on the scientist as a possible replacement, and casual conversations with guests are at morale go in. The report says the idea has been presented to the governor for the governor in recent days, and bc nesses reached out the governor, the scientists and the trump transition team for comment, the journal reports. Trump allies have also mentioned former pentagon official Albert koba a freak eston square box and would be a great pic to senator Jones earns, which we've mentioned before for the job who has expressed a great interest in in that position.
pointed that that this would be interesting just because of falling out between the santis and trusted tis was electric governor with trumps endorsement for the first time and when he ran against him. Ah we will break up.
I never understand. I'm on TV. I'm not ready. I don't think to what during the cabinet not I don't know bad haga I don't know, don't know anything. I mean, he serves nobody. Y's got a great background in terms of education, but I never really understood whether that was the best pick and was hoping for some like bridge kobe or to earth or you know I think government, the senses would be a great pick to. So oh.
very .
serious, very serious pics. It's just weird, like the first ag pic, bizarre. Second one, much Better. This, I mean, if you get a right, eventually everybody benefits.
Well, you look, you're going to have to appeal to the republicans tors. As you point IT out, you can only lose three of them if you can keep them. And by the way, it's probably a high bar to get republican senate to to break with the republican incoming president who received such a Mandate at this point. So if if you're getting major push back from five, six senators or more is an issue.
you you have to revisit pretty quickly the couple of their cosy even republic and .
now a popular incoming presidents and is .
in the one of the blue west states.
But if if you are dealing with big push back from the senate, even when you have this majority, you're going to stop and everything .
i'll take any of the other three, but we don't know of six said, I don't know when you start talking about IT in terms like this .
usually means is the question couple .
you want to I think it's a probably in trouble that that the amy gate was gone, you know here today, gone tomorrow. This quickly trumped ce and luker out. so.
This like a little bit more about sales force. We mention those shares are soaring. That company came in with earnings of two dollars and forty one since to share. That was below the expectations of two dollars and forty four cents, but revenue beat expectations and the current quarter revenue guidance succeeded expectations as well. CEO mark ini off spoke to gym grammer less, and I don't mad money about the prospects for its AI chat bott system, which is known as agent force.
Everything is gonna enhance through this agent mechanism. And that's an incredible opportunity that we're able to harness the power of general AI that we've seen and where delivering something absolutely incredible and shark ninia is gonna be a huge success story based on this idea.
Again, that move Better than thirteen percent this morning. And with the move, sales worse, is now up more than forty percent for the year today, well outpacing the S. M. P. Five hundred, two hundred years has up fifty five times the new hides this year.
Jim cramer spoke with him last night, and only that I had to say was watching crammer at the top, where he gave his his ideas about what he sees company coming. And he has a really intriguing ing idea about the idea that with this in coming into administration, you may see closer ties to china. Then we had anticipated part of that points to elan musk being there and having very close tied to china.
That's the case. Jim was saying there is a lot of something you should buy, including apple and starbucks and others that have tied to. This is an interesting idea. It's not when many other people are pushing. And that was pretty .
intriguing, less when you think about what the end means to an end. If there's means are the means to to Better trade in terms of what the united states gets from its trade with china, that I N result if you do IT in in an economic way and we you know lower some of the other tensions with china and know if china cops to being A A serial violator of of WTF, then they do well. Jim even pointed .
to the idea that that trump has had a lot more fiery retorts that he's aimed at canada, then he aimed at china since the election. And thin may be part of that is because elan moscow, so involved to be on the china.
could pull back everything. Know some of the stuff they did that was pretty bad, pretty aggregation, whether it's or dumping. I mean, they were dumping, I don't they do. You got, I know, a position to moderate what they do because .
because their own interest capacity.
But maybe things get Better and be good.
And we're watching shares of cambell, the maker of cambell soups, CEO mark clouse is leaving to become president of the n. Fels washington commanders. Wow, that's an interesting move. That move is effective as of january thirty first. He's going to be replaced by mic B, C.
The former CFO and current president of campus meals and beverages division class became CEO in early twenty and fifty and oversaw the effort to try and diversify the company away from just soup into other packaged food and snack brands. Campus owns pepper farms, pay sala and goldfish crackers. Also reported earnings a day earlier than schedules and a beat estimates on the bottom line. IT missed slightly on the top line that stock down by about one point four percent.
Go fish crackers. We go through a .
lot of 怎么了?
I think this is a trap. T that would be the only or somebody some like there, maybe I know only package. No, that was the your dots for for a nice dinner would be just no .
way well get um .
that wasn't the only thing he served, but he was known for serving them as a simple appetizer, especially during thanksgiving and cocktail hours. Gold fish crackers were one of her favorite snacks and paired well with her preferred drink, the reverse Martini, which features more of her moth in jen really that interest.
Next on squared, the economics feeling change around the world. But C N B C can tribute Michelle cosa bra, the surprising and very brief martial law in south korea and the european and economy that hasn't grown by much since two thousand eight.
The reason we're talking so much about france is because their debt now trades almost worse than greece.
and it's the second largest economy in the euro.
plus what mcc is watching in south amErica around the globe. Right after this.
i'm thinking about dana cord cutting his finger dressed up as Julia child on server net that you remember that? No, yes, he's like she's cutting and he cuts this in in IT just is hammer ging just all over the plate. I.
This is squared from c nbc today with joe carne and Becky ick.
Stand by joe is mike q software. The opposition parties calling for president units and peaches. Now, after we declared law about a budget fight, the order was lifted six hours later after the parliament voted against the measures, the political CS also played out. The markets impacting the currency, the south korea and stocks are now cbc contributor, the shall crews of cabra CEO of mcc global enterprises.
Good morning. We didn't see this one coming.
We met before. I think we have we go away, back, obviously, in many places around the world when we look and see things happening. It's confusing for americans because we take for granted.
I mean, we have our our issues in this country, obviously. But martial law, based on his political opposition, is calling them criminals. That's communist. So i'm going to clear marcel on control the media, whatever that in tails, which is a big deal. And at last six hours.
I was very short lived. Yes, we didn't have the support of the, can you plain?
I saw the headline that he declared martial lives like what did north korea do meter reaction?
Then I was like, what that's now that is the question where north korea is in stability with all these troops still a massed on the what is that the demo kit with over that line yeah the dmz yes. Um so .
obviously the whole world was taken by surprise, right? He does IT late time korea, right? I think your shows on over when he does IT. And then the korean won was off by seven percent. All of the internationally traded korean stocks that were released in london or here in the united states sold off by seven percent.
The parliament reacted in the middle of the night, voted against martial law, and as a result, he had to withdraw the whole thing all before the korean market ever actually had a chance to react. The the central bank of korea came out, said, we're going to provide as much liquidity as we need. The mark authority came out, said, don't worry, the markets going to open on time.
And as you can see, there actually isn't a huge reaction in the korean stock market today because poof, IT was over from by the time they went to bed to the time they woke up in the morning. But still IT caused a lot of IT pushed U. S.
Yields lower because people were concerned about what was happening. Is this because of north korea? People are right in korea or south korea are still waiting for a good explanation.
Is, you know, what were you thinking, right? Because now he looks like his days are numbered. His party looks like it's going to abandon him. It's not clear they have enough votes to impeach him, but if enough people defect from his party.
then he got really a few people like his defense minister. He went to high school with other people within his own ranks who knew what was going on.
Yeah, no. IT was IT was incredibly using to them to the whole world. And and i'm sure you know he he's a conservative. He's a road business. Conservative is proved regulation. It's sea and i'm sure that you know caught him by surprise and not sure he realized just the terrible, terrible market reaction that he unleashed as a result of doing this. Know I nowhere .
in middle of night what IT cause the initial, uh, I guess, budget budgetary terms to become so front? And what does he want? What does the opposition pushing for? Is are there any similarities to osi? Are when we do dogs or we're going to?
So yes, so so there's a reve party. The party that used to be empower was progressive, that may want to rely more on government programs to solve problems. Where is he is more about deregulation.
Is that is all sense familiar?
yes. By the way, it's the same problem in france. I you which you also .
have a yeah I know that I saw that that you're going to to make the draw some parallels tell us.
I mean, so today is going to be a vote in france where that the government may collapse, going to have a no confidence vote to prime minister will be the shortest premiership since one thousand nine hundred and fifty three months.
Yeah, so why I was the elections? The last like that can hold the begin until next? yeah. I mean.
I I suppose the good news in france is you can only dissolve the government once a year, so they have to wait until july before they are going have new elections. But they also have big budget fights going on, which is one of the similar drivers between that in south korea is there are fighting over how to cut the spending levels in france, which are horrific. You've got six percent the deficit, six percent of GDP.
The th yeah the rule in europe is supposed to be three .
percent of GDP. So their way over, he's just trying to get IT down to five percent of GDP. Um and there were you know sixty billion dollars worth of either tax hikes or tax cuts.
They're going to they nationalized the gas companies. Are are they going to scrap in other two billion of dividends from the gas company? They want to cut the number of teachers.
I wanted to increase the amount that people had to pay for their prescriptions, which was a no go from marine open. They wanted to raise electricity taxes. That's all you know, he said.
That's not onna happen. So now the right in the left look like they're going to hanging up. Vote him, vote no confidence for him. So you end up with some kind of caretaker government with emergency powers to do the basics until they can figure out what's next. That I mean, the reason we're talking so much about Frances because they are debt now trades almost worse than greece, right?
And it's the second largest economy in the in the euro, right?
I I would not say we're on the verge of eo zone crisis. I mean the ten year deal in france, if we can put IT up is like three percent. I mean, nobody y's terrified.
It's trading at a premium to germany is the biggest premium that we've seen in a very long time and the rest of trades worse increase, which has been rectifying itself for the last fifteen and years. But you have to worry about an economy that doesn't grow. They haven't grown since two thousand eight. They just don't grow and they are emblem matic of all of the problems that europe faces right now, which is, you know they're .
calcify before we almost spend the globe with similar issues about overspending and in debt GDP. And and so all these things, I don't know what IT says for global currency fluctuations. Guess we're not as bad, then we'll stay the reserve currency. But if everyone has overspent and they're going to have to inflate their currencies, what does that mean about a global slow down to the bottom?
Well, you call me a professor of the obvious, but when money costs .
nothing all over the world, professor.
the are professor and you. So all the world people borrows and bar and barrow because .
they thought there were no.
And now and now we're all living with the overhang and the the hangover.
So in addition to to making us multiplying eti to save the human species, elan may also save the world from its overspending with.
So what elan is doing very interesting. What going to try to do is very interesting, because he's going to try to cut the federal government by thirty percent, right? There's only one place in the world that that's done that's been done recently.
That's argentina, the new president, argentina. Do you know how much you cut the budget? Thirty percent? He didn't in one month, one month.
I I spent a lot of time trying to figure out how do you cut a budget thirty percent and one month? Because there are so many know are every dollar in the federal budget there is a constituency. There's a legislator who wants to defend that dollar, right? And what IT takes us an enormous amount of political will.
He's got a president. You've got a president. argentina.
Who did you see the cover? The economist this week? The headline is my hate for the state is infinite.
That's his quote. And so they've been extremely aggressive about cutting. They fire thirty thousand federal workers.
Um I mean, it's what a question is, only action in the economy and whether he will continue to have support.
So so that was been very interesting. His pully fAllen a little bit, but considering how much government spending has been cut, the recession wasn't nearly as bad as you might think. You know, the world bank was estimating this year they might have declined to four and a half percent considering you're going to have know you remember your view of you took that to select I S S X I. If you cut g thirty percent, you're you're going to hurt the economy. However, they expect the economy to recover by next year because it's also converted to A P I mei yassir.
All of its interest can cut.
Interesting is that really you ve got to pay your .
bills or you can play your way. So what we do have the cut, we need to do IT.
Now before all of that, their spending, I was actually wondering if our next treasury security dollar mean we're trying to boost manufacturing.
You want a week or two, how many federal employees go to work once a month and are were working about? I saw some figure. IT was tiger.
Yes, so I can do ten. I think I can do ten, fifteen percent. Like tomorrow can you do? You could .
probably do this job. And that .
and no .
cutting, I can do.
I can do ten to fifteen percent I think can do so the other ten of fifty.
And if you have the political .
will from legislature.
I mcc global wow.
I love that. Thank you.
How many employees? Yeah ah you're looking at love .
that alright that's a key employee yes but I I .
got lots of you know great contractors .
that work so well. Oh, absolutely. I never said thank you .
always pleasure, lady and gentleman.
Keys will be .
next still .
to come on school pod a check in with our Andrew ross sorkin ahead of the new york times deal book summit and where A I is a play in our health care system with royal phillips CEO royal cats.
We were looking at how can we make the experience for Better by using technology that is creating an ambience in which they they feel more at home when they have to take a scan that's actually shortening this can, with the help of ai.
radiology, administrative work and so much more about to change, read after this.
Welcome back. You're listening to school pod. Here's joe turnin.
the new york end's deal book. Somebody is happening the day and undertakes his life from a jazz icon center just giving you A A generic intro and because I think it's hard for you to here, but can you hear me? OK, I am excited about.
you can hear me.
I can hear you.
I can hear you. Well, we had a lot of people around, and I actually put one of these, and I could hear on both sides.
You know, every year I see IT on your face, something is happening. You're talking to someone and they say something that's just so unbelievable. And I think you know at the time or have a pretty good idea. And you know what i'm talking about in previous years where you just can't believe what someone just said, and it's gonna everywhere by tomorrow, who's you gonna be from today with the lineup you don't know. Can you predict you've got .
good questions? I never know, no know what the great part is that so many options right to he could something will come up. That's the whole, whole point of in that big headlines and .
news from the .
king I draft, you draft, know who is who is headed here. John from Polly market is gonna here. So maybe he could set up A A betting line on where to come from.
disgust. Let's talk about give a sense of who's on deck exactly and where some that news can come from. We're going to start the day and just a little bit with Henry fin, of course, of cdl. We will talk markets, of course, with them, but we're really onna talk about what's going on in this country. He was, of course, one of the largest actually one of the top five republican donors just behind elon mus this year.
And so we will talk about everything that's happening during this transition of what that means for the economy than a little bit later will talk to open a eyes CEO sam altman on about A I and where everything is going a little bit after that, canda's legend and entrepreneur Serena Williams will be with us. And then we're going to talk about our democracy, this country, about everything is just happened, the election in what happens next with form president bill clinton. And then this afternoon, I think possibly one of those consequential people, when IT comes to the global economy figure, j.
Power, be with us, will bring you that live, of course, right here on C. N, B, C. And then we're going to talk to in the most, listen to pod casters for women, alex Cooper post to call her daddy and the daddy gang.
And then later in the afternoon we're going to a discussion of about G, L P. Wes, of course, this great revolution happening in medicine elli CEO David ricks, along with doctor for tema, one of the leading obesity doctors in the country, will talk about mental health and a massive laws so happening in the U. K.
In just a little bit with prince Harry, of course um the duke of sox tag mental health and so much more and they were going to spend time with the man is in the hot seat uh alphabet and google CEO sunder for chive because that company um in the crossfire of the government to possibly get broken up. And then we will conclude the day with the one and only jeff bazas, amazon founder and force, now the founder of blue origin, who was headed to the moon and then hopefully to mars. So we've got a huge day uh, set up for you will be bring you coverage throughout the day right here on C.
N, B, C. That amazing. And was quickly I was, I was I didn't have a last name and I was like prince joe, but i'm not and he's not prince Harry, so he does not have a last name like us. Mira models that is true.
does not have the last thing because I was looking to the list. So I think there was a some kind of material about the event of a couple months ago that someone asked me, you'll take a look at and I saw and he just said, prince harrier and I said, does I literally thought myself, I google did, does he have a last name and how do you write IT? I just did that. I did.
I have a last name, joe O Q, but he does literally does not have a that that is so cool so um IT seems a little bit and accra isc. But no, no, can't wait anything and wait for for .
all those things we've been talking all morning about what we might .
hear coming out of this, find out whether they're cutting at the next meeting. Just yes, you know.
I last at last, at last. We will be watch morning. Yeah, we will be watching all day.
We're really looking forward to IT.
As promising disruption and health care, but also a potentially Better patient care. Jones, now someone on the forefront of this revolution, right? Jacobs, cu of raw Philips's, based out of the netherlands, but is in the U.
S. Of the annual meeting of the radiological society, north america. So you can see where we're gone with this.
And that is whether machines and A I can be Better than the doctor at all, the subjective diagnostic things that that we worry so much. I i've always wanted when I rather a false positive or a false negative, I think i'd rather him. I don't want either.
I don't want either. I don't want you to miss something. But I to tell me that I got like six months to live.
Unless, you know, unless I can pay you, then you give me a year. But but IT will IT be Better? Or do you need a doctor .
that's really exciting to be here. So thank you for having and it's exciting time and health care because we see many chAllenges and opportunities. Um I think everyone who walks into hospital feels that sees IT and A I can actually really make a difference. Um and I think it's not competing with the caregivers or the people in hospital actually supporting them, but we need to look for with our innovations. And actually, what you saw at the imaging show that we were and that i'm just coming from is actually that a lot is happening already today that helps caregivers.
What is a doctor and Better diagnosis? What is the technician in first time right positioning with health AI? Or what is a nurse in giving her time or him time back, spending more time ventilation, because we can do some of the reporting that they need to do, on average in youth, spends twenty minutes on admin tasks an hour and actually step, we want to reduce five minutes. And their AI can really .
make a really think about history, logical studies or psychological site where you have to send IT out and someone passed to get in under a slide. Look at IT interpret whether you see screams. I know something about these things now as you get a little order, but screams are based on if you could just plug IT in to A I, you'd know immediately, and then even the surgeon would know whether he had to remove more.
Now, I, I agree. And IT goes force. The great example is psychology, right? We use a lot of slides that we look at. You gonna do analysis, but slides are very hard to put a on, so you need to first digitize.
So there's a real current revolution going on where we are digitizing biology and phillips is doing and phillips is doing that and we are doing that with and why you landing, they are actually really doing that at scale. Uh, we are their partner and they also combining a than with other data sets so that you can really get a full view of the patients. And you can come to Better that know is fortinet of cancer and can do with Foster and even Better.
you know, no question right, that this is needed. You can understand how this would make a huge impact in a hospital setting like that. But hospitals don't have a lot of money.
Most of them Operate on profit margins of one, two percent. There are expectations that, that will even get swiss tighter next year with changes that are expected to come down the pike way. Everybody looking for ways to cut out waste and fraud.
Some of that waste has been supplementing the hospitals to some extent. So what happens? Where's the money in IT? It's not chief to do this to digitized and set up.
no. But I think at the same time, you see that a lot of what A I can do is actually help you to drive productivity. So whilst and a file looking at an essence in a simple way, delivering two things, one hand, Better care, that's what we're just were talking about.
How can you actually use the power of data nai to come to Better diagnosis, to Better treatments? But the very important other size is how can you actually give Better access to care in an affordable way? And there actually AI also comes to um to help, and I give you a few examples.
Um there's a huge overload on imaging, neat coronea patients waiting to get. And so we developed an algorithm called smart speed that actually has three times faster scan time so you can actually double the amount patients you can do in the same hour that you could do before. Which actually means that for a hospital, they can tweet more patients, they can generate more revenue.
And they don't need to buy naseri whole new M R. They install an upgrade. We d an A I gone of algy's. How much money .
do you need up front to implement some of these changes, upfront fees that maybe pay off over time? I don't know how much time we are flexible .
in the business model. So actually, sometimes if you don't need, I need of front payment is just a pay as you go or a pay as you consume. An imaging, for example, is very common that also you pay per study or poor report, which is also how the system gets reimbursed.
So actually we tie and also looked at how can we really bring photo. I give you another example of affordability. So we have come up and we presented the next blue seal, mr. That is a healing free mr. That actually has a total course of ownership that is forty percent less.
is a traditional and .
that's a massive saving over lifetime that we are driving. And that actually is a combination of hardware evolution, but also A I that you deploy in the workflow. Because the big savings to be a helping the systems with is how can we make more efficient workload and take routine tasks out and deploy A I give you to twenty five percent of scheduling drops out. So the patients that gone of the to do not show up, that's a massive loss of of productivity right there. We can help hospitals with latest kind of AI to actually feel that very quickly so that they can make sure they get the best volume load and the best revenue generation capacity.
I mean, I would think, like so many things that the doctors and caregivers and nurses shouldn't worry about being display, should worry about being able or they should be happy that we'll be able to focus on more productive things than some of the many of things that they're been doing. yeah. So we are very passion .
about giving time back to the care service. And that's actually where technology really can because actually say for me, it's we are not competing with with people of caregiver fs. There are huge shortage of those and we expect that shortage will also uh and only increase towards future because demand is going exponentially up and we just don't have an doctor's, nurses and and technicians.
So actually we need to help to close that gap would bring technology forward that can take talks away. As I just mentioned, the reporting some of the diagnosis where you can actually do populated reports. But also when a radiologist needs to actually um report back, they currently need to make specific reports. They use uh they need to um use a lot of time for that. We can actually do that automatically.
We had a genre application that we showed that actually on the voice dictation in merely puts up the reports than the radiology only yes to validate and then they can go back into talking to the patient, explaining actually what the diagnoses about because that's actually where real value is also created and making sure that patient understand that the right diagnosis is done. So I think you see a lot of advancements along the workflows where we can do this in order. Example is with with children, we have a great collection ation with nickel child's hospital. We were looking at how can we make the experience for children Better by using technology that is creating an ambience in which they they feel more at home and they have to take a can that's actually shortening this can, with the help of A I, so that if they can do IT Foster, and then also with the outcomes and reading, how can you get the best outcome supporting A I? So you can look at all the different steps, vote for the patient and condition to make IT a Better.
Although we're hoping that the promise of A I is all it's correct of the day I to health care and and that's all you'd need to do to make a life changing, world changing almost a quana leap for for what we do with. And then we put everything else, A I can do, but healthy care. There's so many different aspects that I can think of, the, so many different places, diagnoses, theraputics, all them.
Maybe we'll be a real thermos some day instead of a fake there. Maybe A I take a drop of blood and tell you this is gonna happen. You you've got this, your liver is this you if there is a lot of promise and a lot of potential. And thank you they from here. And uh, I think we're not even I think that we're like the first batter's up in the first inning.
That's about where we are. I agree.
we are scratching the surface.
More to come. Very promising, of course, wish to be taking care of. But if you do in a responsible manner, there's a massive win for patient, for nation and for health care system.
I want to false, but decided I rather have false positive, right? Okay, you're right. Thank you.
Thank you. okay. Prince illian used whales when he was in school. And in in printer, I use mount battery mt. Was winds.
mount battery dash winds?
Or when he got married, they can use IT for official purposes, for royal ascendants that don't have H R H status.
I thought I was not battle because grandfather is children.
News, cambridge, because he was also do cambridge, William, so they use cambridge is very less so.
You, joe, new jersey?
No, go. I'm not current. Get really in june.
And bets the pod for today. Thanks for listening on our run down tomorrow. Highlights from the new york times deal book summit please tune in squad box is hosted by joe turnin.
Becque and Andrew ross sorkin were on T. V. Weekday mornings on cnbc at sixty turn, or you can get the best of our show right into your ears when you follow spot. Follow this podcast. Whatever you like to listen will be right back here tomorrow.
Now we are clear. Thanks, guys.