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tv   In the Loop With Betty Liu  Bloomberg  April 15, 2015 8:00am-10:01am EDT

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loop." i am betty liu. the man behind the power breakfast is taking his concept outside of new york city. expanding the regency brand. why is he taking on the agriculture industry? i will explain what i mean about that. mistakes the u.s. made in dealing with china. former treasury secretary hank paulson joining peter cook, laying out the mistakes that the u.s. has made with china. google calling the antitrust charges facing europe off the mark. regulators say the company is abusing dominance in the search engine market. google favors its own comparison shopping service above rivals. the au -- the eu plus antitrust
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chief says it is not limited to europe. >> we are not for endometrial companies that contain u.s. companies. companies from the united states play a major role when it comes to these business associations with complaints. betty: google has -- the charges are the result of the four year investigation. moments ago we got word that the european central bank is staying the course on interest rates. if governing council decided not to change the already low financing rates. the ecb holding their press conference in half an hour. a deal that will create the world -- no pf finland agrees to buy apoptosis movement of france.
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more than $16.5 billion. note the apostle biggest acquisition ever. the company picks up contracts with the two biggest wireless carriers ever. the pace of economic growth in china is the slowest it has been in six years. gdp expanded in the first quarter at an annual rate of 7%. new figures all point to a slowdown in china's economy. their speculation that the government will take steps to spark more growth. in the plucked congress will get a say in the iran nuclear deal. -- it looks like congress will get a say in the nuclear deal. president obama says he will sign it. the latest version of the bill shortens congressional review time for 60 days -- from 60 days to 30 days.
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those are your top headlines. europe's central bank saying they will keep interest rates on hold. ecb chief mario draghi due to speak in frankfurt. we will monitor those headlines. anna edwards has been monitoring the ecb from london. all eyes are on the news conference. some people are talking about tapering. their only a month into their programs. what are investors going to be looking for? anna: he wants to tell the story of an improving european economy, perhaps pointing to some of the better data we have seen. but not leave investors with the impression that things are so good that the quantitative easing plan would come to a premature end. we could see plenty of questioning of mario draghi about the conditions for the
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ending of that quantitative easing plan. the plan is to spend 1.1 trillion euros buying bonds in the european market. only six weeks in and we are asking what are the criterion for ending it. the reason for that is there is some confusion between what the criteria are. they talked about continuing until september 2016 or until the ecb sees a sustained adjustment in the part of inflation toward the goal which is just below 2%. if we start to see sustained improvement in those inflation numbers, might that be enough of a criteria to curtail quantitative easing plan earlier. we have seen better data coming through but inflation is still around zero. it bounced up from the low we saw in december. that is about zero. nothing to get too excited about just yet. betty: it is hard to get excited
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about what is going on in greece right now. still such a mess. what do you expect about greece? anna: the focus of the greek conversation is going to take place in latvia at the end of this month. we see the eurozone creditors coming together to talk to greece about their agenda. can greece deliver sufficient reform to placate the concerns of the creditors? to allow greece to remain in the eurozone? that is where the focus of the conversation is going to take place. the ecb is probably going to stick to doing what it has been doing, extending support to the greek banking sector. we have seen in the last days the ecb step up the motto support to greek banks. there will be questions about that suspect -- about that subject. betty: staying in europe, after four years of scrutiny, the eu
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accusing google of abusing its dominance of the search engine markets. i will get to hans nichols who is tracking the developments. lots going out -- a lot is going on outside our borders. what exactly do we know so far about this battle between google and the eu? hans: what we have is a statement of objections. u.s. tech companies are going to have to start reckoning with the power center in brussels because they have so many concerns. this case is about google. it is about antitrust. it is narrow and broad. narrow in the sense that they are focusing in mostly on google shopper which is one feature they have on google search. they hinted that it may go on further to google travel but to the core search function, they did not necessarily say a lot about that. they are expanding it and they
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are going to go after an inquiry into the android operating system. that is the bad news for google. the other aspect of this is the commission gave google an opportunity to remedy this. they say you have to have your results with shopper be somewhat comparable to the other results. the fines are significant. it could be up to 1/10 of google's global earnings, 6.6 euros. a third of their revenue comes from europe. some of that is me googling myself, but just a small fraction. [laughter] betty: like 5% of it. how much of protectionism is at play? hans: by their own admission, european commission officials
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have talked about how embarrassed -- europe has not continued to compete on the tech front. they're looking to you regulations to help level the playing field. this is not just about google. this is about facebook, other tech companies. privacy concerns. microsoft has had their challenges. this is across the tech spectrum. lobbyists are going to need to counter. betty: thank you. hans nichols, our international correspondent. a big deal this morning also happening in europe. no p.m. buying alcatel in an all stock deal -- gnocchinokia, buying alcatel. charlie conan caught up with nok ia's ceo. >> if you look at the long-term in order to be competitive and
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to be a leader in this field it was important. otherwise, we are happy with it. they are doing well. the company should provides the portfolio customers will need and want and makes it competitive like nobody else in europe. i see us being number one or number two in every area we choose to compete in. very innovative company. betty: caroline joins us with more. any executive in technology is going to lick up this morning, looking at this deal and wondering what that means for their own market. an executive from china to taiwan to here in the u.s.. verizon, cisco. talk about the impact of that. caroline: absolutely. it is a deal that is changing the landscape of the telecom
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industry because it is creating the world's biggest network equipment maker. it is going to compete. we know that alcatel is strong in ip routing. we make equipment -- they make equipment to transmit the data. all the music, all the videos you can see on your devices. very strong company that is going to be created from this merger. $16.6 billion deal. that is the biggest deal we've seen in the industry since 1999. we know that both companies were financially in trouble for the past few years. alcatel has been struggling. for nokia, it has been rough
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patches in the past few years. a have a new ceo -- they have a new ceo who took charge of trying to make this merger happen. they will create a company with more than 100,000 employees. that is going to be bigger in terms of network equipment than the other competitor in europe. betty: thank you so much. caroline conan on the implications of this huge deal. back on the corporate front in the u.s., bank of america reported their first quarter results this morning. it looks like their costs are coming down. their profit beat estimates. scarlet fu has more. scarlet: sagging in the premarket. you mentioned have the bank rebounded last quarter. the big driver was the legal cost being a fraction of what they were a year ago. $370 million versus $6 billion
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last year --. investors are looking at the revenue line. topline trick more than 5%. they missed analyst estimates by contrast, jpmorgan and wells fargo reported higher revenue. clearly what is good for jpmorgan may not be good for wells fargo or bank of america. trading revenue from fixed income and stocks picked up from the sluggish fourth quarter but declined 7% versus last year. sentiment was positive coming into this bank of america earnings report. that might be another reason why it is giving back some of its gains. betty: thank you so much. scarlet fu on bank of america. expanding the grand. an interview with the lows hotels chairman jonathan tisch on taking the regency model worldwide. ♪
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betty: a look at our top stories. we begin with oil and opec which apparently is not bothered by the worldwide supply glut. opec members including iran and libya, urging the group to support prices. crude advanced for a fifth day in a row but prices still 45% lower than a year ago. global layoffs are at 100,000 and are going up. morgan stanley is still on the block. ceo james gorman has set the bank is committed to selling this business to cut capital and improve the returns. the bank had a deal in late 2013
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to sell the unit but it fell apart because the u.s. bank -- stan druckenmiller is anticipating surprises. and improving chinese economy, rising oil prices and a hands-off approach to interest rates by the fed. he made the prediction in an interview. druckenmiller does not like the look of the greek debt crisis. >> the banks do not own greek debt anymore. draghi has q e. e at his disposal. if there is contagion, he can contain it. i do not get this theory about how greece flushes itself down the toilet and puts itself through misery and everyone else does that to. a more rational response is to go to reform and become more embedded in europe. betty: i thought misery loves
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company. you can see stephanie ruhle's interview on "market makers." last year, i got a personal tour of one of the storied hotels in new york city. the regency, home of the wall street power breakfast. their im with jonathan tisch. jonathan tisch runs the regency as chairman of lowe's hotels. it was a $100 million renovation. the power breakfast is going strong and it is going elsewhere. regency is expanding across the country to start in san francisco. jonathan is here with me for his first television interview since the news broke. great to see you. jonathan: good morning. betty: i was not taking you into a hotel room. [laughter] jonathan: for the whole world to
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see. betty: you decided to expand? jonathan: we have an active at lowe's hotels. now we have three brands. we're taking the lows regency name and putting it on a hotel we recently purchased in san francisco. the mandarin oriental. the deal closes today. in a couple hours, the mandarin oriental comes the lowe's regency hotel of san francisco area of the first time we are taking the regency name and expanding it beyond park avenue. heart of her thinking has to do with the $100 million spent at the loews regency new york. travelers who say this is a specime special brand. we think san francisco is poised to be the second regency hotel. great location and rooms. it is the top 12 stories of the third highest building in san francisco.
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we are going to institute a power breakfast in san francisco. betty: how do you do that? jonathan: it is all about getting the men and women who make the decisions about business deals, who were involved in culture the inner workings of each city and getting them there and making them feel comfortable. making them feel like they are part of the fabric of what we do as a hotel but the larger fabric of the city. betty: how much are you going to spend on renovating this mandarin hotel? jonathan: the rooms were renovated three years ago. we will look at changing up the lobby and the restaurant. we love the restaurant to feel like it is in a lowe's hotel. we're using the same design firm which is based in houston. alone by the name of lauren -- a woman by the name of lauren.
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we are going to be using her for san francisco. the roads were recently done. we will focus -- the rooms were recently done. we will focus on the lobby. the restaurant. as we speak, there are men and women changing the signs. betty: that is exciting. jonathan: we're also expanding the lowe's brand. downtown chicago. 400 rooms right in the heart of chicago. our fifth hotel is under construction right now. lowe's sapphire falls. that will bring us to 5200 rooms. we have a lifestyle brand we are rolling out called oe. betty: you talk about hotels and the tourism industry.
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betty: you're watching "in the loop." good morning. i am betty liu. with me this hour is jonathan tisch, the chairman of lowe's hotels. i know you addressed yesterday in d.c., the significance of the travel industry to the economy. my take away is, what do you have against farmers? you said the travel industry is a huge growth driver of jobs. the agricultural sector
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employees just 1.8 million people but they get their own department. jonathan: i have nothing against farmers. i do not need farmers to take my food. -- to taint my food. the point of the comparison is that we employ 8 million people. they're responsible for $222 billion of exports. farming is a $150 billion. half of americans lived on farms. today it is 2%. they should be supported. they are very important to our economy and lives. travel and tourism we still are that vehicle for creating jobs and we are creating good jobs. american, middle-class jobs all over the country. towards him takes place in all 435 congressional districts. the group that i addressed as we speak on capitol hill
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meeting with elected officials from all 50 states to talk about our industry. we have a progress. we have greatly improved visa wait times. if you're coming from china or brazil, used to take three or four months. now is down to four or five days. we are making progress with border protection in terms of the experience want to get off the airplane and get through lines quickly. those are issues -- betty: what is wrong? it sounds a things are going great. jonathan: the companies we compete with spend millions of millions of dollars to get that same traveler. the travel is important to us. they stay with us longer and spend more money. in new york city, 22% of visitors were from international destinations and were responsible for 50% of the money spent in new york. about $4500 per international traveler in our country.
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we need more international travelers. where losing out to countries like france and spain. we losing out to countries like canada. these are countries that spend a fortune -- if you're the head of travel and tourism -- betty: who wants to go to can it -- wants go to canada instead of new york? jonathan: what other countries have a more defined policy for inbound travel -- we're making progress, our bottom -- the obama administration has been a partner. when so but he comes to this country from another country, they spend money. we are creating good american jobs. betty: the perception is that the travel industry -- a lot of the jobs are low-paying jobs. kind of like fast food jobs. jonathan: that is not the case.
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their first job may be in an entry-level position but the road to the american dream can take place in the travel and tourism industry. often times people move up in a hotel or restaurant. we work closely with the national restaurant association. people are starting their careers in some form of travel in tourism and they're getting that are jobs. they're moving through the ranks. we can create more good jobs. betty: what exactly do you want? you have 400 plus people talking with lawmakers on the hill. what do you want? jonathan: better understanding of what we do. to not put in policies that will hinder the growth of travel. an area that needs a lot of focus is our infrastructure. especially compared to other countries where they are
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spending billions of dollars on new airports roads him a rail systems -- rail systems. people arrived in kennedy, lax or miami and they cannot get to the central business district because the roads and trained are so bad. we need to focus on the public/private partnerships that can help rebuild our infrastructure. we want parity in terms of issues of shared economy. new ways to book places to stay. we need to have a conversation with elected officials about that. betty: i agree with you on our crumbling infrastructure. joe biden, calling laguardia airport a third world airport. might the speech be better to the mayors and governors of this country? jonathan: we also need to make sure that the faa is reenacted
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-- the act for the faa is reenacted this year. part of the conversation does take place in the nation's capital. betty: great to see you this morning. jonathan tisch, the chairman of low lowe's hotels. china's gdp expended -- expanded in the growth quarter -- in the first quarter at 7%. the chinese economy is still one of the fastest growing in the world. their speculation the government will spark growth. the european central bank is staying the course on interest rates. the governing council decided not to change the low refinancing rate. the bank homes this -- the bank hopes this program will strengthen the region's economy. google calling antitrust charges off the mark. the european commission says google favors its own comparison-shopping service
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above rivals and a new probe to find out if google forces phone and tablet makers to use its software. >> we are neither for enemy troop -- and me trio companies that contain u.s. companies and company's from the united states also play a major role when it comes to these business associations who have complaints. betty: google has 10 weeks to answer the accusations. the charges are the result of a four-year investigation. apple and samsung are building closer ties. google acknowledges -- the company started cooperating after dropping all lawsuits against each other outside the u.s.
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they fight and become friends again. a deal that will create the world's biggest maker of equipment for mobile phone networks. tokyo finland -- nokia finland agreed to buy alcatel. nokia picks up contracts with arises -- with verizon and at&t. mario draghi, set to begin his news conference in frankfurt. europe central bank this morning keeping interest rates on hold. what will he say about greece and other troubles in europe? much more ahead. ♪
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betty: three companies about to hit the public markets this week. one potential ipo that could be the biggest one you have never heard of.
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china's largest online lending platform. estimated value of over $10 million. winfax -- louufax ceo joining us. how big is it in china? >> the market in china is going to be a multiple of what it is in the u.s. if you look out a couple years it be 10 times or more bigger than what it is in the u.s. betty: that is a factor of the side of the market -- the size of the market. >> a lot of needs and china are not being met by traditional banks. you're a lot more individual --
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you have a lot more individuals in china who need access to funding. the growth rate in china this year is about -- the gdp growth rate in china this year's about 7%. part of that transition is getting more domestic consumption. there's a need for a lot more money to go to smes and individuals. betty: people think there is so much hot money and that thanks what are the lending standards for banks when they lend out to companies. that there is a shadow banking system. does it need another layer of peer-to-peer lending that needs to be more regulated? that can be a hotbed of money. >> the banking system in china most of what puts out is to large corporations. you look at job in gdp growth
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it comes from individuals. that is not a part being met by the traditional sector. if you look at the shadow banking the credit risk in that, there is a need for regulation. i think he will see by the end of this year, more concrete measures to say what a bottom line's in terms of what you can and cannot do in this space. it is a balance that has to happen. on the one hand you need direct funding to the economy, on the other hand you have to control the risk. betty: regulators are looking at this. are you planning on ipoing here? greg: we just completed in a round the couple weeks ago. we're looking for the longer term. i think we would like to see regulation get clear in china before we consider an ipo. i think that there is so much development going on in this market in china. it is hard for people to compare directly the u.s. and china.
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the p2p market in the u.s. is about institutional investors. in china it is about retail. betty: greg get, the chairman and ceo of lufax. scarlet fu is monitoring the press conference. there were some protests? scarlet: the news conference has been adjourned because a protester attacked mario draghi president of the ecb. apparently he went up to the stage where mario draghi was speaking and attacked him. and looks like he is sitting back down. a live shot of mario draghi. he is now back at the table and smiling so he appears to be ok. brushing off the dust on the desk and ready to get back to business. he had made some comments but that was broken up cousin a protester -- broken up because a
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protester jumped up. quantitative easing will run until sustained adjustment and inflation. until inflation picks up. implementation of quantitative easing -- he made the point that credit demand has picked up drawing from conclusions from the latest economic data that has shown that. he says the focus is on importation of policy measures putting pressure on governments to reform their economy. a lot of questions about whether mario draghi would address the issue of when quantitative easing would end even though it is just begun six weeks ago. if there is any indication that he would give a timeline to that, that could cause angst to lend less. -- cause banks to lend less.
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106 .08 a slight move up in the euro earlier. a disappointing read for the you -- for new york state. it came back down for the start of mario draghi's news conference. the latest headlines are that the measuring best his stance on quantitative easing, helping to improve the inflation picture in the eurozone has not changed. betty: totally bizarre. he was back on the day. apparently the attacker was protesting, calling ecb dictatorship. scarlet: apparently he was taken off stage in a headlock. we will get those pictures for you. betty: thank you. scarlet fu on mario draghi, attacked before he sat back down
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to talk about quantitative easing. stay with us. ♪
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betty: we mentioned you have that footage of mario draghi being attacked -- we would have that footage of mario draghi being attacked. >> and ecb dictatorship. betty: that is what happened moments ago as the ecb president was starting his press conference. the protester coming up in saying "ecb dictatorship." that person was dragged off a few moments ago. we are going to bring you more headlines from the press conference. we wanted to make sure you saw what happened. president obama relenting he will give congress a voice in
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the iran nuclear deal. the president says he will sign a deal giving congress a say over any deal. lawmakers in both parties backed the bill. >> i believe congress should play a role in ensuring that all the details that need to be in place are there and that on behalf of the american people that we ensure that this is something that holds iran accountable. betty: the bill shortens a congressional review period from 60 day to 30. burr very cells -- are very says set -- revenue rose $2.1 billion . for very reported at 9% gain in comparable sales.
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as the ceo of goldman sachs -- hank paulson offers his take on doing business with the people's republic. peter cook sat down with paulson to talk about the history of the relationship. henry: they are a formidable competitor in addition to being a partner. we will be competing on the one hand and partnering in the other. it is very important for the united states of america to get some important things done. virtually every major global problem we have is easier to meet if we are working with china. global growth, climate change etc.. peter: not every american shares
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that you that they want to see the united states helping china. they see china as a threat to their own job. you take a different view? henry: yes. i understand that you. what i saved -- i understand that you. view. what i say to people, that is one of the reasons i wrote this book. we need to recalibrate our relationship with china. china will act in their interest and we need to act in hours. it is in our interest to find areas to work with them because there are many areas where we are not going to get the result we need. peter: what is your assessment of the obama's administration -- the obama administration's handling of the relationship? henry: it is been consistent over eight different administrations.
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i like a group of things they've done. i like the climate deal. there has been a fair amount that is been done with china. i happen to think -- in this administration and every administration the tendency is to go from crisis to crisis around the world. if we spent even more time on china to reset that relationship , some of the other crises would be easier to deal with. i also believe that perhaps the most important thing we can do is to take the steps we need to strengthen our own economy. time after time, people say to me, have they developed a better form of capitalism? are they going to replace the u.s. as a predominant power? my answer is, we have the strongest economy by far.
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we do not begin to have the problems they have. our fate is in our own hands. if we fix our problems, we will be the major global power for a long time. if we do not, we won't. i do not like to see china as a scapegoat. they have serious problems also. we should be careful what we wish for, those that say i hope they have problems with their economy. if they have problems, ours will be greater. betty: that was peter cook speaking with the former treasury secretary, hank paulson. be sure to catch peter's interview with jack lew today at four clock p.m. eastern time on bloomberg television. i want to get back to those pictures you saw a few moments ago. a protester jumped up, interrupting ecb president mario draghi.
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chanting "ecb dictatorship." it brings home how much not only the world is watching monetary policy but also how it affects people's lives. i want to bring in scarlet fu. i know you've been on top of this news. you and i were remarking, he was interrupted. a pretty dramatic moment. he went back to talking about the economy. scarlet: as if nothing had happened. betty: the euro falls, not because he was attacked but because he said, we're going to continue with our bond buying program. scarlet: he did not miss a beat. there were headlines at said he was attacked by a protester and they had adjourned the conference.
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the woman was wearing a t-shirt i believe it was in german. it looked as if it said something about a tater ship. -- something about dictatorship. she threw what appeared to be confetti as well. the euro moved on the fact that he was talking about how the biggest of the euro area economy are more balanced and rising further in 2016 and 2017. betty: good on the people around him. thank you scarlet. scarlet fu with more on the ecb and some drama we did not expect. we will be back. ♪
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betty: much more to come including this morning's surprise.
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protester interrupting mario job be -- interrupting mario draghi's news conference. ♪
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betty: welcome back to "in the loop." we are 30 minutes away from the opening bell. i want to stay on that story. these things are so straightforward. mario draghi -- let's show the footage again -- getting attacked during the news conference just about 15 minutes ago. >> end the ecb dictatorship. betty: so, peter cook is standing by. our chief washington correspondent. i know you have been to the fed news conferences.
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it raises interesting questions. i do know who it was who came to the rescue of mario draghi. i have never thought about it very closely. i would imagine security is a big issue at these events right? peter: it is a reminder why people like mario draghi economic policy makers need to have security. janet yellen has a robust security detail. in washington and at her press conferences you can be sure there is a healthy dose of security. the fed is a very difficult building to access for anyone including the press, at any time of day. during the news conferences they're a very strict rules. i will not go through everything. in my experience, this would have been very difficult for someone who was not a working member of the press credentialed and authorized by a news organization to be able to participate in a press conference like this and to approach mario draghi in this way.
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something went wrong with their security protocol and my guess is they will make changes. these people, their jobs are hard enough, much less to worry about their physical safety. you just have to remember what happened to the u.s. ambassador to south korea a few weeks ago. betty: when fed officials -- ok, two questions. have you seen protests before fed meetings around the building? do you see stuff like that happening? is it happening more? peter: yes, there have been protests outside the fed. what is much more likely to happen here in washington -- i have seen it happen with a whole host of people testifying -- henry kissinger the other day on capitol hill -- when you have a public congressional hearing members of the public are allowed in after a screening. anyone can wait in line and get access to a congressional hearing. we see these kinds of protests all the time there.
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this kind of closed setting press conferences difference -- different. we do see this all the time. this would be an aberration if it were to happen to janet yellen. betty: when janet yellen travels, give me a sense of her security detail. does she have a lot? peter: i don't want to explain everything about the layers of security that she has, but anyone who has seen her in a public setting can tell that there are certain people who are with her that are not fed economists or staffers, they are security folks. their responsibility is to be with her 24/7 to ensure her safety. you used to see ben bernanke at washington nationals games. most people did not recognize him. they might have been looking out for the two people with a most of the time -- maybe more than that. the reality is that these are
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controversial people making controversial decisions and it is not a huge surprise they get protested. what is a surprise is that somebody could get this close to mario draghi. betty: it has got to be very unsettling. do you expect that even within the fed now that the next time they hold a news conference they might change some protocols at all given what we have just seen with what happened with mario draghi? peter: even before the fed, remember what is happening in washington over the next couple of days. the imf world bank meetings which have been the scene of many protests in the past. you have international economic policy makers coming to washington to talk about some of the very issues mario draghi is talking about and you can be sure they are reassessing their own security for the events this weekend that will play out in washington. there are extra washington police on overtime duty through the course of the stocks and my guess is that they will re--- of
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these talks and my guess is that they will reassess what is happening. betty: thank you so much. peter cook, our chief washington correspondent. just drama with what happened at the press conference. not the scene we expected at all. we are 30 minutes away from the start of trading. we want to count you down with the top headlines hitting our radar. alex sherman and the ceo of re -def join me this morning. let's start with number eight. yahoo! taking its hands off the original content throttle. last year, it acquired two half-hour comedy shows and nbc's show " community."
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are you sensing in a shift within yahoo! toward scripted content? >> i have been following who for 20 years. they certainly have a love-hate relationship with content. i think they have a slate and they want to see how it does. i think they also think that they are strong in the digital magazine area and they think some of the people who they have are celebrities. betty: you don't think they are celebrities? [laughter] >> i think this may be an overreaction. >> i think they are waiting to see how their first round of investments from last year play out to some degree. yahoo! was in an interesting spot. a show like "community," which was canceled on nbc after years of low ratings, but it generated a cult following.
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in many ways, it does seem perfect to be an online tv show. it has a high level of social engagement. it fits into a community, perhaps, of will -- of people who use the internet and social media. the only question is, is yahoo! right for it? betty: maybe it is netflix. number seven. by the way, i got some good news. "orange is the new black" is being renewed for a fourth season. >> congratulations. betty: who is happy about that? [laughter] >> it had to be. it did not really end on a clean break. betty: they are respected -- expected to have revenue around $1.6 billion. it is interesting to see how
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their other hit series have done and what they are doing overseas to grab growth. >> short. i expect their growth to continue. they have a huge slate of new programming coming. it will be interesting to see what hbo's impact will be. hbo now just launched and they will be a competitor. as you see streaming service become -- streaming services become integrated into the home, it will be interesting to watch. >> i think it is possible that hbo's new streaming product will be good for netflix. the cable subscriber might think , i can get hbo now and netflix. betty: i can split my pie. >> exactly. betty: number six. google and the eu duking it out this morning.
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the eu is accusing for google -- the internet giant of abusing its position. they say google favor its own comparison-shopping service over rivals. i feel like this is who is the evil empire? it used to be microsoft and now it is google. [laughter] >> totally. the eu has been focused on google for a while particularly the search. this is a bit of an escalation from the eu. i know there is a camp of people that worry about the extreme scenario, where maybe google would be forced to break up into two companies or google would decide that it would be best to split. at this juncture, that seems a bit premature to me. it seems like google can still probably go down the road of trying to address some of the eu's concerns, pay off a large settlement fine.
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we will see. it does seem like an escalation of something more extreme. pretty premature to say that something drastic will occur. ♪
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betty: this is "in the loop." we want to bring you pictures of what happened 45 minutes ago when ecb president mario draghi was speaking at the regularly scheduled news conference. a protester jumped onto the lectern, threw confetti on him, and was yelling "aend the ecb dictatorship." they ended the news conference temporarily and then he renewed the proceedings and made declarations of inflation rising. mario draghi not missing a beat as the protester temporarily disrupted the ecb news conference.
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the euro did not move on this and mario draghi did not seem phased at all. scarlet: we will find out more about the woman. she had a pocket full of confetti. betty: i'm not sure what the confetti meant. really dramatic pictures of what happened at the ecb 45 minutes ago. we continue the countdown to the opening bell. it is time for our deep dive. avon products. the seller of cosmetic and beauty products is exploring the sale of its north american operations. what is going on here? >> avon is looking at strategic options for its north american unit. they have been struggling for a while. they get most of their business
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from brazil. betty: why has north america been struggling? >> it is the door-to-door sales model. one was the last time you opened your door to a woman who wanted to sell makeup -- when was the last time you open your door to a woman who wanted to sell you make up? betty: that's true. >> they pride themselves on their reps. betty: does that model work well overseas? >> it does. betty: avon ladies in china? >> yes, they are in china. in other markets, it is trying to get them to wear makeup in different ways. here it is trying to get them to buy the product. you can walk into said for a mix and match brands, people are not as brand loyal -- intoa a
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sephora, mix and match brands, people are not as brand-loyal. betty: i want to get back to scarlet. you have news on industrial production. scarlet: it is seeing a bigger than expected drop in the month of march, down 0.6%. economists were looking for a decline of 0.3%. this follows a paltry gain of 0.1% in the month of february. empire manufacturing came out 45 minutes ago and that showed a negative read. once again, this shows how the industrial side of the economy the manufacturing side, is struggling a little bit. there is a soft patch in the first part of this year compared to what seems to be resilience in the service industry and consumers overall. we will see how this all plays out, especially as we anticipate the release of the beige book this afternoon. that is the most widely anticipated economic data point of the day.
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that will be insight into how fed policymakers view the economy before the fomc policy meeting later this month. let's pull up u.s. stocks right now. bear with me one second. actually, that was the wrong chart. life tv. what can you do? this is futures. they are higher by about 0.2% to 0.3%. betty: you are so quick with that. scarlet: i typed the wrong function to begin with. betty: you are just like, whatever, boom, boom boom. we will be back in two minutes on "in the loop." ♪
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betty: this was what happened a
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few moments ago -- about 45 minutes ago. mario draghi's press conference interrupted by a protester. >> end the ecb dictatorship. betty: we will have much more analysis on this. we will find out who the protesters are. i want to get back to bringing you the most important stories you need to know before the bell. ok, guys. number four. a bank earnings. legal costs are coming down. banks are earned $.27 compared to a loss of five cents. what do you have to say about the banking sector? >> the banks are healthier, but
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boring these days. regulators are clamping down on the amount of leverage that companies can put out in transactions. the general picture is that from a corporate standpoint, the banks are doing better. m&a activity is booming. the legal costs are more under control. some of the settlements have finally run their course. there are still a few out there that are pending for some banks. it seems like the banking industry is a slow-growing boring investment. betty: five the way their stocks reflect that. the stocks are traded quite cheaply. what du you have to say about banks? -- what do you have to say about banks? >> i moved my mortgage out of bank of america recently. it is a bit of a boring business when banks don't lend money as much anymore.
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betty: i agree. number three. the china conundrum. stocks in china soaring, the shanghai composite index at a seven-year high. an annual rate of 7%. new figures on output investment, and retail point to a slowdown. you have stocks at a seven-year high. economic growth is slowing down. it feels like a recession in china. what gives? >> this might be the same story. china is becoming a little bit more boring, but may be healthy from an economic standpoint as things slow down a little bit and the economy while slower may be becomes a little bit more open globally. maybe the next stage for china is going to be one the big behemoth companies alibaba 10 tencent, baidu start to
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expand internationally. betty: i thought it was interesting that 50% of the gdp growth came from consumption -- the services sector. the chinese love their luxury brands. i am getting really dinged. the gnocchi a--- -- nokia-alcatel deal. nokia agreed to buy alcatel for $16.6 billion. >> this is a boon for 5g technology. this is the dawn of the internet of things. every connected device talking to one another. our phones talk to one another and we will be driving driverless cars. together, they will compete much better. betty: we don't have to do anything now. >> exactly.
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my big fear is that there is some general health concern that comes of years from now that this stuff is not healthy for you. betty: right. a quick check of futures. futures have settled. slightly higher. ♪
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betty: welcome back to "in the loop." alex sherman and the ceo of redef joining me. our number one story is the world economy. the international monetary fund released to their global growth forecast. easing monetary policy and eight ha -- a halciving of the oil price should have been the primer for economic growth.
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but things are not looking that great. >> there are lots of technologies that make using oil more efficient. >> it gets into the question of is this a new normal? two economists need to change -- do economists need to change their models? we may just have to expect certain things to be weaker. betty: what you mean their models might be wrong? they are looking at indicators that may not reflect how the economy is doing? >> yeah the empirical reflection from the indicators are incorrect. if oil is trading at x -- you have a ton of different variables -- and then there is a analysis. who knows? betty: i think that the way we have looked at oil prices and the effect on the economy may be has changed from what it has been -- from what we have thought of before.
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the lower gas prices certainly have not juiced up consumers like we thought they would. even for car sales. thank you so much for joining us, jason. alex sherman, as well, staying with me. i want to get back to the protest that broke up the ecb news conference in the last hour. mario draghi was briefly interrupted after a protester jumped on the table in front of him and disrupted those proceedings. after settling down, he realized he had lost his introductory page of the speech. mario draghi: it would be good if i had my introductory statement with me, otherwise i will have to improvise. thank you. betty: alright. a little bit of humor from mario draghi after what must of been a scary moment, seeing the protester jump up on his table. i want to get some more insight
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on this incident. joining us now is hans nichols. what do we know about who this protester is and what exactly happened here? hans: we know very little about the actual protester, the female who got up and wanted to talk about the tyranny of what she sees as the european central bank. what is remarkable to me about the incident is that the new ecb headquarters in frankfurt they just moved there, they inaugurated the building in march, they had preliminary events in january. it is a fortress. it is built like any embassy you see abroad. it is like a moat around it. going through security is as intense as going through security for any presidential white house. once the security personnel took
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over, it seems like the handled the situation quickly and professionally. betty: it did, indeed. almost immediately, people rushed up and escorted or dragged this protester off. brendan greeley is here with me, as well. i know you spent some time in germany. brendan: stop the betty dictatorship! [laughter] peter: wait a minute. -- betty: wait a minute. brendan: you're lucky i did not have real glitter. this was not the protests that happened last month. this was a group of feminist activists. they have done it to president vladimir putin.
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these are the kind of press -- protests that they do. they are adopting the ecb dictatorship language, but they are not connected to that same group. that said, it is interesting to get this perspective from over there. we're used to seeing mario draghi as a softy in europe. he is the one provider of any type of monetary or fiscal stimulus in the eurozone. what is fascinating is that there are groups of people on the european left to feel like he has not gone nearly far enough. i am going to talk to the finance minister of germany today. betty: are you going to ask them about this? brendan: not about the glitter bombing, but erik schatzker suggested a good question. what is potentially more dangerous -- is that the european right or the european left?
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both are very frustrated with the ecb. we see the ecb as a big softy in europe. betty: hans tell us a little bit more -- brendan makes a great point about these groups. some think mario draghi has not gone far enough in his policies. tell me how policies have played out throughout europe. give me a sense of the european feeling about the ecb. hans: it is very hard for mario draghi to hit the goldilocks notes. the main question everyone is wondering now that he has started quantitative easing is when is he going to end it? when is he going to start the taper? so, if you are from the
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european left and you are looking for boogie men, mario draghi seems like an iconic person. it seems that the german finance minister would be higher on the list. look at the coalition in greece. the left-wing party, who did they join factions with? they join factions with the right wing party. they joined party with a right wing party that has been pretty -- they have not been as bad as the neo-nazi party but they questioned elements of the holocaust. this idea of left and right coming together at the bottom of a circle is a very real and scary possibility. brendan: is it fair to say that europe is in a race right now? you have the next steps for integration and you have these active movements growing at shocking rates -- parties that
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did not exist to her three years ago -- is it fair to say that there is a race for europe to get reform? hans: it is a nice analogy, but it is true -- it is like trying to measure planets in a solar system that are too far away. we don't have accurate instruments to measure to see if the ecb and the european union will be able to solve these problems. we'll must've more accurate equipment to detect how the left-wing and right-wing parties are doing -- we almost have more accurate equipment to detect how the left-wing and right-wing parties are doing. they may get a handful of
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seats in the united kingdom. but they will not be a ruling party. betty: hans nichols, thank you. brendan greeley, are you going to clean this up? brendan: i'm not. it is a mess i left for you. [laughter] ♪
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betty: who knew things would get so inciting -- exciting in europe? right? steve, let's get back to the u.s. and what is going on here. ecb president mario draghi has his own ideas of what to do with his bond buying program. we saw the euro dropped. in the u.s., that means what for us? [laughter] >> we know what the playbook is.
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the united states and the federal reserve started this quantitative easing and the japanese and the europeans have been given the playbook. i think the europeans and the japanese are going to become a test of the success -- covetous of thise success we have had here. institutions want to be positive. they want to have an interest rate lever connected back to the machine. i think they are going to become data dependent. unless something dramatically bad happens between now and september, they will probably go positive. the trajectory for rate hikes becomes more important than when they go positive. >> i know your team is slightly more bullish on european stocks but with the caveat that you have to hedge the current exposure.
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that is kind of a tricky thing for a non-pro to do. is it as simple as buying a non-hedged etf? >> that is why we talked about -- talk about actively managed versus professionally managed money. whether you are a pound-based. it is very tricky. i would say, work with a professional and it should be active management. i think the dollar is really figuring into what is happening in the u.s. i think there is a lot of currency related items that need to be dealt with. betty: ok. that is regardless -- that is pricing one cent rate hike for this year. >> correct.
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25-50 basis points would be the range in september. it looks to be in the mid-ish single digits. betty: you don't see any pullback? >> i think the lack of volatility has been most newsworthy. three years without a major correction. if it were to happen, i think we would have more attractive cross points in the u.s. >> with earnings season getting underway all of the energy companies have reduced their guidance and analysts have reduced estimates accordingly. a lot of the strategists i have read are sort of saying that the beneficiaries of lower oil have not made the corresponding increases in guidance. are we sort of setting the stage for even bigger than normal beats in earnings coming up? >> backed and loaded would be a
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good way to describe the earnings environment. the drop in energy, it affects the credit markets the bond markets, and it affects the energy companies immediately. the benefits globally -- europe is going to benefit and japan, dramatically -- almost 100% of its energy is imported. the united states benefits less so. the benefits are backend loaded. we will see a pay off toward the end of the year. betty: thank you so much. stephen would. -- wood. we will be back in two minutes. much more ahead. ♪
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betty: stan druckenmiller has one of the best track records in the history of investing. he worked for george soros before striking out on his own.
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he spoke exclusively with stephanie ruhle about the near record number of buybacks companies are announcing. stan: if you look at what is going on, we have had a tremendous amount of debt growth particularly in the corporate sector. unfortunately, the productivity of that debt, if it was measurable i would say it is at an all-time low. why do i say that? because there is good debt growth and bad debt growth. good debt growth is when you borrow money and it goes into the real economy, you do capital spending, build businesses. by most calculations, almost 98% of the current debt growth has gone into m&a, corporate buybacks -- by the way, and record prices -- leverage buyouts.
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it is growing in financial engineering. i cannot prove it, but i would pretty much feel very confident that $1 trillion in buybacks and dividends in the last year and $4 trillion is the forecast this year for m&a is a job reducer and an economic reducer. i don't know what they think they are getting out of the 0% rates. stephanie: these are ceos who are worried and know they have to answer to demanding shareholders, possibly activist investors. larry fink said companies need to reinvest and grow and that is not what they are doing. stan: we live in a culture where we go through periods of things being in fashion and things being out of fashion. right now, listening to activists is in fashion. if you are the fed, you have to take that into account. if what you are getting 40 rates
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is just a bunch of financial engineering rather than demand -- for rates is just a bunch of financial engineering rather than demand you are setting up the possibility of another asset bubble. i want to be very clear. i am not forecasting an asset bubble and investment bust 2-3 years down the road. what i am saying is that if you are a policymaker, the risk -reward is so skewed because the zero interest rates are not getting you anything substantial compared to when they went into this stuff 5-6 years ago. stephanie: it is not the activists you are worried about but that we are following and listening to activists. how do you see that changing? we talk about david einhorn bill ackman, and carl icahn more
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than anyone else. stan: i don't see it changing, but it is the myopia of the political structure in our country. everyone lives for today. no one wants to look 5-10 years down the road. until that changes i sure don't see how it is going to change anytime soon you are probably right. stephanie: he is so smart, betty liu, that stan druckenmiller. betty: great interview. stephanie: thank you. betty: what else is he like? stephanie: extraordinary track record. even though he is very negative long-term and is really worried about interest rates being low he is making a ton of dough. he likes equities, telecoms airbus in europe. he is positive about japanese equities and his bullish about the chinese economy.
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i pushed him on the property situation in china. he said look at the chinese economy. it is only growing, only getting bigger, only getting better. he is really positive. betty: even at 7% growth. stephanie: he is most concerned about the u.s. and interest rates. get on it. i will have the whole interview on "market makers." betty: you just all my line. stephanie: those glasses look great on you. betty: thank you. "market makers" coanchor stephanie ruhle. catch more of her exclusive interview with stan trunk and miller coming up later on "market makers -- stan drunken miller coming up later on "market makers." we will be back. ♪
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>> this has been the dramatic footage we have been showing you all morning long. it broke up the ecb press conference this morning. a protester trumped up -- trumpedjumped up on the table.
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the ecb president said he lost his introductory page. mario draghi: it would be good for completing the press conference that i have my introductory statement with me otherwise i will have to improvise -- thank you. betty: that was some introduction. i want to get some more insight on the incident from somebody who was in the room when the attack happened. walk us through what happened during those moments. >> it was a girl, relatively young girl, sitting in the first row, just in front of mario draghi. when he was a few minutes into his introductory statement, she jumped -- it was quite a surprising leap onto the table -- she showered him with confetti and started shouting "end the ecb dictatorship."
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mario draghi was swept aside by security into a side room and the security dealt with the girl and we don't know more for now. the ecb has said they are investigating the disruption but we actually don't know whether the girl has been arrested, whether she has been handed over to police, and any other details. betty: how did she even get into the front row there? >> that is another question. at the ecb, there is quite strict security to get into the press conference. you need to go through airport-like security checks. you have to be registered for the press conference from a media organization. people need to know your name and who you work for. this is also something that the ecb is investigating. there will be an investigation. it is external security who is at the controls of the building.
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the guards are charged with exclusively protecting mario draghi. betty: i know we don't want to give too many details, but give me a sense of what kind of security detail that the ecb president has and what kind of security are we talking about it these press conferences? >> there is a small unit of bodyguards who follow mario draghi everywhere he goes. at the press conference, there are usually four or five people in the room keeping an eye on things. when he travels, sometimes it is a lonely bodyguard flying back home with them. he is the most powerful banker in europe. he does not have a huge security detail, is what you might say. betty: thank you so much for joining us. you were in the room when all of that happened. we have been watching very closely. thank you so much. that is it for today on "in the loop."
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tomorrow, we will be speaking with ceo stephen schwarzman and blackstone's next big deals. what does he think about the markets? and his reaction to stand drunkenm
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>> live from bloomberg headquarters in new york. this is "market makers," with erik schatzker and stephanie ruhle. stephanie: calling out to the federal reserve. stan druckenmiller warns that when it comes to interest rates, they're waiting too long. erik: double trouble for google. european regulators say the company has abused the dominance of internet search and they are opening an investigation into android. stephanie: unexpected excitement and the ecb press conference. mario draghi is interrupted by a screaming protester that demanded the bank and its dictatorship. erik: welcome to "market makers." i erik schatzker. step

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