

> once you ship out a panel with a lithium battery you don't want to see it come home. > but what i imagine is at tesla what you want to take the product back to fix it or return it or whatever for whatever reason they're not doing it. > you don't have the right to return the inventory soprobabl this is the way you litigate a settleme settlement. if you've had fires at 7 stores i wouldn't want it on my stores either. > my guess would be the bigger could just be that tesla is refusing to take this stuff out. > joe, i looked in the mirror this morning with this watch on and i said to myself, you look spectacular. > i would never wear a black shirt - you would have to take me dragging and kicking.

> i'm going to bring you guys forward with that, you have to start to match with what you're wearing. > joe, i'm always trying to bring it fashion forward when i come here, i'm always proud of that and i'm featuring a new watch. > what is the - are you embalming people before you came in or something. lowe's turn around opportunity so it's two different type of investment vehicles but i don't think you'd be hurt owning both of them here. home depot is a very high quality company and undervalued stock. the way i'm recommending is you own them both. Upside of a lowe's now institutional investors always underowned this thing. looking at this report quickly, looking at the last couple of reports, it seems under the guidance of the new ceo, lowe's is getting it's act together and frankly, if we're right here and this continues this stock has a long ways to run > is this a better buy than home depot because of the val valuation of the turn around we have all been waiting now and i talk a lot about this on the show, big turn around potential at lowe's. > i agree with that becky this is another positive data point for the u.s. if you're looking for any signal as to what this means for the economy, consumer looks good and this is another home retailer doing well. > they're still seeing a strong economy and it happened in all 15 geographic regions.

CNBC’s “Squawk Box” got its start way back in 1995.And difficult weather we're pleased we delivered comp store sales in 15 geographic regions of the united states this is a solid economic background and continued momentum executing on the retail fundamentals. Of course, Fox Business Network is not entirely in a different boat.įox Business’s “Mornings With Maria” launched in June 2015. Nielsen does not measure out-of-home viewing, which can somewhat shortchange channels like CNBC and Bloomberg, which are often networks that unmeasured office television sets are tuned in to. It’s worth noting here that in the third quarter of 2015, CNBC stopped using Nielsen’s daytime TV ratings to guarantee advertising returns.

Yeah, these kinds of shows (and channels) skew old.īartiromo has never beaten “Squawk Box” in the main demo.Īlso Read: Sorry, David Hogg: Laura Ingraham Just Had Her Highest-Rated Month Ever That pre-market show brought in 29,000 viewers per day in that age range, while Bartiromo’s averaged just 13,000. On the bright side for CNBC, “Squawk Box” still topped the key news demographic, adults 25-54. ET.Īlso Read: Fox Business Chief Defends Maria Bartiromo After 'Toothless' Trump Interview ET, besting its key competition over on CNBC by 5,000 audience members per day. Maria Bartiromo’s pre-market Fox Business Network show “Mornings With Maria” just beat CNBC’s “Squawk Box” in quarterly total viewers for the first time ever.įor the quarter ending on June 30, 2018, Bartiromo’s Fox Business Network (FBN) show averaged 109,000 total viewers each morning from 6 a.m.
