1 00:00:00,960 --> 00:00:03,360 Speaker 1: News when you want it with Bloomberg News Now. I'm 2 00:00:03,360 --> 00:00:08,080 Speaker 1: Amy Morris. If the government shutdown continues, air traffic will 3 00:00:08,119 --> 00:00:12,239 Speaker 1: be cut back. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says he'll order 4 00:00:12,280 --> 00:00:15,320 Speaker 1: scheduled air traffic to be cut by ten percent at 5 00:00:15,400 --> 00:00:16,880 Speaker 1: forty major airports and. 6 00:00:16,840 --> 00:00:19,480 Speaker 2: The end our sole role is to make sure that 7 00:00:19,760 --> 00:00:22,880 Speaker 2: we keep this airspace as safe as possible. There is 8 00:00:22,920 --> 00:00:27,360 Speaker 2: going to be a ten percent reduction in capacity at 9 00:00:27,480 --> 00:00:31,120 Speaker 2: forty of our locations. This is about where's the pressure 10 00:00:31,600 --> 00:00:33,320 Speaker 2: and how do we alleviate the pressure. 11 00:00:33,440 --> 00:00:36,720 Speaker 1: Duffy is warning of quote mass chaos next week if 12 00:00:36,760 --> 00:00:40,519 Speaker 1: the government shutdown continues. We'll have more on that shutdown 13 00:00:40,680 --> 00:00:43,960 Speaker 1: just ahead, but first we are getting more information about 14 00:00:44,000 --> 00:00:48,760 Speaker 1: that fiery ups cargo plane crash. NTSB investigators say three 15 00:00:48,840 --> 00:00:51,080 Speaker 1: people were on board when the plane took off from 16 00:00:51,120 --> 00:00:55,320 Speaker 1: Louisville bound for Honolulu. ANTSB board member Ja todd Enman 17 00:00:55,440 --> 00:00:58,120 Speaker 1: says the plane caught fire before takeoff. 18 00:00:58,160 --> 00:01:01,760 Speaker 3: After being cleared for takeoff, a large plume of fire 19 00:01:01,960 --> 00:01:05,520 Speaker 3: in the area of the left wing occurred during the 20 00:01:05,560 --> 00:01:10,040 Speaker 3: takeoff roll. The plane lifted off and gained enough altitude 21 00:01:10,120 --> 00:01:13,600 Speaker 3: to clear the fence at the end of runway seventeen R. 22 00:01:14,319 --> 00:01:18,200 Speaker 3: Shortly after clearing that fence, it made impact with structures 23 00:01:18,240 --> 00:01:20,600 Speaker 3: and the terrain off of the airport property. 24 00:01:20,720 --> 00:01:24,039 Speaker 1: Edman says the engine fell off the plane during takeoff. 25 00:01:24,440 --> 00:01:27,360 Speaker 1: The massive fire consumed the cargo plane and spread to 26 00:01:27,440 --> 00:01:31,440 Speaker 1: nearby businesses. Investigators say they have recovered the flight data 27 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:35,479 Speaker 1: and cockpit voice recorders. The death toll now stands at nine. 28 00:01:35,560 --> 00:01:39,000 Speaker 1: Officials are afraid it could go higher. The Supreme Court 29 00:01:39,040 --> 00:01:41,880 Speaker 1: heard arguments today on the legality of most of President 30 00:01:41,880 --> 00:01:46,160 Speaker 1: Trump's global tariffs. Lawyer Neil Kutel argued against those tariffs 31 00:01:46,200 --> 00:01:48,000 Speaker 1: on behalf of small business owners. 32 00:01:48,040 --> 00:01:51,560 Speaker 4: This president has torn up the entire tariff architecture and 33 00:01:51,640 --> 00:01:55,120 Speaker 4: the idea that Congress handed him all this power. That 34 00:01:55,280 --> 00:01:58,320 Speaker 4: is just not something that any president has ever had 35 00:01:58,360 --> 00:02:00,200 Speaker 4: the power to do in our history. 36 00:02:00,280 --> 00:02:04,000 Speaker 1: But Solicitor General John Sowerd, defending the tariffs, argues that 37 00:02:04,080 --> 00:02:06,640 Speaker 1: these tariffs are not attacks. Now, we don't contend that 38 00:02:06,720 --> 00:02:10,040 Speaker 1: he has, at least in peacetime, inherent tariffing authority. We 39 00:02:10,080 --> 00:02:10,880 Speaker 1: don't contend that. 40 00:02:10,840 --> 00:02:13,359 Speaker 4: What's being exercised here is the power to tax, it's 41 00:02:13,360 --> 00:02:16,960 Speaker 4: the power to regulate foreign commerce. These are regulatory tariffs. 42 00:02:16,960 --> 00:02:20,639 Speaker 1: Several conservative justices signaled their concerns a decision could come 43 00:02:20,680 --> 00:02:24,280 Speaker 1: by mid to late December. Now about that shutdown, Congress 44 00:02:24,280 --> 00:02:26,959 Speaker 1: has allowed it to drag into a thirty sixth day. 45 00:02:27,000 --> 00:02:30,320 Speaker 1: It is the longest in history. The Congressional Budget Office 46 00:02:30,440 --> 00:02:33,320 Speaker 1: estimates the shutdown will cut forth quarter growth by as 47 00:02:33,360 --> 00:02:36,640 Speaker 1: much as two percentage points if it continues for eight weeks, 48 00:02:36,960 --> 00:02:38,960 Speaker 1: and the FAA says there is a ground delay in 49 00:02:38,960 --> 00:02:42,360 Speaker 1: effect until midnight for Newark Airport delays a running about 50 00:02:42,360 --> 00:02:45,720 Speaker 1: an hour and ten minutes. President Trump blamed the government 51 00:02:45,720 --> 00:02:50,880 Speaker 1: shutdown for democrats sweeping electoral wins, pressuring Republicans to abandon 52 00:02:50,919 --> 00:02:53,720 Speaker 1: the filibuster in a bid to reopen federal agency. 53 00:02:53,760 --> 00:02:55,160 Speaker 5: The biggest thing is the filibuster. 54 00:02:56,040 --> 00:02:57,600 Speaker 3: We have to get the country going. 55 00:02:58,080 --> 00:03:01,560 Speaker 6: We will pass legislation at levels you've never seen before, 56 00:03:01,919 --> 00:03:03,520 Speaker 6: and it'll be impossible to beat us. 57 00:03:03,520 --> 00:03:06,120 Speaker 1: President Trump spoke at a White House breakfast with Senate 58 00:03:06,160 --> 00:03:10,480 Speaker 1: Republicans who have so far dismissed Trump's filibuster demands. Democrats 59 00:03:10,480 --> 00:03:13,840 Speaker 1: did register their biggest political victories since their loss to 60 00:03:13,880 --> 00:03:16,799 Speaker 1: Donald Trump a year ago. New York City elected Zoron 61 00:03:16,880 --> 00:03:20,600 Speaker 1: Mamdani a Democratic Socialist as its next mayor. He spoke 62 00:03:20,600 --> 00:03:23,160 Speaker 1: about the lessons learned by the Trump administration. 63 00:03:23,240 --> 00:03:25,160 Speaker 5: I think the lesson for the president is that it's 64 00:03:25,200 --> 00:03:28,800 Speaker 5: not enough to diagnose the crisis in working class Americans' lives. 65 00:03:28,840 --> 00:03:31,480 Speaker 5: You have to deliver on addressing that crisis. As a 66 00:03:31,480 --> 00:03:34,200 Speaker 5: president who ran a campaign on the promise of cheaper 67 00:03:34,240 --> 00:03:36,640 Speaker 5: groceries and now has gone so far as to cut 68 00:03:36,640 --> 00:03:39,520 Speaker 5: snap benefits for close to two million New Yorkers, someone 69 00:03:39,520 --> 00:03:41,680 Speaker 5: who is literally making it harder to afford those same 70 00:03:41,720 --> 00:03:44,480 Speaker 5: groceries whose price he was decrying not that long ago. 71 00:03:44,680 --> 00:03:47,960 Speaker 1: Mom Donnie also named former FTC chief Lena Kahan to 72 00:03:48,040 --> 00:03:51,440 Speaker 1: his transition team. CON's tenure at the Federal Trade Commission 73 00:03:51,480 --> 00:03:55,480 Speaker 1: frustrated Wall Street billionaire's accuseder of waged war on businesses. 74 00:03:55,920 --> 00:03:59,240 Speaker 1: Apple plans to use a one point two trillion parameter 75 00:03:59,360 --> 00:04:03,280 Speaker 1: AI model developed by Google to help power its overhaul 76 00:04:03,360 --> 00:04:07,200 Speaker 1: of Siri. The two companies are finalizing an agreement that 77 00:04:07,240 --> 00:04:10,160 Speaker 1: would see Apple pay roughly a billion dollars a year 78 00:04:10,200 --> 00:04:13,760 Speaker 1: for access to Google's technology, With the new Serie Voice 79 00:04:13,800 --> 00:04:17,359 Speaker 1: assistant on track for next spring. Shares of Apple are 80 00:04:17,400 --> 00:04:19,760 Speaker 1: a little changed to Google shares rose about two and 81 00:04:19,760 --> 00:04:23,400 Speaker 1: a half percent in regular trading, and stocks staged a 82 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:26,120 Speaker 1: rebound as dip buyers weighted back in We bring you 83 00:04:26,160 --> 00:04:28,400 Speaker 1: those closing numbers each day here at Bloomberg. The S 84 00:04:28,480 --> 00:04:31,320 Speaker 1: and P gained twenty five points, NASDAK up one hundred 85 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:33,280 Speaker 1: and fifty one points that now jump two hundred and 86 00:04:33,279 --> 00:04:36,039 Speaker 1: twenty six points. The ten yere treasury yield at four 87 00:04:36,040 --> 00:04:39,040 Speaker 1: point one five percent, the two year yield at three 88 00:04:39,080 --> 00:04:42,920 Speaker 1: point six three percent, and Qualcom gave a bullish revenue 89 00:04:42,960 --> 00:04:46,000 Speaker 1: forecast for the current period, though a US tax change 90 00:04:46,040 --> 00:04:49,040 Speaker 1: took a toll on profit last quarter. Qualcomm says new 91 00:04:49,120 --> 00:04:52,279 Speaker 1: US tax legislation led to a five point seven billion 92 00:04:52,360 --> 00:04:55,120 Speaker 1: dollar write down in the fourth quarter, contributing to a 93 00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:58,400 Speaker 1: more than three billion dollar net loss. Shares of Qualcom 94 00:04:58,480 --> 00:05:02,040 Speaker 1: are a little changed in post market trading. ARM shares 95 00:05:02,080 --> 00:05:05,679 Speaker 1: are up about six percent in post market trading after 96 00:05:05,720 --> 00:05:10,240 Speaker 1: a bullish revenue forecast helped by AI demand, and DoorDash 97 00:05:10,440 --> 00:05:13,960 Speaker 1: shares fell more than fifteen percent in post market trading 98 00:05:14,240 --> 00:05:17,240 Speaker 1: after its forecast for the fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA fell 99 00:05:17,360 --> 00:05:20,640 Speaker 1: short of the average analyst estimate at the midpoint. We 100 00:05:20,720 --> 00:05:22,880 Speaker 1: do have a new look at the labor market for you. 101 00:05:23,000 --> 00:05:26,320 Speaker 1: Even with the government shutdown, Bloomberg's Mike McKee has private 102 00:05:26,320 --> 00:05:29,000 Speaker 1: payroll numbers from ADP for October. 103 00:05:29,040 --> 00:05:32,039 Speaker 6: The song remains the same. It looks like hiring has 104 00:05:32,240 --> 00:05:35,960 Speaker 6: significantly slowed according to ADP and pretty much all of 105 00:05:36,000 --> 00:05:38,760 Speaker 6: the data that we have watched from the Alternative World, 106 00:05:38,800 --> 00:05:41,919 Speaker 6: Forty two thousand jobs created during the month of October, 107 00:05:41,960 --> 00:05:45,200 Speaker 6: according to the folks at Automated Data Processing. 108 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:47,000 Speaker 1: Bloomberg's Mike McKee. And that's news when you want it 109 00:05:47,040 --> 00:05:50,160 Speaker 1: with Bloomberg News Now. I'm Ammi Morris. This is Bloomberg