Topics: Notre Dame
Who Gives a Tax
February 25, 2016
The Chief and Kevin O’Neill spend the first hour discussing the election, corporate leadership, and how Notre Dame is looking for the upcoming NCAA Men’s Basketball championship. In the later hour Fari Hamzei joins the show to talk about taxation and the problems of democratic socialism.
“Fed” Up
February 11, 2016
The Chief starts off the show with Kevin O’Neill addressing Janet Yellen’s testimony to the House Financial Services Committee and discussing the Louisville recruitment scandal. Fari Hamzei joins the mix in the later hour to comment on the Fed, discuss the soaring Yen, and project that the Clinton campaign is a goner after her loss in New Hampshire.
Resigned to the Facts
February 9, 2016
Kevin O’Neill talks state of the economy before touching on the Louisville basketball scandal. Joel Elconin of Benzinga recaps the Super Bowl before talking markets. Kenny Polcari, Director of NYSE Floor Operations at O’Neil Securities and a contributor to CNBC, talks markets. Finally, Gregg Rzepczynski, Chicago attorney, is in-studio sharing an update on the marijuana industry in Illinois before talking oil.
Deutsche’s Got Trouble
February 4, 2016
Kevin O’Neil joins the Chief for the first hour of the show discussing the high interest rates that Chicago Public Schools is promising on its $750 million borrowed in bonds. Then the Chief gives Maddie a lesson in gambling before the crew discusses where to place bets on the Superbowl and how they would spend a big powerball payday. Fari Hamzei joins in for a discussion of football hall of famers and baseball allstars. The Chief and Fari take the show out with a market analysis and discussion of the troubles of Deutsche Bank.
Finding Order in the Chaos
January 21, 2016
The Chief kicks off the show with Kevin O’Neill make sense of a wacky Wednesday together, talk some Notre Dame Football and continue the discussion of the chaotic waters in Flint, Michigan. Fari Hamzei of Hamzei Analytics does his best to explain how to navigate the market waters when volatility is as high as it is today.
