they re stale babies, yes. they re still babies. ricketts said that he will call a special legislative session to move on the issue if the supreme court overturns roe v. wade. let s head to utah, the spectrum and daily news featuring a front page story on legalize the sports betting and how it is paying out big in the united states. in the four years since the supreme court cleared the way for legal sports betting, americans have bet more than $125 billion and generated $1.3 billion in taxes. for more than 30 states that have made it legal, utah by the way is not one of those states, mika. coming up, we re going to the capitol where lawmakers are holding the first hearing on ufos and over 50 years to find out what is behind recent mist earous. and we look at the impact the
that pressure. i am definitely guilty of that. let s get some of the day s other news. microsoft forecasts double digit revenue growth for the next fiscal year, driven by demand for cloud computing services, and its shares jumped about 4%. it also reported profit and revenue for its fiscal third quarter that beat wall street expectations, once again benefiting from demand for its cloud based services. another company that beat quarterly profit estimates was visa. the company said its payment volumes rose 17% in the first three months of the year partly due to a rebound in consumer spending after the easing of pandemic restrictions. the results sent visa s shares more than 5% higher in extended trading. shares in tesla slid by more 12% on tuesday, wiping over $125 billion off the electric carmaker s valuation. it came a day after the electric car maker s chief executive and largest shareholder elon musk struck a deal to buy twitter
sanctions countries now means that economic sanctions can be a two way street. germany sanctions can be a two way street. germany for sanctions can be a two way street. germany for instance rely significantly on russia for natural a-s significantly on russia for natural gas and significantly on russia for natural gas and to significantly on russia for natural gas and to have that pipeline switched off would be hugely problematic for the german people. similarly problematic for the german people. similarly elite relies on russia for various similarly elite relies on russia for various different commercial partnerships and their reports today that italian businessmen were carrying that italian businessmen were carrying on discussions with russia to keep carrying on discussions with russia to keep a carrying on discussions with russia to keep a dialogue going. and so the days when to keep a dialogue going. and so the days when you could just cut off one country. days whe
vladimir putin as much as possible and make his allies and family feel it as well. observers believe he could be worth anywhere between $125 billion and $200 billion, most of that wealth tied up overwhelmingly in offshore accounts that are held by relatives, friends and, in some cases, his lovers. and he s now on a treasury department list of sanctioned autocrats like kim jong un of north korea and venezuela s nicolas mauro. adriana. diaz: all right, ed o keefe in wilmington. thank you. tonight be ukrainians that can are rushing west seeking refuge. tens of thousands of people have already crossed into five countries bordering western ukraine. cbs christina ruffini is at a crossing in poland. reporter: their sense of security shattered by russian munitions, ukrainians are getting out. on the road, a crush of cars leads to border crossings in moldova, slovakia, romania, and poland. our parents are still in kyiv, so we are thinking about them and worrying. reporter: stuck for ho
pluplumats on the ground anymore. two weeks ago putin thought he d have ukraine by now. i think it s shown the necessity of the ramped up support. i think support is going to continue to increase in a major level. we re obviously seeing the spending bill go through congress right now which has 14, $125 billion of additional support, and i think that s the primary thing. i think more sanctions will be coming as well. i think administration officials are still pretty cautious about assessments and what s going to happen in the future. but i think their understanding right now given the dynamics and we need to keep doing more. it might not be enough for some on capitol hill who need to keep doing more. i think what they re also looking at now is the fact this is going to happen on the domestic agenda. there s a lot of questions about inflation and gas prices. i think considering now what they can do to address these rising gas prices and if there s anything they can actually do.