tv Mad Money CNBC July 30, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm EDT
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given what's transpired linkedin, into earnings tomorrow. >> i'm melissa lee, thanks for watching. we will see you tomorrow at 5:00 for more "fast" meantime my make you money. i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there's always a bull market somewhere, and i promise to help you find it. "mad money" start now. hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money." welcome to cramerica. other people want to make friends, i'm just trying to save you some money. my job is not just to entertain burk to educate and teach. call me at 877-743-concerning nbc or tweet me @jimcramer. >> they like to take steps, even
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if they're wrong. the s&p up 5 per and the nasdaq jumped 1.5%. they're having a tough time putting together a coalition that can make sense of things that can go higher or lower. it's almost as if there are warring factions out there that can't reach a consensus and the result is this disparate amal gam of stock prices that are all over the map. >> house of pleasure. >> house of pain. >> let me tell you where each of these factions are coming from and why they can't come to the agreement, creating the impression of complete chaos at any given session. ♪ >> the first faction, those who think the economy is strong and getting stronger. this group got a real boost today when the government reported that our country's gross domestic product or gdp grew by 4 per last quarter. that's a remarkably strong figure. they buy the stock of economically sensitive companies
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betting that it's better than expected because the overall economy is stronger. at the same time they want to sell, sell, sell, the stocks of companies that don't need economic growth. namely the foods, beverages, drugs and consumer package food plays we talk about all of the time. the robust economy cohort is alive with another group, those who were concerned about a brand new worry, the very strong there are. in the last few weeks the euro's been crushed, making it so our companies will make much less from the goods when the profits are translated back into dollars and that's putting more pressure on coca-cola, kimberly-clark, pfizer and kellogg. the second fact, here is a company that believes that healthy gdp figure we just saw is the peak of the u.s. economy. that's right. ♪ >> the peak in the economy. and the same stocks, that came
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in the industrialses, they must be sold or even shorted. why? for starters, this camp believes that the fed has to raise interest rates soon or fall behind the curve. so what if the fed itself says they're slack the labor force as it did today and that's what matters? which is why the fed isn't taking up rates to cool the economy right now. interest rates soared on the gdp figure. higher rates will hobble the already struggling housing market. they can hurt auto sales. they can slow small business creation. they can slow down the whole economy, so to this negative camp, the surge in rates we saw this morning off that strong gdp number are sowing the seeds of our economy's destruction. second, the gdp believes strongly that individual companies aren't doing nearly as well as you think because individual cycles within the economy have totally run out of gas. this cohort has turned negative
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on a bunch of sectors that are down 10% now from their highs, much in aerospace and some of the transports and much in agricultural equipment and the mortgage lends that isn't getting hammered and retail spending and home buying and home building. this negative contingent thinks it's all downhill from here from most of the stocks out there. third, this contingent is losing faith in fed chief janet yellin and they're growing negative on the whole stock market because of that. you often hear people articulated in this fuel and they're strident that the fed has become a joke and they're giving you the manifesto of this angry person crowd. i consider them old yellers. people who care about the individual earnings of individual companies because after all, it's earnings season i'm a throwback to this group.
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these people take group action, buying entire sectors when they see good earnings from one of the group's members. so, for example, amgen, big biotech just reported a terrific number which sent up gilead, celgene, regeneron benefitting from positive data showing its anticholesterol drug could help prevent heart attacks and strokes should be taken in conjunction with anti-cholesterols and could be huge or american tower reported the cell phone antenna coming and it was a massively fabulous quarter and the whole equipment complex surged and the big telco players must be spending. sometimes these stock focus guys really do go everboard, when twitter reports a good number like we did last night because that took up every single company involved in social media and the web and netflix rallied hard and the sales force.com and three very fast-growing software plays that, frankly, trade with twitter. the earnings focus contingent
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also sorted out the banks today because the banks do better when interest rates rise and they rose big. believe me, this sector could have real legs if rates go hire again tomorrow because it's fallen way behind the market. same thing happened with steel stocks, but the buying was well contained to just the steel though as the similarly cyclical chemical and paper stocks got hammered, why? because they do badly when the dollar is strong. see how hard it is to put these coalitions together? these stock lovers come out in full force after they were buying the heck out of the market because they were playing the big bad event game meaning they weren't willing to commit the capital until the fed meeting was in the rear-view mirror regardless of what was actually said. particularly the nasdaq before it was blunted by other camps hitting the exits. >> forward faction, and let's call it the geopoliticians. this camp is worried that they'll play major sanctions on
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russia and they're levered to both europe and russia. makes sense, right? this group gets scared that any time they're scheduled to talk because the president is well ahead in its disgust and if not his total frustration with russia versus the europeans who were so worried about the natural gas being shut down by gazprom when it gets cold. the contingent wishes that would do more business. the geopolitician camp wants a diplomatic solution to uukraines problems and this group thinks the dollar is going much higher and the euro much lower because europe is in the crosshairs of the russian sanctions. given the strength of the u.s. economy it makes sense for the dollar to be stronger. this contingent knows that when the dollar gets stronger like oil, copper and iron go down they're selling all of the oil stocks. that's who is doing that selling. the fifth and final contingent, those playing the rumors e special situations and mergers and acquisitions that have been so enforced in 2014, they pile
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into yelp on top of the twitter buyers thinking, well, take-out price. they keep thinking about finding the next biotech take-out price, and they keep being rewarded. they sensed more deal making and restaurants and dollar stores and media plays. they're playing lightning and stock market lightning doesn't strike once or twice, but pretty much every day. so what's wrong here? the problem with all five of these warring factions is that they play havoc with each other and sometimes they come together, those who think the economy is very strong do coalesce with the geopoliticians who believe the dollar is going higher and that leads to heavy selling and the hard-hit utility plays. those who think rates are headed higher because of the economy's strength team up with those who think bank earnings will go higher and those get bought and those who think the economy will cool because the fed is going to raise rates to form a coalition with those who buy stocks who have no economic sensitivity like the buyers of internet stocks that don't need a strong economy and don't have dollar-based concerns, but if
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you add them all up you come up with a confused jumble that explain why stocks did nothing today even though there were pockets of outperformance and underperformance. here is the bottom line, so many different factions cannot form the house that can take the averages up or down by any meaningful amount until we get more resolution and bigger, stronger coalitions. i think you can expect more of the same. let's go to dan in california, please. dan? >> hey, jim, this is dan in sacramento, california, and i just bought your book "get rich carefully". >> thank you. >> and, um, i bought aig at 35, and i sold half my position when it hit 56, so my question to you is what do you think aig will do in the long term? >> okay. the insurance companies short term are hurting because frankly, there's been price cutting in different product lines. prudential is doing well, but we saw travelers -- and the way youio look at it and travelers is a great company and step back and if rates are going higher and insurance companies are
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doing well, i think you'll hold on to aig and you took out a huge amount of profit. let it run. let's go to barbara in massachusetts, please. barbara? >> hi, jim. a graceful boo-yah from provincetown in beautiful cape cod. >> oh, boy, i have nice friends going up there in the next couple of weeks. what's up? >> thanks for all your advice last year which allowed me to pay off the remainder of my mortgage. >> thank you. >> i also enjoy your occasional skits like the barbecue -- the outdoor barbecue one, your jokes and your clever asides. >> it's been a tough time, so thank you. a lot of stocks that are blowing up that i like and that's no good, but go ahead. >> monday you talked about the merger of a few dollar stores and i'm wondering what you think of five below whether to buy, hold or sell. >> i've been adamant that retail has gotten too tough and i've done much less opining, i'm
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trying to pull back from where i don't have certainty and i think that while five is doing well, it doesn't seem to matter right now. i only am recommending right now costco of the big retailers. that's the one i have the most conviction in. let's go to rose in rhode island, please. rose? >> yes, hi, jim. how are you? >> how are you, rose? >> good. thank you. question. i am looking at a stock called mobile eye which is going to be an ipo here very shortly, i think it's friday, am i correct? >> yes. yes. >> okay. what's your take on that? >> okay. i mean, this is collision avoidance. i think that this market -- i'm not punning, but what's happening is that i need to know where the stock is going come public at because at a certain price this thing is a steal like po latin america lo locko and that was a steal in the teens
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and not in the 30s and i don't know until i know where the stock will come public. i'm sorry. you just can't tell. can i go to brett in minnesota. >> i just want to say thanks for all you do. >> thank you so much. what's happening? >> all right. my question is related to american rail car, arii. we've heard the recent news around all of the changes that the rail cars have to make. we've seen the success by greenbrier. i just want to hear what your thoughts are for the recent upcoming earnings and the conference call tomorrow. >> yeah, you know, you have a gun to my head there and i'll say please take the gun away from me, from my head. i know arii went up two off of trinity's good numbers and amazing trinity reversed and went down. i think the long-term secular trend for stronger rail cars is a good trend because we can't build as many pipelines as we like so i like the business, and i thought there were too many cars and then they changed the rules so you needed all new cars if you're shipping oil, so i
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like the group. let's leave it at that. i like the group. united we stand, divided we fall. there are too many factions in the market and until we get bigger and stronger coalition, i think you can expect more in the days like today. in "mad money," tonight, there may be more catalogs. i have an old player that is an additional transformation with big yield. buffalo wild wings getting clipped and i'm digging in to find out what to do next and they didn't ensure you with big losses and could it be the right time to stake a claim? stick with cramer. ♪ don't miss a second of "mad money." follow @jimcramer on twitter. have a question? tweet cramer, #madtweets. send jim an email to madmoney@cnbc.com or give us a call at 1-800-743-cnbc. miss something? head to madmoney.cnbc.com. don't just visit new york.
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150-year-old company that's the largest player in the old-fashioned commercial printing industry with a bountiful 6% yield, yet commercial printing, a business that may seem obsolete in our increasingly digital world especially when you consider it came down two year to date, i think there's more life to this business and then they reported lo and behold, sure enough results were better than expected. and it reported 35 senns earnings and higher than anticipated revenues that climb 12.9% year over year. that's pretty solid and manage am reaffirmed their four-year phiedance and that sent the stock up. that's nearly 5%. going right? rchl l. donnelly is putting financial staples a s atatemente the trusted business in the space. they're making acquisitions that smash kofs and rchl r. donnelly has one tailwind. outsourcing when parts of your business is scattered all over
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the world that creates demand for the packaging and labeling business, and e-books. where rchl r. donnelly has had a tough year, the stock has given you a 4% return with dividend, since i got behind it 13 months ago and it's more than secure, easily covered and the stock deserves to be in the 20s. let's check in with the president and ceo of r.r. donnelly and sons with more on the quarter. welcome back to "mad money." good to see you, sir. >> thanks, jim. thanks for having us. >> i am so glad that i met you last time because people do not understand the story because this is the best 6% yielder i know in the market. i want people to own this. tell people about some of the things that you've just come up with whether it be these very cool cell phone covers or something i really like which are these revolutionary sensor label which is represent the new r.r. donnelly. >> sure, jim. thank you. when you think about the sensor labels and especially from the
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tuck and tilt standpoint. >> when a package tilts. >> when you deliver it. >> we go ahead and we can do that with all of the consumer electronic products. so when you think about the products that are out there from e-devices to tvs, whatever it may be, obviously when they ship there are issues that can take place. our customers want to know know only where those products are, but if anything's happened to them during the shipment it can report back to their corporate office and say, hey, this is when it took place and this is what happened. >> what does that have to do with commercial printing? how did you go and why is it good that you have that along with commercial printing? >> sure, the commercial printing aspect, right now back 10, 15 years ago, customers used to be able to reach out to you in one way, through your mailbox. today, customers can reach out to you through your electronic device, through your laptop and whatever device you have, they have to go ahead and synchronize all of that content to you so
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that their brand remains the same. anybody that can do that is creating a connected experience. when you think of r.r. donnelly, we're sort of the vehicle that engage am takes place with so we can help that connected experience whether it's through your employees, customers, investors or suppliers. so the platform that we've built allows us to go ahead and have all of that content whether it's physical or electronic sent to you at the same time at the right place where it needs to go so it drives you to take an action. >> at the same time you use free cash flow because you've been consolidating in an industry and your book "consolidated graphics," while there was some overlap you're in the rest of the world with the consolidated graphics and that business is still doing well in volume. >> it is. we're in 38 countries. we've got over 65,000 employees. we've, uyou know, over the last 10 and a half years, $3.5 billion has gone back to shareholders and over a billion
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in stock buyback. so we generate a heck of a lot of free cash flow that allows us to invest back into the business and allows us to invest back into some of the technology that you see here. each one of these pieces here, they're a communication piece so no matter what takes place, our customers want to make sure those communication pieces are done in such a way that will drive a better return on their investment. >> we had restoration hardware on and what a great story. in the end, the catalog and omni channel approach really does work. you are the omni channel facilitator. >> we are the ones that provide the connective experience. restoration hardware is great for us as well. what they've been able to do, and people like that understand the catalog and that drives an action to take place. we don't have to wait for you to go to your electronic device to look something up. that catalog comes into your house. williams-sonoma feels the same way. these are really successful retail anders and it's
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interesting they've come back to what you do to really make their sales big. printing is also at the core, and then you have to have that content sent out electronically to wherever that consumer may be. >> you're a trusted name so you've gotten into m and a, and the room where people do their m and a. >> venue. >> yes. how does that come into play? >> it's a technology of ours that allows for mergers and acquisition conversations, discussions, work to take place. pharmaceutical discussions that are taking place. so i think from a technology standpoint, there, too, it's know only print. it's beyond ink on paper that we've taken our technology to. >> one last question that's kind of theoretical, but tom, i met you 13 months ago. the stock has just been fantastic for our viewers. what is the disconnect between the exciting things that you're doing and why people don't understand you have more than enough to cover the cash flow is
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bountiful and the dividend is sake. what's the the disconnect? >> how do i keck the disconnect? >> it's perception and i always like to use the words mark twain, my death has been greatly exaggerated and the prined word is only a small part of what we do and long runs is books and retails and catalogs. the variable prin and those combined is 54% and we've got an international business and we have 18,000 employees in china and international is 23% for what we're looking at. >> this is the kind of story that people say i can't find yield anymore and give me growth and yield and i'm giving you r.r. donnelly. president and ceo of r. rchl donnelly and sons. please, go to the document and you'll see everything and realize this is not just some magazine printing company. "mad money" is back after the break.
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few things are more annoying in this stock market than apparent injuf stice, the the wrong man getting convicted while the hardened scoff law goes free. yet that's exactly what it looks like in the cases of buffalo wild wings and panera bread, two household restaurant names that reported last night. buffalo wild wings, blew away the numbers and posted more than double the same-store sales and i was looking for and executed flawlessly. i emphasize mrfa size flawlessl it was remark believe in every way. panera bread, lowered the boom on the forward earnings guidance. there was a classic disappointment versus posted
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expectations, yet its stock rallied $5.14 or 3.5%. isn't this a complete outrage? total indiscriminate justice bundled up with my mistaken ide entity and all-around fickleness, right? wrong! these moves make all the sense in the world, if you know where the stocks were coming from, going into the quarterly report and what was really expected meaning what people were whispering about were the companies behind them. buffalo wild wings galloped from $196 to $167 in the last year. this stock was in the 90s a few months ago. in the last weeks it ran from 150 to 167 going into the quarter. this advance occurred just by the sluggish restaurant group in a down beat period for retail sales. panera, on the other hand, juf hit its 52-week low of $142 five days ago and it's been a miserably performer and it's going into what we call the print. in short, people turned on
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panera big time. they've gone ga ga for buffalo wild wins after a series of wins. buffalo wild wings, like starbucks, has become the star pupil and panera was struggling just to get its restaurant degree, buffalo wild wings delivered its picture perfect performance and failed to guide the up numbers in the future which have come in again with sky-high expectations and even the amazing numbers sally smith delivered. there was nothing she could do to follow the analyst jackals and like buffalo wild wings where people anticipated a super increase, there were fears that panera would slash next year's earnings forecast and be very down beat about the future so you can imagine their surprise and their short covering when panera reported .4% transaction growth. that was the first growth in six quarters, and the the ceo intimated that things had only
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improved since the year end. >> for the first time since panera 2.0, the reinvention of panera bread that has been rolled out as an experiment in charlotte, north carolina is experiencing a real lift in the numbers. the 2.0 rollout could be more aggressive than people thought. he'll put some debt on the company's balance sheet to continue what aims it a much more aggressive buyback with a 1.7 million shares, crunched just this quarter while he also expands his improved store rollout and commitment to better technology. that buyback is a huge statement of confidence from a restaurant oour, as is the willingness to take down debt with 2.0. the bottom line, was this a miscarriage of justice and does the market have the wrong man? hardly. the companies that do a great job whether it be starbucks or buffalo wild wings get taken down harshly when taken down with absolute perfection. that's just how it is, don't
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worry, though, starbucks has stabilized and it's coming back from its whooping last week. i expect buffalo wild wings to do the same and panera, let's just say it's done going down and may well be embarking on a mull-year run back to the old heights and a terrific strawn chain which has only momentarily lost its way. gary in oregon, please, gary? >> jim, pleasure to speak with you. >> same. >> with all of the merger activity in the industry and with the recent price pullback, does pinnacle foods present a good value here? >> you know what? pinnacle foods needed that takeover because in the end the center of the store which is all of the different goods they sell is really dragging. so now pinnacle foods has to do acquisitions and it only yields 2.76%. my take is when the stock drops to where it has more than 3% yield to where it got the bid, then i want to pull the trigger and stephen in new jersey,
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please. stev steven? >> i want to know about gnc. do you think we've hit a bottom? >> i don't think gnc is that good and if it hits a bottom doesn't interest me and i prefer vitamin shoppe, and i think the vitamin shoppe has been unfairly linked with gnc. how about hansen in florida, please? hansen. >> jim, a big boo-yah from palm city, florida. >> nice! >> say, jim, i've owned kimberly-clark for some time and i have a nice profit in the stock and it ran to 113 and it's been trickling down. what's your thought? >> the strong dollar is hurting them. a lot of people feel the raw costs are hurting them. i like the company. it's spinning off a terrific division and it will bring up more value. i think the stock can go down to a hundred and down six and you get a capital gain and i think kimberly is a terrific company. i just think it would be wrong of me. at first glance the action just
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doesn't seem fair, but if you take a closer look it makes all of the sense in the world, and i expect buffalo wild wings, and i think panera is still going down. there's still more ahead. does the the stock have premium potential or does the asset become a liability, and unless they can shield you from foreign approximately see and farm wars, get pullback protection tonight with am i diversified? plus the calls in the lightning round are just ahead. stay with cramer. the cadillac summer collection is here. ♪ ♪
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> what's the matter with gen worth? here's a company that's a major purveyor of insurance both here and abroad as well as long-term care insurance. the stock got slammed falling $2.28 or 14% at under $14. before i get into the details of today's weakness, let me explain that gen worth has been a turnaround story. at the depths of the great recession this company wasity wheren off as a goner because of the mortgage insurance business and the stock had traded down to less than a buck. since then it's come back with a vengeance and the older, riskier mortgage insurance policies have
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been replaced with policies that are much safer. >> jen worth reported a miss off the 34-cent basis. the claims have been coming in much higher than expected and to make matters worse, management said they may have to set aside a lot more money in reserves to cover the long-term care claims they're currently conducting review, and long-term care insurance isn't the only thorn in genworth's side. earlier this month we learned that the federal housing finance agency is coming up with onerous guidelines for mortgage insurers who write loans by fannie mae and freddie mac. jim mcnerney and learn more about the company's prospects. welcome to "mad money". >> jim, great to be with you. >> all right, sir, i know there was a view that you felt that wall street did misinch pretty some of your remarks about long-term care. i know as soon whose father has a long-term care insurance policy that the kofs of taking care of the elderly have
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skyrocketed versus when the policy was written. is this a problem that can dog j gen worth for some time? it's certainly an issue and all of the policies we issued before 2002, we're clearly losing money on those, but we've made a lot of progress. 43 states have approved significant increases and 60% or more of the older policies and that's a way to offset the fact that we're seeing significantly higher claims. >> i know that there was some chatter that last year i know you felt that the reserves didn't need to be as high as they were, but now it seems that even though you're getting those states to give you some relief, the reserves do have to come up. is there money that can make up for those reserves where you're know going to have to do anything to borrow money or raise capital or to be able to pay for them? >> you know, jim, i think there is confusion because this is a complex business and the
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difference between margins and reserves and so last year we gave a review of long-term care and we said our margins are in good shape with the 4 million positive excess margin, but when you do the margin analysis and that includes all of the future cash flows coming in, and a big part of that are future premiums. both the premiums as well as these incremental premiums which we said by 2017, the incremental premiums will be between 350 and 300 million and that all counts for the margin and the margins were more than adequate as of 9/30/13 which was the basis that we did. these are 50,000 of those approximately see holders are on claim. it has nothing to do with future premiums. the premium increases, it's just what do we think is our best estimate of the net present value of the claims we're going to pay for these 50,000 people?
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and they're on average on claim for three or four years. so it's that 3.5 claim reserve that we have a much larger act of life reserve which is the reserve we hold for the bulk of the 1.2 million policyholders and that reserve is about five times the claims reserve and it's the claims reserve that we're focused on. >> that's important for people who were in the stock. you have to understand these are very important matters as some people are worried about and mr. mcnerney explained them well. on this notion of having to have for the federal housing finance agency is saying that some companies who do mortgage insurance may r to put up more capital. that story knocked your stock down. i think maybe you can tell viewers that it may not pan out the way headlines first said. >> i would say, jim, first, we support the gscs and the fha. there were two or three companies and gen worth made it through and some of the others had trouble in the crisis and i
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think it's appropriate with the regulators like they're doing with the regulators to have more capital. for us, the new standards would mean 450 million to 550 million more capital if we upon to be compliant by the date which is june be 30, 2015. there is going to be a transition period which would allow you to, we think, to the end of 2016 and at that point because of improve am of the business that we talked about, so i think people have to be clear that this will change. we're still working and talking with the gses and fha that those requirements may change and it's 450 and 550 million and we laid out on july 10 whth we responded when this was released, that there are many ways that genworth has to meet requi requirements and today we went further of the 450 to 550 million, we believe the bulk of
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that capital can be met by re insurance and we would hope to enter into those re insurance arrangements and it's an insurance marker and would cover the bulk of the issues and we hope to do that on or before the 15th and to the extent there was any shortfall, we do have proceeds from an australian ipo, which is 514 million so we can hold that cash to the extent there's any rainfall and we think it will take care of the bulk. >> thank you. i know it's confusing for shareholders and tom mcnerney, president and ceo of genworth financial. thank you fish coming on the show. >> great to be with you, jim "mad money" is back after the break.
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what would happen if that happens? anything. stock chars, before we get to the lightning round we have some business to take care of. i'm doing a whole week of charts next week. you may know it as chartnado, but this time it's different. we want to see your chars, cramerica. tweet them @jimcramer or send them to mad money's facebook
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page, using the #chartnado, and i might use it on the show and now it is time -- it is time for the lightning round, and -- [ indiscernible ] >> play until we hear this sound and then the lightning round is over. let's start with dave in massachusetts. dave! >> jimbo snc! what's up with gta? >> i do like ieti better because they have the wireless charger that i hear so much about. i need to go to michael in illinois. michael? >> mr. cramer, i want to thank you for taking my call and for your courtesy. i'm asking about nimble storage. my view is long term. >> long term it might be okay because earn prize storage is really emc's game and v.m. ware game and i'm not crazy about the stock because of the saber rattling that's been going higher and that is the one
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people want. may i go to lynn in illinois, please. lynn? >> boo-yah. how are you? >> good. good. >> jim, did i miss the move on pitney bowes here? >> that's a really great question because i've got to tell you, it has moved so, so smart. they're doing a lot of right things and i like the logistics business. no, they can go higher. let's go to paul in texas. >> boo-yah, cramer. >> boo-yah. this stock is trading at a discount, and i'm interested in seadrill. >> i believe the yield is safe, last night they called and they said they do see real weakness in the platform business. the platform business is seadrill, so i've got a feeling that what you'll do is pick up that yield, but you're not going get a the lo of upside from the stock. er win in new jersey. ier win snchl.
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>> i add it to my position shortly before the earnings came out last week, and i was really expecting more of a bump. >> no! no that was a good quarter and you did well in that and i think that went by the way that we saw two different great fund managers talk about larry robbins and leon cooperman. i urge you to stay, and i want very much to buy that stock for the charitable trust and trying to free up the bad positions they have because man, there's stuff out there that keeps blowing up. you have to talk about the bad ones, too. it's called honesty. niemin. >> hi, jim, i'm from connecticut. >> hit me. >> my name is arena pharmaceuticals. >> people were angry with me that i didn't like it not that long ago, okay? i have to reiterate. it's know one of my favorites and i don't think that you've got some biotech company that's
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not been the right place to be, and i like, here, let's repeat it, regeneron, and i like biogen because of the ms franchise and you know what? do i need more -- okay. genetics and isis. let's go to warren in north carolina. >> hey, jim, i'm calling about a super strong company with great leadership and some game changing products. reesenly this company received an fda approval for their continuous glucose monitors to be prescribed and used by pediatrics or anyone under the age of 18. i'm thinking the positive earnings numbers and news will soon follow. what do you think about dxcm? >> we had dexcom on, the stock keeps going down. by the way, let's be really clear. where am i on the device business? i like edwards and the stock was
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up almost 10%. i like st. jude, but edwards is best in show. how about sue in florida? sue snchl. >> hi, jim. boo-yah. >> boo-yah, sue. >> to you and your wonderful staff, you are so appreciated. >> a stock split in priceline, do you see that in their future? >> i've been doing good work on splits and my intern, and i have to tell you that i think splits have helped and you like priceline because of the earnings and the earnings there are very good and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of the lightning round. >> the lightning round is sponsored by t.d. ameritrade prospect. time and sales data. split-second stats. ♪ its so close to the options floor, you'll bust your brain-box.
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if you follow me on twitter, if you follow me and hate me would you just stop following me? if you folly me, you have to know that i have aing bit of a gardening obsession. you probably hate for me that, too. if you watch the show you probably heard about it. if you passed me on the street, you probably overheard me talked about it. i am an obsessed, speed gardener, i have some zukes and squash, and just because you have one bad crop doesn't mean it's left for dead. they haven't gotten to the eggplants and same go for stocks. let's kick off this week's am i
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diversified with a question received on the facebook page and this is from mary lee hayden who says clor be onning, northrop grumman, health care reit, duke energy and conoco phillips. am i diversified? let's take a look. clorox, boy, these, fixed income equivalent stocks have gotten clubbed and i look clor ox and they report later this week and i don't think it will be that great a quarter. utilities got clobbered today and health care reit, that got clobbered today and northrop grumman, conoco phillips and anything high yield got hurt today because of rates. we have oil, aerospace and real estate investment trust and a consumer packaged goods company, it is terrific, but i just want to point out that if you have high yields they, too, can be one kind of company, but i do like the portfolio. why don't we go to michael in kentucky, please? michael. >> hi, j im. thanks for taking my call.
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>> of course, i wanted to compliment you on your tremendous staff. >> my staff is great. they make me look good every night. >> i wanted to get your take on my portfolio. i've got eog, gilead, cbs, vfcorp and prudential. can i juf sst say before i even go through the -- man, you like the show and you've done well. i'm know kidding because you are buying a lot of the stocks that we emphasize over and over again. eog resources and gilead, fantastic and that's the hep c pill and one of the bankable 21 ceos and apparel has done terrifically and cbs, les moonves makes you money and has been buying back stock and apparel, health care and oil, that is just perfect. ♪ ♪ >> why don't we take another? why don't we go to jean in
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arizona? jean owe? >> hey, jim, how are you doing? >> real good, how are you? >> good. my stocks are apple, disney, constellation brands, trinity and valero. >> constellation brand, modelo negro and corona, best-sellers and a technology company and a rail car company and a beer -- spirits company, that is perfect and again, although i'm worried about valero in the margins, i like every one of those stocks, well done. perfectly played game! ♪ hallelujah stick with cramer.
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going to make judge ams s ams homework which is always the only way to do it. there's always a bull market there's always a bull market somewhere and i >> narrator: in this episode of "american greed"... a near-perfect insider-trading scheme... ...stealing merger secrets, and turning them into millions... >> if you play it right and you're careful about covering your tracks, you have access to some of the most important deals on wall street, and that's a gold mine. >> narrator: ...until it was all caught on tape... ...in stunning detail. shocking revelations of greed that stun even wall street. >> they allegedly stole some $32 million worth of inside information. >> narrator: the rise and fall
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