tv Fast Money CNBC August 23, 2016 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT
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that does it for closing bell. we have still friday januaryet yellen on more serious issues. rob, mike, thank you for joining me. "fast money" begins now. live from the nasdaq market in new york city's times square, your trader is -- tesla backing off. just as elon musk reveals major upgrades to s and x. why aren't investors excited? plus, cause for concern. two recent ipos are starting the to look similar to go pro and shape shack. the names and what it could lean. later, amazon planning to launch a new ad free music k streaming service at a super low price might the impact be? cara swisher will have her take, but first, a standout move in
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the markets. rally in the homebuilders surging on bullish housing news. july's new home sales hitting a nine-year high and a blowout quarter, so, is now your best opportunity to move into the housing trade? >> i think there's more to do here. you think about where interest rates are and there's a nice lead time. the implications for the homebuilders, but also home improvements. i think you can look across the spectrum. bottom line is you saw housing start last week. we're still well below bubble territory. you saw sales today, we're back to 2000 bubble down south. that part of o the market is really starting to open up and it speaks well for the economy. so i'm encouraged. i like gordon. ipg you've got an opportunity in some of the again, in the sherwin williams and rest hard
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wears. >> i like the housing starts. we talk specifically about moving out of the cities and finding traction and leaving and having babies and essentially spreading their wings. >> babies? >> yeah. you see job growth. that's another story. that's horrible. >> i thought they wanted to live in group homes. >> jobs were so concentrated. so concentrated to the cities. they calm through, there's renting going on like crazy. they're not going buy in cities. they have kids, they move out. but job growth needs to be there. you need to see it out of the and we're starting to see that occur. you're starting to see that happen and it's going to facilitate the new purchase, especially at the lower end for -- >> that's where we saw the strength. at the lower end, which holmes caters in. >> also on the high end. >> toll brothers has been ab
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underperformer. i think people are waiting to see and they want to see -- >> i'm long both. >> i'm long both polt and holmes. i did average down in k brk holmes, i did not buy more polteric. there's still more room for this to move higher. i'm staying long. >>. >> here's the question. was this just a surprise on the numbers in terms of what people expected or this is a new trend. >> i'm looking at stuff like rail carloadings for lumber. still at low levels. one of two things are going to happen. either this was a surprise. people didn't expect it to be this big or lumber prices are going to pick up. if you forced me somewhere in the homebuilder area, i'dbuilde.
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bd doesn't like to buy things. >> if you want to be skeptic at the july number, the error of margin on july numbers plus or minus 12.7%. at the beginning, it was 12.4, but you can't deny that a lot of the stocks, whether it be fortune brands, 12 months, year to date, they have been strong stocks. >> by looking at -- we've been talking about forever on this show, it takes time to 18 months to take these two metals and what you're starting to see is access to capital, but access to credit is really working here. you're right to be skeptical because we're not seeing other parts of the economy. that typically go along with this, but again, look at where the. >> howard: ing starts numbers are. we're still 25% below the peeks. i expect that to go to 24 million. >> back to those peaks again.
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up 8% today. >> i'm long holmes, but you have to point out there is a 24% short interest. that's been a theme. the short covering that chase where guys are covering into this rally. because it was too painful. had a 24% shortage. that is is a major factor in holmes, which is up. >> tristate area, look outside connecticut, new jersey, new york. prices aren't necessarily going up. as a matter of fact, they're coming down in a lot of those areas. you got south, go to florida, pockets of the middle america and you're statingi ing you got south, go to florida, pockets of the middle america and you're statingi in you got south, go to florida, pockets of the middle america and you're statingi ing you got south, go to florida, pockets of the middle america
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and you're statingi i starting rise. we bought a lot of properties in florida. the reality is prices continue to go higher. main ali because of job growth. >> the renovation strad the strong. not necessarily the building. the homes. >> people can't afford. >> put a kitchen in. >> without question and in fact, the residential private investment trends are great leading indicators. even though new home sales shouldn't matter for someone with an existing home, they're very, very good and speak to what's happening at lowe's and home depot. >> you're telling me they're building like crazy. that says there's a lot of supply on the market. yes. >> any way. >> other parts of the economy are not expanding as this was suggest. all i'm saying is where building stocks at the highs, that's not a great risk reward. we're getting euphoric about one number and -- >> are you skeptical?
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we are talking about retail stops yesterday night and for the past two week, we've seen a renaissance in these stocks. 13, 14%. >> crushed. it's because they got -- now, let's think about this. >> five consecutive numbers. >> one at a time. one at a time. >> not just one number. also a company reported today that showed strength at the high-end, which is what people are so concern ed about. high-end real estate. the high-end part of real estate people are uber concerned about and they saw signs of spring. that shifts sentiment to your point. and helps bode a a little bit of. >> you can't make money of the stocks. i wouldn't get that euphoric about it and when we get back to the retail, just look at the other side of that coin. okay, so, retailers are cutting sores.
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what does that mean? it means people are going to go out of work. cisco cutting people off. >> i get what you're saying. take a look at home depot. best buy. >> if you like restoration hard wear -- >> stereo systems and shove them into their dens. >> especially if you've got a tv from ten years ago, you have to rewire your house to put that -- >> i just bought an x box for my daughter. i'm ten years behind the trade. >> you going to bring in atai, too? >> congress is my game. >> i can't argue with the fact. >> the housing inventory is low. 4.3 months of simply. there's not much out there. >> moving on to the broader market as. the market's been trading in its
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tightest range for a longer period than any time in last two decades. heard that right. how worried should investors be? chris is over at the smart board. chris, how worried should we bo b? >> i don't think they should be worried. let's recount where we've been. we had a two year s&p range. broke out decisively in july. we've now spent the last 20 tas in one of the last ratings. let's look under the surface. what has the market done while it's paused over the last two plus weeks. beta stocks have outperformed by 300 basis points over the last 20 days. we think that's consistent with the market thpt that wants to go up, not down. we've seen short interest. momentum stocks. those are all the factors we associate with the market that wants to go up, not down. when we look at the leadership
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stories, semiconductor, new highs and new relative highs this week, look at names like micro chip. that is pro cyclical leadership. factor work under the surface is very good as well. >> what would cause you to be concerned? we saw this article in the journal today about the vix at its lowest in two decades. does that make a difference to you? >> it's not been a very good predictor of forward market return. we don't spend too much time looking at that. as far as sent. maybe we ge bun to see evidence of complacency creeping in and just going back to the debate about what's working and what's not. when you look at the home billers today, another group moving higher. not just the builders. lazy boy broke out today. best buy as well. i think those are all charts supportive of the pro cyclical trade. >> thank you. you need a lazy boy, tim, along
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with your x box. semiconductor trade. >> there's not many trades that i'm really -- semis included right now. i look at this market and say we talked about the shortage. short covering and repositioning, which is a keyword we use on our phrase we use all the time. the position has gotten long. if you look at the motion of stocks in the russell 3000, the 50 most shorted stock, they were up roughly 30, 40% in the last six months. it's an enormous move, so i say we've seen a repositioning if you will, hedge funds getting longer. the underperformers. >> they've covered their shorts. and the key is what you said though. have they gotten long to the point where they're stacked now, now they're bias is to the long side versus the short side and they're not immediately going to get out of their positions. >> i don't know about that. >> see about the nature of the fact that by everything is in
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play, right? except volatility. and i agree. short volatility, that's a play. >> that's exactly -- >> list, i'm not saying i'd want to be short volatility because obvious, you can get an event spike immediately, but short volatility and bye everything else. they're going to continue to control the show and people are complacent. people are complacent on the fact. >> exactly why you need to be worried. >> i'm telling you now, everybody goes to one side to have boat. you should too. you should be concerneded. complacency. those are reasons to be concerned. >> everybody that is that has been in the boat has been working. >> i think consensus trades have been dangerous and largely
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wrong. consensus moves on the recession, on china. these are things that have been so overweight, people have been so blindly following trend that is everyone was talking about, if you've been picking stocks and running counter to that, financials are clearly starting to get a benefit. >> coming up next, tesla selling off into the close just as the company unveils the new model s and elon musk promises to deliver the fastest car in the world. plus, beginning to look similar to both go pro and shape shack. the names and whether it could mean trouble and later, the cost of epepen fuelling outrage. but did mylan also raise prices on other drugs? more "fast money" right after this.
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offering an we're talking about more range, more speed and more money, which is certainly key to the bottom line for tesla. start with more range. this is a 1 o 0 kilowatt hour battery that will be offered in performance versions of the model s and x. the range for the model s and look at this, this is important. the range will have 300 miles for the first time, making it 1 315 miles. 0 to 60 drops down 2.5 seconds, the fastest production car that will be out on the market in the u.s. and the price starts at 134,500. the number, less impressive for the model x, but we're talking about electric suv, a bigger vehicle and as a result, what you're dealing with a 289 miles as the range. 0 to 60, 10 educational backgrounds seconds here he is talking about the importance of this new battery pack and how quickly tesla can can fill demand for this 100 kilowatt power battery. >> we think we can do about 200
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cars a week. 200 packs a week right now. and we're working very hard to wrap that up as quickly as possible. so, you know, somewhere on the order of 10 to 12% of our volume. and that's as much as we can figure out how to make. >> speaking of the tesla's volume, all eye rs on that final bar in this graph. the total delivery that is year from tesla. the forecast from the company between 80,000 and 90,000 vehicles. there is no commentary today on the conference call about that. autopilot, about model three, nothing stand. if you order a model s right now, you get a p90d, the largest battery pack. wait a second, 0 o h hto 60, i
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the 100 kilowatt battery pack. it will cost you another $10,000. if you have an existing model and you want to upgrade, it's $20,000 and believe me, there will be tesla owners who will be doing it. >> i'm sure. i was just thinking myself i want to drop down 2.5 seconds. i say that a little sarcastically because it seems extreme in terms of speed. he's saying we could make, we think we can make 200 packs a week. they haven't hit anything forecast lately. why should we believe that? zble there's knob who's said -- we'll have to wait and see. it's a little too soon. look, there's going to be some bears. you and i have talked about this. they think he's filled with h h hyperbole and you can't trust
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anything he says. having said that, most of the analysts and i've read a few notes, this is an important increment incremental improvement. see if they can match delivery expeck tases! thank you. the stock has held in there. zpl 24,000 short interest. what i like about it, i have been be bearish lately and i've been wrong, originally, it was about range, performance. looks of a car. because before this car, your choice was a prius. it wasn't a cool car. it was the electric car, but no one wanted to drive it. this is the first electric car that people wanted to drive. and the price point was tremendously high above the prius, but i think it's lost its way. unfortunately bears, you can't break the stock. zpl ik this announcement shows two different things and the stock reaction.
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number one, the view from wall street has changed a bit since elon musk talked about his grand plan and how he's try iing to te this company. and this is a multiyear view. trying to that i can this company and compromise the electric grid. trz you start to see the business plan and how the upgrade cycle can happen here, so, if every year, you're going to get a 10 or $20,000 boost from tesla own rs that are going to want to upgrade their battery, now you start looking it it like an apple story. multiyear type of year. >> it just seems -- that's exciting and why are we referring to chris bridges? what's with the ludicrous? >> yeah. >> chris bridges. >> sorry. >> all right. >> my point is ultimately, you've got a case where the stock has a lot of negative
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headline risk. 240 is the upper end of the range. i'm happy the battery life is great. but the solarcity deal to me is partially out of necessity to keep the whole magic kingdom alive. >> also interesting to see he's had safety issues that were really recently. talking about speed. >> but nobody cares about the safety issues. when i say nobody cares, the stock doesn't care. got to go on. still ahead, left for dead retailer best buy, shocking the street. logging its best day in more than three years. why one trader is betting the stock to break out even higher. you're watching "fast money" on cnbc. here's what else is coming up on fast. >> you want answers? i think i'm entitled. >> i want the truth! >> you can't handle the truth. >> wow, you can say that again because a well-known market
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strategist says two recent ipos are beginning to look scarily similar to go pro and shake shack before they plun nled to new lows. we'll equivalance you the names. >> i'm the king of the world! >> and it sure sounds like amazon is vying for that king of the world title with is plans for a cut throat music streaming service. what that could mean for apple and pandora ahead on fast.
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this morning, we got a note from goldman sachs saying production freezes don't matter, so this is ironic to see this reaction to that headline. >> opec's scrambling. $50 oil, amazing how we're acknowledging it's $50 oil now. this is not what people were saying a couple of monlts ago. this is the good news though is is that it's unsustainable for people to have $50 oil. therefore, more production is is coming offline because it has to and it will or because ultimately, you're going to get to a place where opec has to control. >> why do you think -- i'm perplex perplexed at the moves as well. why do you think when you see rigs coming on and rigs still out there, i don't know if anyone's cutting back. by the way, the freeze. they're pumping everything they can. they want to freeze. >> it changed while we were on
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hiatus with the new saudi oil minister talking about this. that's what the market picked up on. his plan was basically the driver of the ten get that market share and what happened is saudi arabia on the stocks, this new guy has changed sentiment of the market. zpl i think at 50 bucks priced d in. that's what we've been saying for a long time. for it to get 50, it's going to be a cut. 45, 50 going to be the range. >> still ahead, mylan -- turns out the epi pen isn't the only product they've raised their prices on. you're here to buy a car.
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stocks ending slightly higher. nasdaq did set a new record for coming off those levels. here's what's coming up the second half of fast. mylen is under pressure and it's not the only drug seeing a much higher price tag, plus, amazon could be launching a stand alone music service to take on spotify and apple, but there's one big difference. we'll have the details later on, but first, we start off with the ipo market ramping up in one sector. bob pisani has the story. zpl hello, melissa. it's been a year of few ipos, but big returns. only 59 this year. the average return, 30%. wow and technology has been back as the big leader. look, the the average return of the nine tech ipos so far this year, eye popping 97%. remember bio tech, they're among the poorest sector of performers. the hottest techs, acacia and
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twilio. both up triple digits. along with talend and line. so, where are the unicorns? uber, air b and b and pin tres and drop box? former twitter chief says there's still in private plan. >> we've been with a twili, coming out and having a great run here. you've got some robust private companies that could be public anytime and awesome platforms. really taking their time and perfectly content to keep moving along in the private markets. >> but there are several tech companies that may go public in just a next couple of weeks, the trade detection is a realtime bidding platform for onlines. they just filed and so did ever bridge. they provide emergency
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communications soft far and nutanics provides data center storage and may go public soon. if the market holds up, there should be a lot more, not only are spots holding up, but the ipo market overall is doing great. renaissance capital itf, this is a basket that has been handily outperforming the s&p. i promise you, the ipo market keyed up in september. thanks. >> wow. thank you. bob pisani from the nyse, so, could two hot ipos be on the verge of a slowdown in nice to see you. bob was just talking about the two hottest. you actually say they look like they could be on the verge of trouble. >> well, you know, brings back memory frs 2014 and 2015, go pro and shake shack. both stocks had huge runs in their first 80 days out of the gate, but around 70 trading aye days, they piqued and came back
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to earth. they are very different compa companies and consumer companies like go pro and shake shack. this big increase is more supply related. increases in form of options trading or lock up expirations. you can see more downward pressure. they have a 20 borrow rate. it's hard to bet against these stocks right now. what we saw with the others in their 70s, they, around 70 trading days, they started falling. acacia just hit that mark this week. twilili has a little bit of a way to go. we have a chart comparing these two stocks to those two stocks in the prior in '14 and '15 and there are some similarities in the pattern. initial surge sideways.
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>> these are technical reasons, so you can't bet against them because there's no real vehicle to do that. more of -- >> you have to realize it's not strictly fundamentals. >> it sund sounds like a cycle. zblour right. >> yeah. more importantly as we approach, bob pisani promised that the ipo market was going to heat up. we've seen it fall in the two hottest tech ipos of the year. >> when i talked to client, people look at that as a sentsment independent kart. i was telling guys this week, and they said twil ilio and acacia are doing okay. so they look for those recent ipos to dick kate tate.
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you see the s&p sell off, people look at it as a sentiment independeicato indicator. >> if you're a dedicated or a company throwing a massive company throwing out big cash flow, you want to grab some growth. you grab a cloud based company. price too low, look what it was priced. >> it was really -- >> the only way -- >> the market is in a tenuous spot. probably trading at a fair valuation. i wouldn't compare it to go pro or shake shack. >> the other thing is that twilio and acaci, there haven't been many ipos. >> sell side getting their hands, there's not enough analysts covering the stock right now. once they start to get deep in there, you'll see a ramp in number that's going to be extreme and i could justify valuations in a different way. >> for twilio, their key is the
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scarcity in services to be able to buy that, there's not a lot of ways to do that. the ipo market and the whole issue market, the buyback market is destroyed. it's all the market. >> okay. >> that's the thing. before you leave, your pick. recent ipos. >> most are bio tech stocks and you have to know. three interesting names on the theme. first is is match.com. biggest demographics looking to settle down. you have match.com, okay cupid and tinder. some looking for hook ups, some looking to settle down. when they do settle down, where do they go? >> the range of uses. >> at least by brian. >> household nation. and they are budget conscious and don't care about brand. look at lazy boy. nobody cares about the old brands. they want quality.
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at home group sells at home furnishings. then you look at the outside of the house, you have landscaping. i would say most probably never mowed their lawn and do you see more household formation, sight one is is largest distributor of landscaping materials and i think that's a stock, went to 40, pulled back about 10% and has just broken back up to new highs. >> thank you. >> thanks for having me. >> much to the benefit of my neighbors, i'm the only guy that cuts his own grass. >> just to your neighbors. >> because they -- >> you know, actually, twilio of them all, i wouldn't buy here, around 45. >> still ahead, share of mylan taking a hit on its 500% price hike for epipens. that's not the only drug.
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shares of mylan getting hit today. let's get to meg with more on this story. >> as the attention is being really ratcheted up on drug price increases, david highlighted some price increases he saw mylan take. this was in june highlighting these increases that lan has taken. he said in the six months leading up to june, mylan raised the price on 20 products an more than 107% on seven. two are generic drugs. one raised by more than 500%. to treat gallstones. the other two by more than 400%. of course, those aren't mylan's largest products. largest is epipen. its prices creased significantly including a 15% increase in may,
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which is garnering that consternation now. while this may have a small impact, the overall business, these kinds of 400 or 500% price increases can become beacons of scrutiny after we saw this play out with valiant. we did reach out to mylan. they called it a flawed angelsy, focusing on a small number of products out of the more than 1400 protects they sell globally and 600 they sale in north america, self-serving and misleading to investors. they say this is especially true when theese products represent small percentage of mylan's $4 billion north american generic business. they say it hasn't been premised on hikes. when you see this criticism, people worrying their entire model is is premised on buying drugs and raising their prices.
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>> it's interesting, some of the wall street reports. they said it wouldn't affect earnings if they had to roll back the hike, but it could put a path of multiples. are you getting the sense that wall street is either ignoring or discounting the sentiment impact this could have on a drug? >> i think they embrace the sentiment impact here is strong, but what i do kind of see like the highs is that this will impact all of mylan's business model. analysts say this is a bigger company, they're mainly focused on generics and they have a good reputation in that sense. so, it is kind of interesting to see just how it starts to play out among analysts. you have a guy like david out here saying two months ago this was going to be a problem and now, it clearly is a problem. >> meg, thank you. been all over the story from day one. there have been a note out and they said specifically for spefblty that focusing on
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therapeutic drugs, the concern has been affordability and access. these concerns may hit those smaller brk io techs more, one with less of a pipeline. >> it depends on the company. but i look at it and say bio pharma has it right. i can't understand why management would make a decision to raise 500%. this is exactly what's wrong with mylan. exactly the problem. look back at why they didn't sell, they should have done that. they didn't. management made a bad decision. you know how you tell your children, look at celgene. they had a price increase, it was a small price increase, which is normal for these companies to do. bio pharma has it right. they understand how to do it in a staged way that's not going to really have a massive sort of impact on sentiment and what have you. this was an absolutely obscene
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price shift. it's going to have an impact on smaller companies. >> i think all this does is recap the multiple. doesn't change the earnings. just means that the stock is probable trapped. >> still ahead, amazon could be about to take the streaming wars to a whole new level, but is it too late for them to compete with apple and spotify? plus, check out that move. best buy nearly 20%. you won't believe how high one trader is betting it will go. all that after the break. you're watching "fast money" on cnbc. first in business worldwide. i'm here at the td ameritrade trader offices. steve, other than making me move stuff, what are you working on? let me show you. okay. our thinkorswim trading platform aggregates all the options data you need in one place and lets you visualize that information for any options series. okay, cool. hang on a second. you can even see the anticipated range of a stock expecting earnings. impressive... what's up, tim.
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welcome back a. when it comes to streaming music, amazon wants to be your dee jay. so much so, they're willing to charge after half of what apple does. we're joined by executive editor kara swisher on the phone. how far along is amazon? >> we reported they're working on it. coming up soon as part of the echo family. i don't know if you've used those, speakers that really smart speakers that amazon has put out. a a wonderful product.
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it's the use bability of this device, which is really a ground breaking device for amazon. one of the things that's important is music. this is a music service. you can use spot i fy and extend your link to amazon. just like you do with prime or movies or things like that. >> we hear about amazon launching a competing service at a cheaper price. you think maybe one will win, are we looking at this too narrowly? is the wallet on music, does it expand with an amazon offering at a low price or actually take away from other services? that's an excellent question. i would use an amazon service. whatever the monthly fee is, i forget. and the question is there's only so many you're going to use. which is not a -- musical.
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the device, you're going to want the easiest service to use and if amazon is cheap and you get the same thing, you know, you're going to use it. the question is when you're out and about, do you use t it and where you use it in your car and if amazon can send it to the car. it gets to be very powerful. that's what's great about the ec echo. >> sorry, it's tim. thanks for coming on. sounds like we're talking about the lateral implications. seems to me streaming is the more obvious place where you're going to have more people reliant on amazon. this seems like a threat to netflix. what do you think about sna. >> well, echo is a voice device,
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so netflix makes video. >> amazon as really the threat to netflix because we've talked about competition and no one seems to recognize that anyone can get in there if they want to. >> amazon's making these deals the buy things. they have the prime service, the video service. which makes sense for them to go into this. they sell music, but nobody's buying music anymore. so, same with video. so, i think it's all around the device and they finally have a device that's very powerful or could be very powerful. it becomes something useful. you could be like facebook. facebook doesn't have a device and they have a service everybody wants. netflix has a service everybody wants. netflix shouldn't exist if there's apple and google. it's a better service. same with spoti fy. they seem to be doing rather well. as hard as it is and so, the question is if amazon comes in here, creates yet another
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competitor and service and the prices start to go down. that's great for consumers, maybe not so much for these independent operations. >> we've been talking about this, haven't mentioned pandora. >> i think that's the problem. one of the things, music is a must have, so amazon's selling the bryce dwooiss and now, they're putting the music on it. they dwan by partnering with lots of things like spoti fy. that leaves thep out took into consideration. it's harder to compete unless your fs service is to fantastic that it's a must have. think about hbo. kind of a must have. what if there was a competitor? netflix is r sort turning into a competitor. that's the question, as people start to get good at this and copy the big players start to learn what they need to do and amazon has been very deft in this area. >> thank you for calling in. appreciate it. >> thank you so much.
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>> i'll ask you guy this is question. what happens to the likes of a pandora or the other? >> they have two choices. go out of business or get bought. if somebody wants the somehow or yes, they can invent a device. this is a longer plan for amazon. not sure that i would make a trade on amazon or apple or netflix on this. >> feeds the prime members. for me, i live by amazon and they keep offering these side products. but ultimately, it feeds into their beast and you wind up getting that 80 bucks a year, whether the number is, doesn't matter. same thing with netflix, i just pay it. because i use it. i think it just feeds the beast. >> you're all tied up. used to talk about the apple, now, the it's amazon. >> smart and strategic. the average streaming user uses it two hours a day. that's two hours a day more than amazon has you locked in. they can show you things.
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give you product announcements. it's just bringing that consumer, putting their arms around in a way that's significant for the long-term. >> pandora's been living through this entire dynamic. it's moves the 14 bucks. i wouldn't run from it. > best buy surging today in the options pit in a frenzy. mike? >> yeah, we saw well over ten times the average daily options volume and more than 13 times the average dale di call. even though the stock was up 17%, we saw an institution alibier paying about a dollar for a thousand of those. that's a bet best buy could be up about 5% by october expiration, which is about 60 days from now. if you think about it, this is a trade that makes a lot of sense. that one dollar represents just 2.5% of the current stock price. the stock's up 5% and it's easy to see the stock move ng the next 60 days you're not risking
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a whole lot. that would be 2013 highs to be approaching if it gets to those levels. >> for more, check out the full show, 5:30 eastern time on friday. up next, sunscreen and fried chicken. exactly what that means, plus final trades. ♪ [announcer] is it a force of nature? or a sales event? the summer of audi sales event is here. get up to a $5,000 bonus on select audi models.
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but the best place to start is in the forest. kubo: i spy something beginning with..."s" beetle: snow. kubo: no. beetle: snow covered trees. monkey: nothing to do with snow. narrator: head outside to discover incredible animals and beautiful plants that come together to create an unforgettable adventure. kubo: wow! narrator: so grab your loved ones monkey: don't even. narrator: and explore a world of possibilities. kubo: come on, this way. narrator: visit discovertheforest.org to find the closest forest or park to you.
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time for a little fast but not least. talk add a deep fried tan. kfc gave away 3,000 bottles of sunscreen that smelled like fried chicken, but they were used to drum up sales for its extra crispy recipe. it's sold out of tspf 30 bottle. >> now we know what they do with their excess grease. >> time for the final trade. >> believe home sale rs hire. ets up north of 20% in 2017. i like the trade. >> i'm going to take the other side. buy volatility. dsx, start loog k to buy here. you could be in for a surprise. >> still like gold. gdx down a bit. used the weakness to buy.
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>> jet blue. underperforming in the airline space. >> what are we listening to? >> zac brown band. >> see you back here tomorrow at 5:00. jim"fast." "mad money" with jim cramer starts right now. ♪ my mission is simple. to 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" starts now. hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money." welcome to cramerica. other people want to make friends. i'm just trying to make you some money. my job, not just to entertain but put it in perspective and educate you. call me, or tweet me @gymcramer. at this happy-go-lucky moment it's hard to imagine, let alone remember the terror we felt one year ago
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