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tv   Mad Money  CNBC  May 8, 2017 6:00pm-7:01pm EDT

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aller again. agn. >> i'm melissa lee. see you back here tomorrow at 5:00. do not go anywhere, "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 trying to make you some money. my job is not just to make friends, it's to educate and teach you. holy cow. holy cow, it finally happened. a money manager came on television and admitted that he had made a mistake.
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he had an obvious win on his hans and he punted and didn't take advantage of it. nasdaq gained .03%. accountability at last? the money manager in question was warren buffett, and maybe the take away is that only the world's greatest investor can afford to make a mistake. everyone else must be too secure to do the same thing, because they're all making them. it rapt at everything buffet said over the weekend. when he told us what he's looking at, what he's thinking, way he he is a done right and what's done wrong. he and his team, including the incredibly youthful 994-year-ol
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charlie mugger particularly the companies he plat flat out acquires wholesale. before he go over buffet's self-admitted gaffs. this is a man who believes in america, who believes the future is brighter than the past, and he likes business es he can buy for less than best of breed companies. he can afford to take his time and get it right. because the penalties for getting it wrong are very high. he values hard work and smart work. he knows how to identify those who do both. most of all buffet's joyful about the process, he's genuinely curious, but skeptical. witness his upgrading of john
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stump, the former ceo of wells fargo, to not acting quickly enough about the misdeeds. google, that truly had me on the edge of my seat. geico and brook shire hathaway realized early on that it wanted to city on google. remember, geico can run all the ads it wants with the geico or the gecco. but it doesn't target the most important audience, people looking for insurance right then and there. they can obviously influence you at a certain point. but most tv viewers on any given day aren't in the market for a new auto insurance policy. that's why buffet was so
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enamored of google. because pretty much everyone doing a search for auto insurance is looking to buy some, which is why geico gets such a fabulous return on these online ads. here's where buffet's confidence really helps us out. he recognized that google's cost for taking that ad was almost nil. yet buffet didn't pull the trigger. i'm not sure he realized when he realized what a guy google stock was. but let's contrast that to ibm which he bought six years ago. it's now about 7 bucks below when he started buying. but more important, back then, google which subsequently became alphabet was trading at about $300. now it's $958.
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of course buffet probably learned of google before that. but it wasn't clear who would dominate the space. you could have bought google even lower than the price i mentioned, because even six years ago. first we have to recognize a hum humbling thing. by the way, it's interesting that he bought ibm stock, without much firsthand knowledge of the company's situation. back when asked about watson, the artificial intelligence platform, it's emblematic of the new ibm. pointing out that it's fast growth is coming off of a very small base. when you put buffet's ibm pick alongside his failure to pull
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the trigger on google, you have to conclude that nobody in this business gets it right all the time. if even the oracle can make this kind of mistake, you can understand why i'm so adamant that you keep your retirement money in a low cost index fund that mirrors the s&p 500. buffet said in his annual report that he preferred the vanguard low cost fund, i agree with it. write that down, it's s&p 500, and he said vanguard fund. how about take away number two? once you have your bedrock index fund investment, when you keep adding to that every year, and you have spare cash, why not put it towards some stocks you can find yourself. it's how buffet found apple, he saw teenagers loving their iphones. but as a unique consumer goods company that sells for much less
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than any of the others, including those he knows so well. remember, this is a man who really understands the stocks of coca-cola, kraft hines a, and nobody seems to blanch at its ridiculously high price point. these are precisely the attributes that tim cook stressed in my interview with him last week. it's obvious that even apple appeared as a very cheap stock. apple rallied 40 bucks to a high of $153 today. what else can we learn? if we keep our eyes open, we can always find good companies and if you're prepared, you can buy the right stocks at the right time. my daughter's always on
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facebook, and my wife checks her facebook a couple times before he goes to bed. how about google, just like google, facebook has the low cost of goods sold, and i can argue that google itself, now that it's spanning beyond just search into video, and it's more than just merely a search play. among many gettable stocks we see in our day to day lives, let's not forget about amazon. i'm not saying you should build a portfolio of your favorite products. al make you like coke. but coke is not as good as pepsico. here's the bottom line, if you want to augment your index fund
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with a few stock picks of your own, i think that's a really responsible and frankly a thrilling way to try your hand at grows wealth, out of the orderary, even if the ordinary does pretty well itself. >> caller: thank you for all you do for us young investors. want to get your thoughts on the future prospects for the home building industry, specifically toll brothers, i'm wondering if rising interest rates will help toll. >> i still toll is still under valued by the way, peer house down in brooklyn is almost sold out. that's an example that they're urban. you know in princeton, what kind of quality homes they build, the company bought back a lot of stock, the toll brothers are
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magnifice magnificent. well done, i would be a buyer of that, scott in new jersey. >> caller: what about shake shack. >> on a store by store basis it's expensive. i think at $1.3 billion it's a reasonable valuation versus what it used to be. that's the way to look at it. mcdonald's is a better buy. how about bob in ohio. bob? >> caller: jim, boo-yah from n canton, ohio. jim, my question is on treehouse stock. ths, on may 4, the stock fell 4% after reporting first quarter sales and earnings below 20%. although their next quarter is
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projected to be the lowest quarter of the year, they still project their share price to be over $3. >> i was thrown off by that quarter, i got to tell you bob. i went through the conference call. i think they kind of got blind sided. no, i can't tell you to buy that stock right now, that was not a good quarter and not a good call. and that's disappointing to me u after that first quarter. i wish i could, i love those guys, but i can't. stock business is not easy business, there's a lot of take away from the oracle. including something you the home gamer can do, but only if you've got that indexed fund. the house doesn't always win, so it could be your turn, it's a high stakes casino battle. i'm looking at which stocks to
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hold and which ones to fold. we know the rent's too dang high, but are stocks following suit in i'm revealing. and one lone leader in the s&p 500. find out if i'm recommending mule brands. [vo] when it comes to investing,
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when you're dealing with the people's republic of china, every now and then you're going to get a nasty communist government induced selloff. that's what happened to the mccal based casinos. all got hit as the chinese government announced plans for new security features to monitor cash withdrawals from atm
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machines. mostly because they're trying to crack down on illegal foreign exchange scams that have been thriving in china's gambling haven. this results in less people losing money at the slot machines. i got to believe this selloff is just another buying opportunity for the best run mccal based casino stocks. as i mentioned before, mccal is facing a very real turn around. macal was growing. the problem was, much of this growth was already reflected in the stocks, which meant we needed to get more selective with the ones we own. the most a known ones are winn.
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there's huge insider buying. i also told you to buy mgm if you wanted a casino company with more u.s. exposure. and it looks like i was right, frankly, as soon as i recommended these stocks, mgm is up 10%. still when it comes to the battle for macaln, these high rollers have been the best bet for the region. however it turns out the best bet for the whole casino space was mgm. so how are these casino companies doing right now? if you look at the data, the c
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macan turn around, that said the last three months have been down with total revenue being up 17% in february. 18.1 in march, and 16.3 in april. let's first understand what happened to the company that was doing pretty well since last december. when it got hit with the last macau scare. the numbers came in much better than expected. suddenly people were not worried about that dividends. then we got the news from china. it's been roaring back, like lvs, who gave bullish commentary
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about the future and the stock sorry soared 7% in a single session. then a couple of weeks ago, winn truly delivered a complete blowout quarter, earning $1.24 per share. the stock popped 6% on the news, but again, pulling back today because of his atm restrictions. mgm pulled back a lot less, because this story is more about the u.s. what the heck are we supposed to make about this story about the chinese cracking down on macau's cash machine. we heard that an extreme amount of money was being extracted from macau's atm. he's poised to make what's being described as a major announce. we don't know what that announcement will be.
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so should we be concerned about all this? is there enough to derail the incredible turn around that's been taking place with these macau based casinos? i don't want to overreact in either direction, but i'm actually not particularly concerned. if anything, i think this week could be a buying opportunity because we have seen this kind of story play out before. back in december, the casino stocks plummeted after the south china post reported that the chinese government was set to slash the atm withdrawal limit in macau. less access to cash means less revenues for the casinos. over with in days, the actual rule emerged, and it turned out to be less restriction than we thought. the overall limit on daily withdrawals was untouched. you could still withdraw the
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same amount of money you just had to take more trips to the atm. if you bought wynn stock in that december scare, we would now be up 32%. our recent's experience with the chinese government cracking down on cash machines in macau, this could be another buying opportunity. it took a while for the casino stocks to recover from the december selloff. so you're not in a rush, but you should be focused on it. i think the win is on the macau play. the former selling for 21 times, the latter, 20 times. if you don't want to be totally at china's mercy, you can buy mgm, that's at least 19 times earnings. you want to buy the stock
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whenever investors get nervous about the chinese restricting the cash machine. you've got my blessing to do some buying, especially after it's most recent quarter, after it's remarkable up side surprise. much more "mad money","," from home and garden to its nearly products, newell brand products. an under the radar company that could profit off of the strong environment. stick with cramer. think again.
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♪ ♪ i'm dr. kelsey mcneely and some day you might be calling me an energy farmer. ♪ energy lives here. where's jack? he's on holiday. what do you need? i need the temperature for pipe five. ask the new guy. the new guy? jack trained him. jack's guidance would be to maintain the temperature at negative 160 degrees celsius. that doesn't sound like jack. actually, jack would say, hey mate, just cool it to minus 160 and we're set. good on ya. oh yeah. that's jack.
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are stocks too high? that question certainly resonated through the berkshire hathaway meeting today. warren gave you one way to look at stocks, the traditional measure versus bonds, he found bonds pal try. even though the market may value a company's stock at what seems like a high price, that stock may still be cheap to a company that wants the whole business. today we got not one but two examples that confirm the negotiation that stocks could be cheaper than we think. sin claire's billion dollar purchase and these deals were rumors, 6.4%, and 8%
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respectively. but tribune stock had run from $29 to $49. more important, from the point of view of the overall market valuation, sinclaire stock jumped on the news, even though it pulled back and ended up slightly in the red. why did they go up so much at least at first? sinclaire took advantage of the recent decision to relax the concentration rules. this is a classic example of how important agency deregulation from the presidency on down. president trump's people simply don't fear increases in -- tribune media gives sinclaire tremendous reach and much
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greater scale. you can call it regulatory capture, or simply helping out it's fellow travelers. but it's great news for investors, tei think the better buy is nexstar, with a stock at 63 stock, and is down a little more than 1% year to date. i have have -- this stock could, why buy the potential acquirer? that's interesting, because i think the potential targets could be overvalued because of all the chatter. how about coach's brilliant purchase of -- i think coach played this perfectly.
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at kate's stock soared last month, but eventually just sold itself for $18.50. coach under the really brilliant victor louise has become a house of brands. coach has a gigantic world wide network of stores, running these additional brands particularly in asia, has created a terrific diverversificatio diversification. you know what to me this is a wakeup call for both pvr corp. and vfc. in order to pay down debt, that gave them many additional calvin klein licenses. now, it's just possible that the
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flood gates will help. keep in mind, pvh stock has been a good performer. but to sinclaire and coach, it's just right for making acquisitions. so i have to ask who's next to fake the plunge? jamey in new york. >> caller: i want to know if there's might be a strength behind comcast and as well as if it's a buy, sell or hold. >> my travel trust has a position in comcast, why do i like it? they have tremendous subscriber growth. they made a deal with charter. but what matters is that this stock is very inexpensive on earnings could do really well under the president's tax plan, but has phenomenal growth, and has fee cash flow. miguel in tennessee.
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>> caller: cramer. been a fan of yours since 2008, so a big boo-yah from the volunteer state. >> thank you, the vols rock, as we all know. >> caller: of course. question, i have been reading article after article after article about these sports products these sportswear products going toward athl athleisure. like under armour. >> it needs to go down, it needs to generate some serious growth to go higher. i'm knneutral on it. i'm not going to pound the table, i'm not going to tell you to sell it. >> caller: jim, boo-yah, thank you for taking my call.
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i wonder if you heard the news about the merger between att and time-warner. how do you think that will affect time-warner's stock. >> cha-ching, cha-ching, remember what happened with walgreens and rite ate? i said you had to sell, i have to always keep that on the front burner. stocks could be cheaper than we think, that's what the stocks of sinclaire and coach showed us earlier today. more "mad money," including my conversation with the ceo of newell brands, at a 12% move higher, is it time for you to get to know the stock as well? great news, i did your home work for you. and it could make you some money. plus an all new rapid fire
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edition of "the lightning round." so stick with cramer.
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follow the path of more than 50 different brands and they all lead to one stop, newell brands has a portfolio with scores of familiar names. but can this collection of icons make the stock greater than the sum of its parts? every now and then a company that you absolutely adore will surprise you by doing even better than you imagine. that's how i feel about newell brands, created by the newell-rubbermaid. mr. coffee, oster. i have been a big fan of this
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deal ever since it was announced last year, which is why we own newell brands in my travel trust. but even i didn't expect the company to blow away numbers like it did this morning. newell just reported a 5% increase, big boost in the di tend. and that's why i rocked it off at $5.05. i wanted to talk to mike polk, ceo of newell brands. how did you do it, you outran retail, you did much better than the category, you simply just hit the ball out of the park. how did you do that? >> i'm just proud of the team, in the midst of a tremendous amount of changes, the team did great work. the competitive legvel of growt
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while having all these synergies to margin. so we have got the whole mix working for us at the moment. >> of course you've got yankee candle. that's her mother's day present. talk about slime, now slime is something that if you have kids, you know. this is the hottest thing in the stores right now? >> exactly. this is an example of slime, what we found out about the middle of last year, our brand management team started hearing people talk about slime online. so we're actively out there socially listening, we're on facebo facebook, we follow facebook. and our brand has identified this unbelievable trend with making slime. one of the ingredients in slime, which is this gooey creation.
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every bottle of slime uses a bottle of elmer's glue. we have had a tremendous run providing elmers's as an ingredient in this fabulous recipe. you would see colored slime. you would see clear slime. >> your ball jars, i can never get the things open. i'm banging a knife on the top whatever. this is the kind of innovation, a product that's how many years old? >> it's a very, very old brand, but a beautiful brand, and even more relevant today as people have farm to table providing. but the beauty about that innovation is it's a very simple insight, it's difficult to open the jar, so the spiral creates the ease of opening. all these innovations have something very specific associated with them that
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provide often times a claimable functional benefit, so that we can talk about that to consumers. >> the personalization, obviously, you have the holiday season coming up. get it in, right, because this is something you can do, maybe even for father's day? >> we had in online as a proposition, we're now in the midst of putting kiosks in every one of our yankee candle stores, so we will drive traffic to the store so consumers can create their personalized candle for their special moments. by mother's day, 167 malls in the u.s. will have yankee candle. >> we just acquired wood wick at the beginning of this year, and they are perfect complements to each other. the yankee brand and the woodwick brand. there's real excitement in the
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candle business, this whole type of home decor is really powerful. and consumers are willing to pay for the sensory experience they provide. >> i was trying to figure out how you can take that beyond just high school rings. >> a really important aspect, it gives us correct with students, so we were able to secure the world series championship rings with the cubs. and i know it's not a phillys ring, but it should give you some aspirational sense of what's possible. >> i will wear it every day. >> and we'll work hard to secure the phillies ring when they win it. >> thank you. one you're too modest. international has been great for you. >> there are really three things that are contributing to our growth and our relative strength versus our other peers, one is international results. we had broad based growth in all four regions of the world.
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nearly 12% growth, over 5% growth in europe, over 4% growth in asia. so those thing work for us. we have just got a fabulous e-commerce business. e commerce represents 2% of our global revenue. and it's growing strong double digits. we have created an enterprise wide global commercial division. by the end of this year, we expect to have almost 500 people in this division. >> it's clear from your conference call, that you're just getting started. >> we just turned one, newell brands is a new company, we just had our first birthday. we have achieved a lot. the people in the organization have achieved a lot in th.
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the business is starting to get into a rhythm of operating and putting up good results, and results that we can be proud of. and it's early days. we have 101 factories around the world. 66 of them in the u.s., we have 50,000 manufacturing jobs in the u.s. the elmer's initiative behind glue and slime. we have a blend of a manufacturing footprint, we have to support demand around the world. you want your factories close to the place of demand. but 56 factories, 15,000 manufacturing jobs here in this country. >> congratulations, you really put it together. i thought you were going to be the targets of the world.
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you have outdone everyone with innovation. that's michael polk, the ceo of newell brands, this is the fastest grower in the entire category. you think traffic's bad now, the future's going to be a nightmare! does nobody like the future? c'mon, the future. he obviously doesn't know intel is helping power autonomous cars
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and the 5g network they connect to. with this, won't happen in the future. thanks, jim. there's some napkins in the glovebox. okay, but why would i need a napkin? you could have just told me a bump was coming. we know the future. because we're building it. and the wolf huffed like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems.
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it is time for "the lightning round." [ buzzer ] and then "the lightning round" is over. starting with patrick in alabama. patrick? >> caller: jim, cwh, camping
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world. >> here's the deal, they had a good quarter. it just doesn't matter, it's retail right now, one day that will matter, it does not matter. i have gone over that quarter time and again, it was good, it just didn't seem to move the needle. glen in new jersey. >> caller: there is some valuation concerns about mic oro micron effect technology. >> they said, we know we don't want to overstay our welcome. because the price for d-rams have gone up, there's going to be a huge amount of d-rams being made so i thought it was a good report. let's go to dustin in west virginia.
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dustin? >> caller: hey, jim. i'm a college economics major, and a young investor. >> fabulous. >> caller: i don't have a lot of capital to work with, i have a question about chesapeake energy. >> chesapeake is cheap if it's a real hot summer and it's not cheap if it's not hot. it's a call on the weather. because that is what controls natural gas. if it's real hot, that stock will go higher. alex in pennsylvania. >> caller: jim, i'm calling from westchester university and my question is do you think that square can keep up with the growth? >> they had an excellent quarter, but it's a crowded space, the stock is at 19, it could go back to 18, at 18, pull it. >> caller: it's joe here in the
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university miami university in oxford, ohio. i'm calling about stamps.com. that stock has smashed. >> looks like pitny bows is getting into that stock. i think it makes some sense to do some selling. let's go to don in wisconsin. >> caller: my question is karyopharm. >> i don't know what happened. let's go to bert in florida. >> caller: what are your thoughts on tk offshore? >> i don't like any of the maritime shippers. and let me just say once again. someone on a rival publication said i liked nordic american. that was a long time ago.
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i don't want you in that stock, they did another bad quarter today. i'm sorry but i got to tell you, that stock is not for me. let's go to anthony in new york. >> caller: my stock is valvoline. >> we like that, we thought it was an inexpensive stock that nobody got excited about. it's still an inexpensive stock and it's going higher, i think it's a winner. let's go to dennis in new jersey. >> caller: i want to ask you about fireeye. >> that was a good quarter, if it drops back at all, then you want to be a buyer, and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of "the lightning round." ading knowledge. that's a great idea, but why don't you just go to thinkorswim's chat rooms where you can share strategies, ideas, even actual trades
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you know i'm on a never ending mission to make this the most interactive show on television. with that in mind, how about some housekeeping. back on march 24, matt in kentucky asked me about advanced energy industries, ais, i told him i needed to brush up on this one before giving him an answer. they are a power conversion company, they make power
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converse products that are used in all sorts of manufacturing products, particularly semiconductors, flat panel displays, industrial coating and artificial glass. this is a stock that's been slowly working its way higher for the last three years. it's main business is making semiconductorings and we know that this sector has been red hot. they made an amazing forecast at their investor meeting last month. the stock has been a rocket for six years, it's up 30% just today. i like the business, but closing to 20 times earnings, applied materials, 16 times earnings, that's why i'm going to wait for weakness. if you don't get it, okay, you missed it.
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april 19, andrew called about p proto labs. if you're developing a new product and you need a prototype real fast, these are the guys that make it for you, in some cases they can make the stuff the same day that it's ordered. instead of using skilled labor to make this stuff by hand, they rely on 3d printing. this stock spent years outperforming the average, however sit proto labs reported last month, it looks like the company is having a real turn around. significant revenue growth, up 10.5%. and came out ahead of wall street's expectations, 30 times
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earnings. i suggest waiting until either the stock gets cheaper or photo labs can produce more in its business. eddy asked me about nektar therapeutics. nektar is a development company, so by that i mean speculative. they're working on cancer drugs, and chronic pain. currently they have a handful of drugs on the way to getting appro approved. the company's got phase three drugs for noncystic fibrosis, moderate to severe low back pain, pancreatic cancer and pneumonia, a lot of irons in the fire. plus some early stage cancer immunotherapy. on top of that nektar licenses
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it's science so that other companies can benefit from its research. here's the deal, as i have told you many times, stocks like nektar don't trade on sales or earnings, it's all about the data on clinical milestones. and why it's still a bit of a lottery ticket, as development stage biotechs go, i think it's worth speculating on. and that's my home work. so stay with cramer. that'll save you hundreds. get two lines of unlimited data for a hundred dollars. that's right. two lines. a hundred bucks. all in. and now, the brand new samsung galaxy s8 is here. so what are you waiting for? get the new galaxy s8. plus get 2 lines of unlimted data for a hundred bucks. taxes and fees included. only at t-mobile.
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what are you doing? getting your quarter back. fountains don't earn interest, david. you know i work at ally. i was being romantic. you know what i find romantic? a robust annual percentage yield that's what i find romantic. this is literally throwing your money away. i think it's over there. that way? yeah, a little further up. what year was that quarter? what year is that one? '98 that's the one. you got it! nothing stops us from doing right by our customers. ally. do it right. let's get out of that water. gave us the power to turn this enemy into an ally? microsoft and its partners are using smart traps to capture mosquitoes and sequence their dna to fight disease. there are over 100 million pieces of dna in every sample. with the microsoft cloud, we can analyze the data faster than ever before. if we can detect new viruses before they spread, we may someday prevent outbreaks before they begin.
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i've spent my life planting a size-six, non-slip shoe into that door. on this side, i want my customers to relax and enjoy themselves. but these days it's phones before forks. they want wifi out here. but behind that door, i need a private connection for my business. wifi pro from comcast business. public wifi for your customers. private wifi for your business. strong and secure. good for a door. and a network. comcast business. built for security. built for business. true to form, i dislike the rental companies, true to form, i like the hotel companies very much. marriott reports a blowout quarter. what an industry, great company. like i say, there's always a bull market somewhere, and i promise to help you find it. i'm jim cramer and i will see you tomorrow. >> welcome to the ,
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where entrepreneurs seeking an , investment will face these sharks. if they hear a great idea, they'll invest their own money or fight each other for a deal. this is "shark tank." ♪ shoot it, shoot it, shoot it! i live with my two kids, avi and leah. my kids are awesome. they mean everything to me. growing up, i watched my father start and run a handbag company. he put every penny he had into it, and he took a very big risk. and he did it. he broke open all of the major department stores, and his business took off very quickly after that. eventually, my father and his partner sold their company

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