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tv   Mad Money  CNBC  May 19, 2017 6:00pm-7:01pm EDT

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not tieing to pick, the call counter is setting up for events, i look it. >> it looks like our time has expired. thank you so much for watching. check out the website optionsactions.cnbc. meantime, see 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 is not just to entertain you, but to educate and teach you. call me or tweet me @jimcramer. every day we try to get a read on the economy, and every day it's hit or miss.
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a concrete company says business is booming, two home builders rave about business. broad line department stores just don't see it. today the bulls clearly won the day. dow gained 140 points, s&p climbing 8%. still recovering from that last day that was ugly. but there's no denying that this is a tough environment to navigate. throw in the white house's seeming inability to get back on track after this 24-hour leak-a-thon, and you can't be sure where you stand in this market. that's why going up to the fed's june immediating, we're going to have to hang on all the words of the fed. case in point, monday when noted
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dove neil cash carry expre expressed -- epawill they cance each other out? who knows, all i can say for sure is their utterance will dominate action this week. bulls, remember you want the hawks to win out because we need the fed to bless the economy. the only quarterly report we get on monday, ajbilent, a, that compa if they disappoint, corporate buyers are out there.
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one of the one rumored to be acquiring companies, xilinx. i like to diversify all things business. some will be unhappy with xilinx no matter what. i say stop worrying, be happy, the fundamentals will rule out. we have been liking the home builders. after the remarkable run we predicted in k.b. homes, but maybe it's time to leave that horse and go back to an old fave, toll brothers. they're always very thorough and very transparent. in the last two years, toll cut it's market cap. they were not a serial buyer stock before this. i don't think anybody realizes
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how powerful they are in the urban business. my wife and i kicked the tires in one of their apartment's water front. what else? i have the video game thesis shocker, and so does earn else. that's why take two interactive is doing well. there are so many grains for xilinx company. one of the stories here is the weakness in auto parts. they keep hitting these guys down, the retailers, autozone has been in the blast zone. maybe you can turn around the group. we got to see what's happened with autozone's accelerated buy back, they is should be buying back every share. there's a company called red
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robin gourmet. i'm curious about a broader turn in dining out, versus the stay at home economy that we're always raving about. now it's been up for all the burger chains, mcdonald's, wendy's, burger king. wednesday we're going to play our new favorite became around here which is is retail strong or weak? when we get numbers from lowe's, big box hard ware, tiffany's, diamonds are your best friend. i expect all three of these companies to report strong numbers, lows because home depot reported a fantastic number. tiffany's because they're known as a head wind and their sales have been robust as of late. and europe is going to save pbh's numbers. you're not going to get good
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numbers from the domestic. thursday the changesimost chall day of next week, in the morning, best buy reports and that tells us how it's doing, and i wonder if -- the switch was a major reason buying target's huge turn in its electronics statement when they reported yesterday. best buy has not been able to beat back amazon when they reported wednesday. out also has become the last man standing in the group. and i bet it's gross margins are improving. and you know burlington stores, burl, the hottest of the discounters, it's down a point. and if it goes down wednesday because "the new york times" and "washington post" said there were 438,000 leaks, then you got
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a chance to bier lower. after the close, we heard two nonamazonable companies reporting, we got costco, because of it's hard membership fees. these two stocks rally in an tis pace of it working out. nothing's good enough for the market, even with these two marvelous retailers. remember, jcpenney called out it's cosmetics as it's strongest suit costco just gave a special dividend. i don't think they would do that if business weren't good. and another one we're going to be watching on thursday is medtronic. just like boston scientific, or cramer fave mazor, have you seen that stock? isn't is that unbelievable? i like this stock ahead of the quarter.
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the best retailers are the ones that offer you big bargains, i don't like big lots, but what does that mean? i know the analysts like it and if they report good numbers, the stock's going to jump. here's the bottom line, we still have some earnings next week, mostly ones that answer the guessing game is how strong the consumer is, but we're going to be back on hanging on every utterance of the fed. so we'll have to collar or thinking with how the trump economic agenda is doing, and see if it's referenced as something that's gone mia because of political turmoil, which means the fed might not meet in june. let's go to timothy in tennessee. timothy? >> caller: hi, cramer, my daughter has saved up some money and she would like to ask you a
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question. my stock went up 30%, will it go up, should i buy the stock? >> mcdonald's? >> caller: yes, mcdonald's at $148? steve easterbrook? i think that mcdonald's as cramer would say, that's a real good idea at 148, where were you at 93. but i would say you buy some and then you let it come in and let's have an egg mcmuffin tomorrow, 233 calories s there anything better? let's go to anne marie in new york. >> caller: i love the vector group dividends, but their earnings are not so hot. is my dividends stock safe? >> it has some other things going for it.
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i think you're in good shape for that one. i do like outshare more. i don't like my kids smoking. let's go to charlie in north carolina, charlie? charlie? charlie, it's cramer. >> caller: hi, jim. charlie in north carolina. >> love it. >> caller: how are you doing today? >> this is one of the best days in history, frankly. i was stuck on fdr for two hours, trying to get to the george washington bridge, is there anything more satisfying than that? >> caller: i want to get your opinion on a company i've been following, you may know it as coach. >> think guy who runs coach, he won't come on the show, this guy has so much game, when i go shopping, my wife makes me go there now, we were able to avoid coach for years, but not anymore, because of all the stuff they got in there.
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coach is good. and i think the acquisition was good and i want you to buy that stock, okay? did people really think i would like that traffic thing? because that would be, that would put me in a different class by himself. it's time our collar or thinking, we're back to hanging on every word of fed, you already know tech stocks nvidia have been flying lower. i found one recent spinoff that marry fit the bill. and day three after the market had a selloff, i gave you the game plan. i hope you understand the importance of what was moving underneath. and a double shot of cnbc d disrupt disruptors, from the company offering 10 billion check ins on your phone. stay with cramer. look closely.
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lately the whole semiconductor market has been -- as quell as the semiconductor capital equipment place, like land research. they tend -- there's one name here that i think has been completely overlooked. versum materials, the symbol is vsm, it's a company that provides many of the materials needed to make chips, especially chemicals, gases, and related delivery systems. versum has slipped under the radar, they're the product of a
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breakup. last year we were told that it was a spinoff as versum, this is the kind of split that we adore here on "mad money." breakups can make you fortunes they hafortunes they're done right. i think that that's exactly the situation with versum. the stock has already run up 30% since the breakup, but i don't think it's done, i think's more upside. why? because the split up is like some of the many split ups we have been chronicling for you, ebay announced it was spinning off pay-pal. sin since then if you owned it, wow, 58%. and i still like the stock of
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pay-pal, i would buy it right here. nearly two years ago johnson controls told us it was spinning off it's automotive speeding business, since then, you're up to an astounding 40%. look at young brands, which announced it was breaking it's faster growing chinese division into a separate company in late 2015, and i endorse that, since then you're up 58% if you own yum and yum china. or morse, the commodity chemical company that spin off a few years ago. even dupont stock is live on the market. back in september of 2015, it's all parent company air products noujd a spinoff. air products mainly makes prox city gases, that are used in
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metals and electronics. the division that came versum had a slilgly different focus, it was all about making materials for this semiconductor face. the process of actually making these chips is incredibly complicated, requiring lots of chemicals and gases and machine machinery, not just sand. versum is heavily involved in the semiconductor manufacturing product. the business but never much of a needle mover, thus the spinoff. it just could not get the attention. versum had two main signals, the company gets 78% of its sales from the materials business, where they provide chemicals and specialty gases that are used to make flat panel displays, how hot are they? the 22% of versum's business
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comes from delivery systems, this is what's needed to transport and store their materials and then introduce them into the manufacturing process. it sounds like these guys are making something straight forward like silicon wafers, they maker proprietary materials that are gdesigned to make companies for efficient. the new company owns 159 patentses, plus they have a terrific reach and development. thanks to their innovation and expertise, they have strong relationships with major players, like intel. meanwhile versum is in an excellent position, first of all we know the semiconductor business has become hotter.
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that's the supply and demand -- days we use so many things for chips but demand is a lot more stable than it used to be. second chips are designed differently too. in the old days semiconductors were flat. now they're switching to more complicated 3-d structures. that requires more etching in the manufacturing process, meaning more gases. the company's got terrific numbers, over the past four years, versum has dramatically improved their steals. in 2013, the company's gross margin came in at 26.7%, last year it came in at nearly 44%. improving its product mix and shifting production to regions in asia with cheaper wages and
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fewer environmental regulations. versum plays in a highly competitive market. but there are a lot of smaller competitors disbursed around the world. versum is in a position to roll them all up by making acquisitions, air products didn't want to bother to do that. but they're going to buy a lot of them. they're going to make a major company out of them? the stock's all right up about 8 bucks, climbing to 22 and change as of today. most of that gain came on the third day of trading, business is so good, from all the semis that we cover for you. every single time it's beaten both the top and bottom line. look at the latest results, three weeks ago, versum is up 16% year over year, they talked got how both segments are seeing
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higher volumes, as memory and launching chips continue to accelerate. the stock got dinged a little bit. and it's currently trading at slightly below what it was when it reported. buy, bye, buy. at the moment this stock is a steal. it's trading at 16 times next year's earnings. everybody else in that industry sells between 20 and 30 times earnings, but this one doesn't have any sponsorship other than "mad money." given the impressive record of recent runs in both chipmakers and the semiconductor stocks, i think this little old versum has got a lot more room to run. and the first of two cnbc disruptors, four square has gone
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from a single app to 94 million playerses around the world. find out how semiconductors are making your refrigerator sleet. obsolete. stick with cramer. your muscles look good, but we should be seeing more range of motion. i'm fine. okay, well let's see you get up from the couch. i'm sorry, what? grandpa come. at cognizant, we're uniting doctors, insurers and patients
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day three, post selloff and the buyers--buy, buy, buy. they're everywhere. interest rates drift up, maybe giving hope that a rate hike is coming. anything related not just to agriculture, but to construction equipment soared. the oils came alive with pleasure over opec's short selling, bad mouthing and natural gas garnered fans thanks to the heat.
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meanwhile one of the hardest hit oils have been health care provider providers. and how about that delicious breakout in starbucks? as we grow ever more confident the mobile ordering problem is solved and the selloff seems over, maybe the domestic sales are turning up after a couple of really bad quarters. we have the wind at our backs, given the demand for capital equipment is very strong. thanks to all kinds of chips, d-ram, artificial intelligence and leds. from apple cell phones to, yes, nvidia, the most under valued stock you have ever heard of.
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their computer aided designs of earning from skyscrapers to race cars to movies. no wonder it rocked up on today's quarter. put it all together and you can see we have the classic three-day rally after a vicious selloff. the stocks in the last hour of day one, day one of the selloff, last hour, soft good news rallied because there are bond markets equivalents. the fast growers levitate on die two, that's the pattern. and then on day three, pretty much everything rallies with the industrials in the lead. i remember all these people who spoke this week that the down third day you got to whamma, you got to jamma, they won't be called out, don't worry about it, they'll be fine.
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they're probably having some gin now and i'm working. is it safe to own stocks instead of using these moments to trim back, unlike the panicers who dumped wholesale late tuesday into wednesday morning. now that we have a bullish tape, as opposed to the panic, maybe i would ring the register. but for my travel stock, i was only able to buy a little stock. as far as i'm concerned it may be too risky to be a buyer or seller. plus it sure doesn't hurt that this market has stopped doing the whole russian investigation as a negative. that's probably why we didn't plummet when "the washington post" reported late this afternoon that a current white house official was under scrutiny related to the russian probe. i got russian dolls that look like the philadelphia eagles. at this point, the bulls have
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figured out, that even if this things really blows up, we'll end up with a pence presidency, which could be even better for the stock market where trump's pro business seems stalled. but the idea that this could be a win-win proposition for stocks may miss the bares. if you missed the buying opportunity the last few days it may be the time for selling. >> caller: i've been watching "mad money" since i was 9 and i want your opinion on disney, dis. >> disney isn't going anywhere, one day they'll lose subscribers to espn and it won't hurt the stock and then in the interim, you just own it. you don't have to make a big audit like it's great. but it's not going to start running until what i described happens.
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we're going to mike in texas. >> caller: thanks, cramer, thanks for taking my call. my stock in question today is box, i purchased shares of box after its ipo in january of 2015, for around $18 and change. >> i think castle is finally really good. i was proud of him that he delivered that number, i still think that ibm should buy them. the question is no longer is the rally real? can we find them? do you know where they live? do you have like a google map? anyway, we're facing a tough choice, i think it's too risky to be a buyer after the move, but hold off on the selling. foursquare, has powered more than 10 billion check ins
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worldwide. and cooling tech has moved from the refrigerator to the server and beyond. and hang on, we're going into the weekend strong, with a fast fire "lightning round" and week that was. i suggest rather than going out and having that drink stay with cramer. ♪
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you don't have to travel far to check in somewhere amazing. but years after it hit your screens, this company is more than just an app. checking in at number 46 on the cnbc disruptor 50 is foursquare. >> what do you do when your once
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red hot idea is not working well? that was what the executives at foursquare asked themselves a couple of years ago. you probably know foursquare as the app that started recommending where you want to go. this privately held company had a real smart idea. they could leverage their big data to turn around the business, while foursquare users were checking in around the world, they were rapidly putting together a treasure trove of data that has helped the company to make a map of a new business model. including apple and snap among others. i think it's safe to say that the new model works, i love the model. because foursquare made the annual disruptor list. let's find out more about the company and it's recent
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transformation. mr. glen, welcome to "mad money." i have to tell you, i love this fo foursquare. tell us how you get this empirical evidence that you have? >> we have a map of 100 million places around the world. every place in the world has a digital fingerprint. it's all the sensors that allow us to understand when a phone walks into these 100 million places, we even mapped the bar san miguel in brooklyn. >> let's say i contracted with you, or a hedge fund trying to find out whether to short me or not. who uses the info. >> we have 50 of the biggest advertisers in the world. 100,000 technology companies using our platform to maker their apps smarter and we have
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three of the biggest hedge funds wanting to know how foot traffic the changing, that's allowed us to know that the stock would be down 30% before their earnings report. we have a pulse of who's winning, who's losing and the economy. >> i was out with my daughter a couple of weeks ago, and there's this pot store on every corner. i said to her this must be killing bars. she said, oh, yeah, definitely got to be killing them. you have evidence that it's not? >> the interesting thing is it is hurting liquor stores. but we took a look at the data, we're able to see passively the phones in the pockets as they move in and out of bars and liquor stores in the states that have legalized marijuana. it hurts liquor stores, by people are still going out, they
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want real human contact in bars and restaurants. >> when you made the transformation, it's pretty clear that big data is worth a lot more than anything else. every day you think of new ways to monetize what your have. i'm told that you can actually pin point, not like oh, that person is in a four-block radius, you, pinpoint it. >> there are different wi-fis available on the 10th floor than the 3rd floor, bps signals. we have taken billions of signals called check ins, and we have provided these wonderful apps for people, that in the process of them checking in at all these places in the world, we have mapped those places. it lets you tag a tweet on twitter from where you're standing. uber drivers, they're using our
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databases from people checking in. all of these technology companies are benefiting from this living, breathing set of explorers that are mapping the world every day. >> i can give you some advice. have you contactedlike likecont travellers, or a big insurance company? >> that is in our newt. >> they go block by block, but you go building by building, they go by zip code when they write property damage. and their always say, listen, i know that zip code. but that's not what you need. you need what you have. >> well, i think there is no limit to the industries that are going to be disrupted by mobile data. >> it has to be, it's so much more granular. >> take a look at real estate in the future, it's something worth thinking about. we know who's on every block in 150 countries and how far they have come from. so we think we can help not only
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big technology companies but also you are baurban planning. >> can another company come in and maybe buy you? >> the interesting thing about it, everybody who's not facebook and google is pretty much using our platform, we are only one of three companies in the world that can recognize, across the world when phones walk in and out of these places and if you look at all of our paying customers, it's apple, it's microsoft, it's uber, it's pintrest, 100,000 companies. >> visa and mastercard could use you, no one -- you're providing the information, which is a fabulous business model. i love that much more. but i do think at a certain point, i would love to have shares in foursquare. >> we're trying to grow a
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profitable big business. and we grew 74%. >> a lot of companies in public are not profitable. you want to be profitable. >> we did 74% revenue growth last year, and we're growing about that fast this year, so we have said we're on track to be $100 million revenue business in the near future and from there the sky's the limit. >> i love this story. i can see who hours people are really going, versus what they're telling me. that's jeff glick, ceo of foursquare. thank you for being on the disrupters list. stick with cramer.
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it is time for "the lightning round." [ buzzer ] >> and then "the lightning round" is over. are you ready, skee-daddy? i'm going to start with john in california. john? >> caller: jim, we love you out here in sacramento. i have a question for you, jim. explain this to a small player
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like me, i did my home work, i bought gilead at a little over $100. they make billons and billions off of drugs and -- >> people who do really well in that business is maintenance therapeutics. this is a one and zone and it's a cure but it doesn't do much more the stock. gilead, go by insight this weekend and i'll go bullish on you, otherwise, don't buy. i need to go to johann in texas. >> caller: yes, jim, this is johann green, i have been watching your show since you first started it. the question is qoro.
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we do not want to be pigs. i do like the stock. i'm going to joe in michigan. joe? >> caller: hi, jim, i bought tanger let yesterday when it was yielding 5%. >> i think that's a brilliant move. i think that tanger is still going to make money for you, because they are experiential malls. i love it. i bring plenty of cash when i go there. i keep my daughter away from the players with the hand bags with the fancy, with that pink thing. let's go to victor in arizona. victor? >> caller: jim cramer, i love you, man. >> what's up? >> caller: something i'm looking for, ichor holdings.
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>> i have to check to see what they're doing, the stock has been red hot. but i have to do more work on that. and that is the conclusion of "the lightning round."
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electrical circuits supplying power to all kinds of kitchen appliances.
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>> this disruptor is eating up what it means to be cool. coming in at number 33 on the cnbc disruptor 50, it's economic. >> i think it's worth keeping track of cnbc's annual disruptor list. take phononic. it's a company that's basically reinvented the frinrefrigerator using a process called thermoelectric cooling, compact energy efficient refrigerator, they are announcing a partnership with thermofisher, an appliance giant for medical
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refrigerator. and they also have a deal to provide coolers for a major soft drink company. i'm all over the place here, because i don't want you to miss any of it because i think it's so, so exciting. let's check in with tony, the chairman and ceo of phononic. i'm excited about having you back on because i think yours is break through, and mark caster, does not just endorse anyone. tell me about this. >> direct sales and partnership are key to our market penetration strategy and over the last year, we have shipped,and of our refrigerators to hospitals, even wine preservation, we have a million devices in the hands of fiber optic and data com members. here you have a partner who's
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made a significant commitment to sustainability, with a combination of performance features, that are not believed possible with a semiconductor. >> unc racks, fabulous endorser, real commercial business. >> when we go after the market and twe tend to go after the biggest fish out there. you won't find anything larger than a hospital, pharmacy or laboratory. >> it can't go down. >> it's about redundancy which you can't get with a conventional system. >> you've been partnering with a soft drink manufacturer. i look at this, i think, wow, a lot more room, if i were a store, i would say i need this because i need more shelf space. >> it's not just the store, it's the distributor and bottler. what surprised us, is there's trucks driving around aimlessly,
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refilling fuel and emissions that are released into the atmosphere. so you're adding 30% to 40% more inventory, that translates to a 30% savings for the bottler or the distributor who doesn't have to restock the equipment as often. >> what they can do, you can make it so they can figure out what's needed, then you can bring it over, everybody saves a lot more money and profit, profit, profit. >> it drivers the bottom line in an already competitive rural where margins are tight. you not only have sustainability, but now we can maintain an emotional connection been an economic one as well. >> let's talk about an emotional connection that i like, i don't like the fact that we design
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semiconductors here and we make them over there. >> a semiconductor operation that manufactures our products and with asemably partners, we can deliver products to our customers wherever they need it. >> you're making a big investment in asia. >> the rollout there is simply incredible, and every time your phone buffers when you're downloading contempt, it's because upstream there's a thermoconnection issue. we now have assembly partners there ooas well. there's still parts of asia where coldness is still new? >> really? so tell me about this. >> a lot of our products are designed bottom up from economic models, sometimes we do products just because they're fun. >> oh, my, holy cow. >> earlier in our development. >> i'm trying here, that's not a
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typo there, that's a minus 20-degree compressor free industrial grade freezer powered by a semiconductor chip. >> what's the industrial application? >> it parallels off of what we do in medical, herseot care, pharmacy and beverage. it just opens up the distribution fstorage. >> i said one of these companies has got to snap you up. it turns out in the interim, you have raised money, you don't need to be snapped up by anybody. >> we want to build a company whose ultimate value is based upon the appropriate markets we enter. that's our vision, not necessarily building us for a prescribed outcome. >> i like tony atkins on the show. because your attitude is the attitude i look for in corporate
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america. >> we never needed any innovation, full product assembly, going into hardware was the right thing to do. >> you go to the government and tell us we need $50 million in semi? >> that's where that direct partn partnership comes into play. >> i wish i could be your partner, i love your stuff. phononic, this is number 33 of the cnbc disruptor 50.
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(shouting) more power tools. more power suits. (shouting) more power... chords. with customized loyalty programs and data-driven insights, synchrony financial can help bring more... power to your business. auto desks, believe it or not a stock up 14, and it's not done. like i say, there's always a bull market everywhere. i'm jim cramer and i will see you monday.
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>> welcome to the shark tank, 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." ♪ my name's steve gadlin and i live in evanston, illinois. (bird chirps) i live a really normal life. i'm a dad. i'm a husband. i love my family. i work a 9-to-5 job building web sites. a lot of that's just sitting at a computer staring at code all day. so i think it's important to fill your daily life with strangeness, with exciting things.

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