tv Mad Money CNBC January 11, 2018 6:00pm-7:00pm EST
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tim gets a chance to be wrong on this trade as well >> something you know well, steve. >> fighting words. i'm memblissa lee. thanks for watching. "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 isn't just to entertain you but to educate and teach you. call me at 1-800-743-cnbc or tweet me @jimcramer. oil and airlines, they don't mix. jet fuel is number one cost for the airlines, so they shouldn't be able to rally at the same
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time, unless it's their stocks we're talking about. they're interacting in ways i didn't think possible, going up in tandem. how positive is that every night now, i keep highlighting the bizarrely bullish ways that stocks are trading. sometimes they're totally in your face. like this simultaneous move in the price of oil and airline stock which i've never seen in almost 40 years in this business it's the type of thing that can really get the market's animal spirits roaring as it did once again today. dow gained 206 points. s&p climbing, and nasdaq falling .081%. look at this oddity. lucrative set of circumstances because i want you in. not excited because that's not rigorous i want you to understand how rare things are that are
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happening right now. airline stocks surged because of terrific numbers out of delta. many thought delta was doing poorly surging up nearly 5% airline stocks gone from nearly most expensive because of endless losses to nearly cheapest save the autos because investors can't believe they'll be able to meet the earnings estimates given that they always seem to be in price wars but that's not what delta told you today. directly debunked the notion that fare cutting has come back and said they'll hold the line on willy nilly fleet expansion which historically caused it hence why flying is miserable. every flight is extremely full notice that? pay through the nose for amenities and even first class feels like steerage on old ocean liner. key metric that delta reported
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with all the full flights you have, company spews cash given profitable growth, stock is way too cheap trading miniscule nine times last year's earnings all can go higher. this is about price discipline and industry seems to have it under control. bad for you as passenger, great for you as shareholder pin action from the amazing delta quarter was so strong, stocks of united, continental and american also rallied. only imagine how many price target bumps this group is going to get starting tomorrow what is the one thing that most airlines don't have under control though price of oil which is a huge variable, often stung these companies. been hobbled by fuel costs so much, in hedge fund handbook, or the theoretical one, it says short the airlines whenever oil
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inches up a couple of cents. yet, here is oil rallying strong bursting through the $64 level before giving up gains later in the day. what happens doesn't matter to the airlines keep going anyway. but oil stocks, how about them hot as a pistol. what i renamed our rescue pug after chevron, you could tell he was envious and tortured by the fact his much less clever doppelganger, formerly everest was renamed nvidia don't blame him. jensen huang's above fo keynote and proud to be name add of the company. nvidia running all over the
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place and call his name, will go right to you provided you have a steak in your hand when you call. chevron is no longer jealous up nearly four points today on recommendation of bountiful cash flow on many new projects. who would have thought oil stock would have so much gain? only this in amazing unbelievable stock market could oil stock be up 12% as oil is down $40 from where it was when chevron last reached these levels going by the rescue place, getting another dog, renaming her schlumberger
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this oil rally's even got real dogs like apache, anna darko and pyre pioneer going. who let those dogs out buy new planes from boeing, makes less noise, burns less fuel both those stocks won't quit but somehow, i still don't think enough people realize how amazing stock of boeing is up another $7 and change today maybe this anecdote will help. walking, went by good downtown manhattan capital grill and see two guys out there smoking
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no doubt seeking their own premature deaths and start chanting cramer how about bitcoin, how about bitcoin, how about bitcoin. when are you going to recommend bitcoin. a jingle and prayer all wrapped up in one. heisman, no bitcoin, boeing. might as well have said put down marlboros and we'll have some of my wife's queen with a contempt was palatable chalking up to millennial lunacy can't believe still around and more powerful than ever. rise in interest rates, anything less than a quarter point jump in so-called long end could cause a catastrophic downturn in u.s. kmcheconomy. who would be hurt worse?
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homeowners especially in california where they just lost tax attractions bears sharpening fangs, licking paws darn thing already more than doubled since we recommended it. you can make a case against it but core of the bear thesis was the fear of supposedly soaring interest rates, made worse because chinese were supposed to be dumping them. that turned out to be fake news. kbh blows away the estimates, talks about how the rate rise has meant nothing to the business because mortgage rates still low. company sees plentiful jobs, bountiful wage increases, strong economy and new tax code as spurs to the housing market. even better times ahead. how they rallied another 12%
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today. people do not understand how good things are. interest rates are going up, not enough to hurt homeowners but enough to help earnings for bank stocks we start getting tomorrow their stocks have run too, but valuation is so low, is something horrible looming hope there is, give you one more opportunity to buy this fabulous group ahead of the rate hikes i'm expecting this year. more on that later banks and home builders surging at the same time, that's mixing oil and water, or oil and airlines get this, many morning, barclays, a respectable firm, report that netflix is second coming like traditional networks no more than seamstresses while netflix invented the loom. stock leaps $5
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even the seamstresses, discovery and viacom among the biggest earnings keep buying discovery. bottom line, to borrow a line from f. scott fitzgerald, test of a first-rate market is ability to hold two opposing rallies at the same time that's something this wonderful market seems to be doing with aplomb i say get used to it will in kentucky >> caller: boo-yah or we might say go big blue-yah. ask you about a stock you mentioned, discovery channel, adisca, dropped in october, now jumping through the roof long hold here >> yes stock was going down, i saw the
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ceo at dinner and almost felt bad for him. does interview with john malone, the dean of tv and media and he says he thinks discovery is fabulous $19, now $24, david faber making you money again. molly in michigan. >> caller: hi cramer, boo-yah. thanks for taking my call and all the hard work. >> i'm not working hard enough telling wife, getting up at 3:30, why getting up early actually late. i don't care for sleep go ahead >> caller: i'm a better investor because of you so thanks
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question about juno therapeutics i own the stock and questions about how the company will position nonhodgin's lymphoma therapy. >> i think it's a terrific spec but it is a spec like i'm saying to cryptoids, you're speculating how about the way they were blasting buffett as old coot yeah they've got it figured out. another day, another beautiful performance. beast in beast mode. on "mad money" today, exclusive with denny's ceo. can you bank on the bank earnings pv, what's going to happen tomorrow morning at 6:00 a.m. and private company, cramming more into your carry-on, good
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airlines can make more money stick with cramer. >> announcer: don't miss a second of "mad money," follow @jimcramer on twitter have a question? tweet cramer, hashtag #madtweets send an e-mail to madmoney@cnbc.com or give us a call at 1-800-743-cnbc miss something? head to madmoney.cnbc.com. and the wolf huffed and puffed...
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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. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies!
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late last year after spending a long time in the wilderness, the restaurant stocks finally started getting some love. some had to do with tax reform big domestic taxpayers so will benefit enormously but another thread here. reinvigoration of the consumer denny's, long one of my favorites. diner chain with more than 1,700 locations. reported stronger than expected domestic same store sales up for fourth quarter, big step up from less than 1% increase in
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previous quarter by the way raised $2 million for no kid hungry. charity devoted to fighting child hunger, a terrible heartbreaking problem for the rich country we are. check in with john miller, ceo and president of denny's in orlando. >> ceo of america's diner. i think denny's is in ultimate comfort food millennials agree. >> they do late night, on demand, to go, breakfast, lunch, dinner and late night >> let's talk about that before i sat down to do work, i thought dod was department of defense. >> denny's on demand always been brand, 24/7, open all the time, love to feed people why not make it available online, eliminate the phone call
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and hassle and deliver >> you've brought back old model and redone it. denny's of old. >> got to where it felt like ca cafeteria or lunch room. wanted to be like diner. we divided up spaces 67% of the system on the new image. by the end of 2018, about 80%. >> felt you were a bargain now i see two, four, six, eight, i know you're a bargain. >> about 20% of our system, customers come in with more regularity for $6 menu, $8 everyday value slam for $6 or all you can eat pancakes - >> can i - >> create your own >> each one is little bit
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different. >> limited time offers but oddly enough for to go, you expected breakfast to do well but burgers and shakes create your own burger, omelette and breakfast is doing well. >> most people feel that food can't travel how do you do it >> new packaging, investment but beneficial for the consumer. >> not only consume erdo well but one of the most friendly shareholder companies i've seen. crunched a lot of stocks one of the ten best buybacks of public companies. >> october we were down to about $8 million left in authorization. upped the multiple debt capacity, took on a new facility and upped from two to three times multiple range to 2 1/2, 3 1/2. more share capacity and added
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more authorization great program. >> maybe you can help us talked about on your notes the franchises franchisees, association, all excited. what does it mean? >> franchisees run these businesses if they feel like they have somebody to listen to them and care about them making money, makes for great partnership. >> a lot of people feel there's a propensity of -- let me put this -- it's difficult historically young people don't want to gain weight, selfie generation but when i taste your stuff, authentici authentici authenticity trumps the idea but real. >> high percent butter fat, hand-made shakes that's why popular and sell well a great society runs best when
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you push responsibility down give people choice, let them make decision. you want indulgent shake, we'll sell it to you monday morning you can have fit slam egg white omelette. popularity of the fit menu is going through the roof leaner, high protein sources are doing well fresh vegetables number of those going through the roof this year. >> one of the things i'm uniquely focused on is where units are. really you're just pushing into universities shouldn't every university have a denny's? >> we'd love the idea. we have 18, which is great, more than anybody but not near enough doing well. >> northeast is underrepresented versus the south and southwest when am i going to see denny's at every interchange >> half of our system, 800 in
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about four states. california, arizona, texas, florida. starting to get into southeast a little more and finally breaking into new york, staten island, brooklyn we have a store looking for more >> with restaurants, hard to get, hardworking people at restaurants, immigrants, trying to make it to have american dream and maybe be a franchisee one day. is it tough to find people particularly on the coast where you can still make a profit? costs a lot to hire somebody. >> it does key is keeping people, making sure they're motivated and properly cared for and highly productive seem to have no problem. turnover is lower than most, win awards for people practices and we're proud of that. >> i'm proud to be behind your stock, fantastic run john miller, president and ceo
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of denny's, what a run you've had and it may be early. >> thank you it's a small finger...a worm! like, a dagger? a tiny sword? bread...breadstick? a matchstick! a lamppost! coin slot! no? uhhh... 10 seconds. a stick! a walking stick! eiffel tower, mount kilimanjaro! (ding) time! sorry, it's a tandem bicycle. what? what?! as long as sloths are slow, you can count on geico saving folks money. fifteen minutes could save you
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tomorrow marks the unofficial beginning of earning season it always starts with the banks. j.p. morgan, wells fargo and pnc financial all in one day, others coming i would say that monday and tomorrow are going to define what may happen. literally for the next month it's that important. i think most companies will tell us what we want to hear. but comes to financials, problem is this quarter is going to look a lot worse than it might be be messier tonight i want to sit down and get everybody in shape for what
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happens tomorrow, prepare for what's going to occur. not going to predict which banks do well, which won't simply separate signal from noise so you're in position to understand what is happening as it happens big themes early december, realized tax bill might actually pass, banks taking large one time account charges in fourth quarter to get ahead of it. cfo of sidney group talked about taking a $20 billion hit from the tax bill why? accounting issue big companies like financials have tons of unrecognized losses at any given time and much more valuable in 2017 offsetting 35% tax rate than this year, only offsetting 21% tax rate if the banks want to take full advantage of the tax code, they
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always try to do it, up to them if they want to, take a bunch of write-offs in the fourth quarter before it kicked in. so could look horrendous on the surface. i predict people will be doing this the moment it happens >> sale l sell sell sell sell sell sell sell. >> i'm trying to steel you to that and trading volumes likely to go down and down big. $20 billion hit conference call, also mentioned would see large year-to-year declines in trading volumes. likely high teens. suboptimal but you have to understand the banks are coming up against difficult comparisons. last year extreme volatility because of the surprise election of donald j. trump and last quarter j.p. morgan and citi told us they set aside more
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money for credit card losses concern in general i'm not concerned. given the strength of retail over the holidays, my sense is consumer is feeling flush. but it's something to watch for. you know the bears are going to run with it. big issues smaller niggling ones that could hurt individual companies? how do we evaluate the banks as they report. nim is the single key measure. difference between meager amount they pay you for deposits and huge amount they try to charge you for loans. how banks make most money. there's real reason for optimism here i think can prevail. that said, people have been fretting about the flat yield curve, long-term so low even as
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short-term rise because of the fed, could put a damper on things looking for negative chatter on that remember a lot of people want stocks to go later if continues to rise, bank of america benefits most. the biggest beneficiaries are actually regional banks. typically to pure plays on actual lending not doing a lot of trading and m&a. second most important metric, loan growth. important for banks and tell for overall economy. why i said in the beginning these stocks are important for the overall market want to hear they're as robust as market indicates. nothing makes me happier to hear bullish numbers. sign that banks are feeling more confident about prospects going forward and more willing to
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borrow but loan growth tailed off as year ended it's going to freak you out. steel your heart also hear about dividends and buybacks lower tax rate and looser regulatory environment means banks could substantially increase earnings for you. fed cleared big banks' capital return plans and got to be more aggressive even before trump appointed his own chief. i think janet yellen did a good job and i think new guy will be easier on the banks. see how much they increase buybacks without risking ire of the fed. i think fed will encourage them. too much capital on the balance sheets most valuable information comes from listening to the banks'
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conference calls and hearing what the ceos have to tell us. most people won't bother, be trading first. why am i going through this? don't want you to do this. tax bill still isn't well understood and don't know all the ways it could impact the economy. so begging you not to react too quickly to headline numbers. almost always wrong with trading and banks. we don't understand the impact when the banks start reporting, don't be thrown off by one-time charges from fourth quarter, human gus. but listen to what they say about loan growth and sending money back to you. key group in the market and after the recent run i don't think stocks can handle any real bad news i'm banking on the idea we won't get much away. don in massachusetts >> caller: how are you doing
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>> well, you >> caller: great when we go to get a loan from a bank, we usually have to experience hassle in dealing with bank managers and outrageous rates this is all about to change. this firm realizes age-old way of loaning and lending money doesn't have to remain in the hands of big banking right now over 2 million customers borrowing from over 180,000 investors. won't take long for people to realize peer-to-peer lending is the future of financial transactions. >> okay, okay. >> caller: enter lending club corporation, lc, which provides a better, more efficient, cheaper and easier way to borrow andlend money. millennials are especially going to like this. >> but don, emember, we care about how a company does
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they're spotty and inconsistent and man am i being diplomat? goldman sachs has a -- that does the same thing why not own goldman sachs rather than the suboptimal way that company manages its business >> caller: new york community bank corp. >> it's okay we like quality with banks stocks like j.p. morgan, not going to go down the food chain just because it looks like something's cheap. j.p. morgan is cheap why? five years from now could be dramatically higher. major banks report tomorrow. trying to give you flavor of how confusing it will be so you won't do the wrong thing quarter is going to be messy now you know what to focus on. hope you won't be confused
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making travel a better experience may not sound that exciting but away is turning this industry on its head using direct-to-consumer business model to directly undercut the competition sold 200,000 suitcases through their website. what is driving this terrific story? steph korey is the cofounder of away >> why did you start away? >> personal experience business partner jen was traveling. suitcase fell apart in the airport and asked all friends for recommendation everyone said don't get what i have, nothing to recommend to you. she gave me a call and we started to talk through travel and travel experience is and why no brands that exist today are
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speaking to that one thing led to another and away was born. >> other companies wanted to make luggage, you wanted to do something experiential that included luggage. >> nail on the head there. how do we make a feature list to market all about the feature list and marketing and bullets on the materials. but we said how do people travel today? how is it changing and different? how do we build products to support that experience and made the end-to-end seamless. >> millennials travel differently from my generation want different things out of a suitcase what do you give them? >> number of things are unique one of the first things we learned, we asked do you travel more for work or pleasure? one of the best things is answer is always both if you're going somewhere,
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you're incorporating everything. part of what we did, made some things super light designed it to fit more inside than anything else, maximum size you can carry on with you. charges your phone, if you're sitting at gate answering e-mail, no more sitting around waiting for outlet. >> i sit on bag, people snap a picture thinking i'm desperate that's what you do millennial pink -- how you make money, but interesting anecdote, something you had that was hotcac. >> modeled it off your shirt millennial pink suitcase, only made a few thousand and sold out in tenth of the time we thought they were going to do and saw ourselves a few weeks later with
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wait list of 10,000, 20,000. people see mailing, what can can i do to get the pink one wanted it so badly we brought it back so people are happy. >> millennials watching the show, i want to have a business. they have something they believe in and want to do a business how did you think you could. sold 200,000 pieces? >> a little bit more >> why did you think the dream could come true? >> great question. i didn't start with i want to start a business i started with my friend not being able to find a suitcase that met her travel needs. and i told her i would help her look into why her needs couldn't be met we started doing consumer and market research and one thing led to another, we were like, oh, my gosh, we could create something to make travel better
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for all these people. >> how are people hearing about it what kind of guerilla warfare are you doing? >> if we can create something that leaves a lasting impression with people, that's so rare they'll tell everyone they know about it storytelling in the brand and inspiring people to travel more and get out there is core part of how we get our brand awareness. >> social? what do you use? >> lot of social media, instagram is second biggest way people find out about us after from a friend. >> instagram, people watching at home, i can instagram, get it done what do you do what is the trick for away
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what are you doing >> ask you a question first. when you scroll through instagram feed or thinking about what to instagram yourself, it's typically not someone sitting at desk, here's me eating a sandwich >> bad branding. >> people are instagraming traveling and seeing the world what we've done is highly encourage our customers, when you're traveling and doing cool things, share it inspire your networks and share what you're doing. now people are traveling, instagraming themselves with luggage and people are finding out about it. >> that's the word of mouth that works. i love that you believed and then created a business. as opposed to i'll create a business, what should i do that's terrific. believe, that's what people should do, what success is about. steph korey, ceo and cofounder of away. we want her to win stay with cramer
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and then it's over are you ready skee-daddies time for lightning round, mike in florida mike >> caller: boo-yah from orlando. >> just there, love it what's up? >> caller: nine years of double digit comps, thousand better this quarter than last year. thoughts >> buy, buy, buy floor and decor are red hot. gives you both john in new york >> caller: boo-yah, how are you? thank you and staff for great advice, i've been doing well regeneron? sell or hold >> buy lot of people have given up but so many irons in the fire. joe in new york. >> caller: boo-yah from syracuse
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>> one of my territories at goldman. >> caller: lpl, bought in 2017, what should i do >> swap out of it. so bet against it's crazy. anne in california >> caller: greetings jim question on zagg >> used to zig when it was zagg but we sat down with them, liked the story. sticking by it tyler also in florida. >> caller: how is it going question about -- i picked it up mid-november >> we like the stock at $3 not backing away we say come on back. it's quintuple go to steve in pennsylvania. >> caller: hey jim grandson harrison is looking forward to seeing -- on
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saturday. >> going to get there early. he ought to come early no tail ggate by the way. we're responsible. >> caller: also hello to grand daughter bella what do you think of buying core labs >> i like it but if you already own the other, don't do it joel in pennsylvania >> caller: hi jim, how are you >> good. how are you? >> caller: not too bad ask you about cedar fair >> i like them, streamlined and 5% yield tom in new york. >> caller: boo-yah >> wow >> caller: what's your take on first solar? >> huh up 10% today
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did a piece on stock ramping will probably go to 80 nick in new jersey >> caller: boo-yah jimbo howard lud nick on cnbc said i should buy newmark. >> it's not no-brainer but fine. good but not amazing but steady. that ladies and gentlemen is the conclusion of the "lightning round. >> announcer: "the lightning round" is sponsored by td ameritrade help you with that., at first, n jj, will you break it down for this gentleman? hey, ian. you know, at td ameritrade, we can walk you through your options trades step by step until you're comfortable. i could be up for that. that's taking options trading from wall st. to main st. hey guys, wanna play some pool? eh, i'm not really a pool guy. what's the hesitation?
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woman: so, greg, it's a lot to take in. woman 2: and i know that's hard to hear, but the doctors caught it early. hi, blake! my dad has cancer. woman: and i know how hard that is to hear. but you're in the right place. man: and dr. pascal and her team, they know what to do. they know what to do. the doctors know what to do. so here's the plan. first off, we're going to give you all... (voice fading away)
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we're being way too cavalier about the return of retail, including mall-based retail and what it really means just don't believe any of these companies can escape the clutches of the death star, amazon but reliable old strip mall store can put up 5% growth first time since 2001, something bigger going on. children space can generate sales, can we write it off as fluke? showing genuine earnings power
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spent a day talking to retailers at icr conference in orlando something is afoot consumer is stronger than anybody and any of these companies could imagine years ago. shopping aggressively at costco, home depot and lowe's. but walmart is choosing to reward workers with new bonuses, courtesy of the tax bill although did cut from sam's club, sent the stocks in costco higher there's been a serious pickup in shopping not just 2014, but in many cases to early to mid-2000s. should we just buy their stock right now?
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i huddled down with the action works plus action team after this run, might be mistake to jump on all of them we think you have to wait for etf-related pull-back. in control, seems to manipulate up and down. given that rth is roaring, think you'll be overpaying if you don't wait for a little bit of a downturn but retail executives feel like job creation, stability and some genuine booms related to cheap energy in southeast are contributing household formation is back on the upswing with millennials finally having children, spending money on them, moving out of parents' house. third many retailers cobbling together strategies that the consumer likes
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may have to partner with amazon web services but also better control of inventory and figured out positives of bricks and mortar buy online, pick up at store fourth, survivors getting spoils so many failures in retail, remaining winners taken a lot of market share and making a killing because business is picking up fifth, valuations may be wrong for the companies. how strong for nordstrom, seems ridiculous they're not going public considering they were contemplating doing that when the company was in worse shape failed last time but now things are better, think talks will restart. same about macy's, i don't think people understand the magnitude of optionality they have if they get it right and they have been. cleaned up balance sheet, doing more with less
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and flagship store wiped out by strong dollar. that's over. dollar is weak retail indry spell, happens in january, need to buy this group next time there's weakness here. retailers not falling apart anymore, first time in years, not just tradeable, actually investable stick with cramer. we have a short amount of time to get our patient to the hospital with good results. we call that the golden hour. evaluating patients remotely is where i think we have a potential to make a difference. (barry murrey) we would save a lot of lives if we could bring the doctor to the patient. verizon is racing to build the first and most powerful 5g network that will enable things like precision robotic surgery from thousands of miles away. as we get faster wireless connections, it'll be possible to be able to operate on a patient
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every night i come out here and i just keep trying to explain how unusual, unusually fabulous for the bulls, this market is. oil and water story, they are mixing there isn't anything that i find that relates to the old market even just a couple years ago airlines never go up with fuel oils, it's just incredible leave it at that i like saying there's always a bull market somewhere, promise to find it just for you on "mad money," i'm jim cramer, see you tomorrow
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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 is ryan carpenter. i live in portland, oregon, with my turtle, mo, and i'm the owner of moberi. i love living in portland. portland is the place where weird ideas thrive, and what i do is definitely a little weird, and people really like that here. leading a healthy lifestyle is something i've done for a long time. i frequently ride my bike around to the farmers market, picking up fresh produce. can't wait to juice these.
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