tv Mad Money CNBC July 19, 2018 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT
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charts is target and that will make a play for the all-time highs. >> bring it on >> great music tonight you hear that, leigh van cleef stuff we had going on? >> ibm >> all right i' test test 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. 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 save you money. my job isn't just to entertain but to educate and teach you call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. or tweet me @jimcramer when this market falls in love with something it just won't let go when it hates something, the
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hate is so palpable -- it borders on the pathological. there's very little ground when the market is ambivalent about something, companies need to change their stripes if they want to do anything whatsoever the dow dropped and nasdaq declined the most beloved in the market is payments. financial payments it's worship analysts can't resist payments why the technology group has been anointed as the best way to play finance what makes financial technology so attractive? all about the long term shift from paper to plastic to digital. half the world uses paper money. and the plastic have a huge addressable market
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right in front of them unlike banks still disliked even though they reported good quarters, credit card companies have no interest rate risk and don't have to worry about the federal reserve tightening they don't have loans to worry about, no brick and mortar outlets. these are financials without financial stuff. mastercard is up 36% now, we have the digital payment companies like paypal and square today, ebay reported an obnoxious quarter and it got hammered but paypal has become a huge force in online purchases and pure payment businesses. it's on fire we've interviewed the ceo, dan, and 2 billion people have a cell phone but no bank account. i believe you can do it, hence
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we own paypal for my travel trust which you can follow along by joining my club but the gains have been puny compared to the gains in square! the other company. house of pleasure. >> it's guided by chief financial officer sarah fryers, been on the show a couple of times an built a whole ecofinance system. i've been a huge supporter of square and we used some of their services at my small plate mexican restaurant even i didn't realize this stock would rally. 103% since the beginning of the year, better than jack dorsey's other company, twitter, only up 84%. dade they deserve the recent gains? the analysts still upgraded.
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just today made square a buy also this morning, morgan stanley put out a piece of research about payments processing and titled. great businesses with undervalued leverages, defensive positions upgraded view to attractive i don't know both of these goals seem late to the party. that's indicative what goes on never too late to show a winning sector some love, not in this market what about stocks that are hated? what can they do to get the market to bury the hatchet in the last three years, disney and comcast that own this network have been a victim of their success. comcast is the most lucrative cable operator in the world with incredibly profitable growth if disney keeps releasing hit movie after hit movie we don't
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care we only focus on them when they put out a loser. that's only highlighted by espn who is losing subscribers. disney decided to bid for fox assets so big they could move the needle and offset whatever may be going wrong at espn comcast tried to snatch those out from under them forcing them to pay more and today, comcast dropped out of the bidding and gave them a boost and changed the stripes in a positive way. hated it, love it, comcast makes a bid for more money and ever since timewarner takeover was turned down they haven't been able to grow now, investors are getting their heads around the possibility comcast may be able to get to buy the majority, it isn't done yet, or perhaps all of sky, the biggest european broadcasting
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company with more than 22 million customers, sky gives comcast the growth it needs to win back the market's affection. i think these two stocks aren't up nearly enough with today's news and will be rewarded with a total reevaluation, sends them higher, contingent on being able to close on these deals. on our show just last night, this company gets no respect ibm has been busy trying to transform itself but didn't get what it deserved until yesterday when they reported half its revenue. think cloud. bmw's overall business doesn't have much growth to speak of, revenue up 4% this year. it should be more upward more than the 42% gain or .27%. as the company is making big progress in cloud and product
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lines. fichbly, there is unlike ibm or comcast, there hasn't been any hatred for danaher, however they have one business despised, dental consumables business, invisalign the stocks have been brutalized. they savaged the whole industry anticipating ugly forecast cuts. for more than a year you have conference calls saying all is well except their business they couldn't get up to its standards. what does a company do when it has an attractive asset, it does its best to spruce things up and announce a spin-off! that's what they did and the stock went up 4.5% it has a lot more room to run now that it's getting the dental
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alba trough on its neck. this market is thirsty for a company with no hair on it and it just got one. they love an investor and the financial base and cloud and medical tech and entertainment sector it can seem irrational at times but to portfolio managers loving these stocks means never having to say sorry to your investor. mike in illinois >> caller: hey, jim, thanks for taking my call >> of course >> caller: my stock is intercom communications they merged with cnbc radio in november it fields 4.5% the chairman has been buying stock. in the last couple of months it has a reverse head and shoulders pattern. should i buy >> i believe in david field. i know the business is slower than it should be. i think it's real and should come back and not because the chief operator's officer has the
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same name as my late mom >> jeremy. >> caller: i bought a 52 year low of irm should i stay with that or look elsewhere? >> i think you should stay i don't understand why this symptom is chronically undervalued, i think you have a winner john >> caller: hey, jim, broo-how. wendy's, 2011 i bought, they report a papa john merger or buying are wendy's a takeover candidate for themselves buy or sold? >> you hold wendy's because todd penny ger is good and i'm saying that not because my wife, believe it or not, loves the baconator. >> wayne >> caller: >> jimmy: how are you doing? >> let's go fishing, to the
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tarpon rodeo, what's happening >> caller: you're not kidding, it's an a good time of the year. i'm calling to get your opinion on shopify i bought it in april and made 35% on it. i can't complain that's a good return seems to be an erratic stock, up and down several companies competing for the same type of services, several companies out there. taking it to a different topic, i sold amazon in february just above 1300, good lord was that a huge mistake i should have never did that i learned the lesson of a knee-jerk reaction at that time. my intention was to sell it, buy it back at a lower price that didn't work out too well. you know what, that's okay >> shopify got a huge gain, etsy has been having a huge won
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they and amazon are secular growth winners, ebay is not. let's take a little off the table, but let the rest run. >> investors love cloud and entertainment and love was never a rational thing dominos just delivered something investors aren't used to digesting, a little miss on the international same stores number but should you consider buying it one thing that should keep investors guessing, the tariff concern. a giant new company just kicked off earnings season by reporting a surge in profits and the stock is dropping. i will see what that's about stick with cramer. don't miss a second of "mad money," follow@jim cramer on twitter. have a question, #mad tweets send jim an e-mail at cnbc.com,
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last month, domino's pizza lost its ceo after pat doyle stepped down after a remarkable run and handed over the raines regular viewers know i've been a big fan of the stock of domino's ever since 2010 when the stock was trading at 10 bucks and the comeback had just become its ordering online technologies allowed it to take shares domestically and around the world. some today thought it was subpar and why the stock pulled back 2.5% while it posted a nice 10 cents earnings beat, its sales were slightly lower than expected domestically and wall street was looking for 5.4% while the stock initially dropped 11 bucks, by the afternoon it pared down to 7 bucks. what do we make?
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let's talk to mr. allison. thanks for coming on "mad money. >> hi, thanks for having me on the show. >> i'm glad you're here. right at the beginning your cfo said we recognize the same-store sales internationally is slower than expected the first half of the year other people would kill for these numbers. why did he mention that and can it be turned around given the fact he himself was pretty tough on himself >> we're pretty happy with the quarter in the international business and domestic business internationally, same-store sales growth was 4%, within our range. what we were commenting on with the first half of the year that was a little disappointing was the rate of unit growth in the international business as we look at the business going forward, very strong cash on cash returns outside the u.s. we're confident in our long range 6-8% global unit growth.
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>> we do not need to worry about potential cannibalization because at one point you talked about how absorbing 2016-2017 growth was typical i have to ask you about that are there too many domino's? >> definitely not, jim we take a look outside the u.s., in our top 15 markets alone, we see the opportunity for another 5,000 units at least in the u.s. business we see an opportunity to get to 8,000 units over the course of the next 10 years. yes, some of those new store openings do cannibalize some existing sales but not at a level that gets us concerned that we're anywhere near saturation in the business >> pat never emphasized this but i have to ask you, a bunch of mentions about the willie program. there's been so much technology innovation but the program played a role in good sales
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here >> loyalty is still giving us a good bit of tailwind in the business our active member base continues to grow and we're continuing to give customers more and more ways to access the loyalty program. we're really happy wit three years in, continuing to help us drive our business >> 200,000 hotspots. how did you get to that many so quick? that's amazing >> our franchisees have embraced this, it's been a lot of fun they define the hotspots at the local level inside their territory. your local franchisee might set one up at the beach if you wanted them to customers have really embraced this we have a lot of excitement about it still early rolling it out in the third quarter, excited with the response so far. >> recently we had a little outfit from san francisco called zoom pizza they had a truck with portable
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pizza ovens. is this something domino's should embrace or are you concerned that's a good competitive business in itself >> we're really focused on the business model we have today, making hot fresh pizzas in our stores and through this fortressing process we're bringing delivery areas tighter and closer together. as soon as that pizza is out of the oven, we want it out of the oven and with a driver on its way to the customer. we're focused on getting the hot fresh food as quickly as we can. >> talking about how much money you spent buying back stock, the basis is 236 it sounds like buy back is important to you even though there's a lot you can do with your capital >> we're trying to make the most officiate use of the capital in the business we've been investing
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aggressively in technology as we spoke about today on the call, investing in our supply chain. with the available cash we have we will return it efficiently to our shareholders and had an opportunity to do that in our second quarter >> a lot of people are excited when you are coming on mike tr 1 asks, jim, can you ask the ceo of domino's after the recent disaster of papa john's, do they plan to capitalize mike mike's putting the question to you. >> there's noise going on in the industry we're really focused on our customers and franchisees, i think if we continue with great customers and support of franchisees, we can continue to take market share and fairly agnostic where that comes from
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>> you have been taking it from papa john's and pizza hut. that's empirically true, right >> we've been taking market share across the industry. >> a pack money called me and said, come see me and said to me directly, i don't like the taste of the pizza and you will see an ad campaign. he just took over. do you like the taste of the pizza and is it where you want it >> i love our pizza. we're constantly working on the food still very happy with the product, tests really well with consumers. we do a lot of innovation behind the scene you don't see everyday we're not constantly launching new products but constantly how we can make that product for consumers. >> you are too tough on yourself and congratulations on a good quarter. >> thanks for having me, jim
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>> when you hear someone is not happy with their performance after that kind of quarter, i got to tell you it makes me worry they're too hard on themselves that's rich allison, ceo of dominos, i remain a big believer ♪ you shouldn't be rushed into booking a hotel. with expedia's add-on advantage, booking a flight unlocks discounts on select hotels until the day you leave for your trip. add-on advantage. only when you book with expedia.
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the smoother the skin, the more comfortable you are in it. and now there's a new way to smooth. introducing new venus platinum. a premium metal handle boosts control... to reveal up to 100% smooth skin. venus the tariff news doesn't quite wreck the landscape but makes investing harder you never know how it will impact companies you now here at every conference call tariff impact kind of like shadowboxing. when an analyst is trying to model ebay, they want to know how thee bay will model.
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ebay call was discouraging, it hasn't worked out the way they hope the stock was down badly it wasn't about tariffs, it had no impact. these days you had to ask the question and alcoa talking about taking a $12-14 million monthly hit from the tariffs on canadian aluminum imports coal may be the largest producer in america, 28% comes from canada we opened a new one in 40 years in this country. all that's happened in the tariffs is inofficiate supplies. that's actually bad for the industry canada thought they would get an exemption and the stock was slammed and fell 13.3%, one of the worst performers today you know what goes on when you start getting these questions? the portfolio managers start
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listening what the heck? why do i have to listen to this? it can't hurt my company as they talk about more and more goods, trying to model earnings estimates becomes more and more complex for the wall street earnings issues. especially as they keep escalating president trump said, i told you so they just slapped a fine on google but not for long does that sound encouraging for autotariffs? for cutting them for raising them for instance, five below, today it closed up at an all time high of a buck-11 you might be tempted to buy a domestic chain that sells. especially when they had the strongest quarter of any retailer
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the first conference call was full of congratulations by analysts and now you have to wonder how many will ask about chinese goods in the next quarter, where's the stuff made? switch manufacturers take it to cambodia or vietnam maybe you should own domestic source of goods not from china good luck finding one. and how about rails? union pacific cites tariffs as agricultural weakness. free trade inpacks we are keeping an eye on. they take tons of stuff from the west coast for the rest of the country and the stock went down 4 bucks instantly but it ended up at 80 cents i think it's a buy as long as we're worried about it people won't be as willing to pay up for companies that admit they have exposure to the tariffs, especially next week's talks with the ceo and national
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advisor larry kudlow said, don't go there from that google tweet, i don't know how well they're going to go we certainly won't pay up for those who have their numbers cut by tariffs like alcoa. the russell 2000 index has been strong with domestic companies now, it's pretty clear you can't be too sure anymore about many more stocks than we thought. complexity is not a good thing when you're picking stocks and leads everyone to become more cautious for now, let's put tariffs in the yellow flag camp the more tariffs we get the more alcoa like red flags we need to guard about. that may mean having to lighten up on vast parts of the market if the tariffs turn hot, all at once around the globe. james in virginia. >> caller: hey, j.c., nice to talk to you.
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>> the same. >> caller: j.c., i read a lot of your books in one of them you made a killing on ati, allegheny technology. >> yes, i did. >> caller: with the aircraft industry doing quite well and with all these tariffs going on and energy up and down so much, where do you think ati would be going with the lightweight titanium it's good with now? >> this is a great question. i tell you why it's a great question because i literally don't know after what happened with alcoa, i don't know what they source and need next week we have to listen to that quarter this is exactly -- james brings up exactly what i'm worried about. i don't know the answers to ati. i will do home work but things are more difficult in the steel industry to figure out to shawn in illinois >> caller: hey, jim, boo-yah, thanks for taking my call. >> boo-yah >> reporter: my question is
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about unit corporation, i bought that stock a year ago, up nearly 50%. a couple weeks ago you had a segment on oil and gas you shared bullish views, especially for those who were in exploration. it was great for me because it was in april or so they sold a $300 million stake in their business and said they will use it to boost production having said that, seems like analysts are concerned with this one. >> call me a bull. i like the stock and sector. i think you're barking up the right tree it always surprises me when people say this is up 20%, too late i think there is more upside tariffs make it harder to buy stock and let's put them in the yellow flag rate just as the eu begins its possible retaliations, they are said they're going to in foreign
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steel. talk about an interesting day to report, i'm talking to the ceo to find out what's ahead good news if the dog ate your home work, i did it for you and it could make you some money tonight's edition of "lightning round"! stick with cramer. tomorrow, kick off the trading day with "squawk on the street." live from post nine at the nysc. >> the head fund managers, they came out - >> they've done the work >> they did the work sorry. >> it all starts at 9:00 a.m. eastern. alerts -- wouldn't you like one from the market when it might be time to buy or sell? with fidelity's real-time analytics,
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i know president trump's trade policies have been very controversial one thing everyone knows when you slap a 25% tariff on steel it's good for the steel industry how come they can't get more momentum this is driving me nuts. just this morning nucor delivered a good earning and basis of 130% year-over-year and
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sales came in high up 25% and management says the next quarter is going to be even better what happened? the stock goes down. granted they already announced numbers last month but ever since president trump announced the tariffs in march they have fallen we own it in my trust and got a 14% gain i have to tell you, i expected the stock to roar thanks to these tariffs, it hasn't happened yet what's dhel? nucor is putting up good numbers. wall street doesn't seem to count it as if it doesn't count if it's from government intervention we'll talk to the ceo about the stock. welcome to "mad money." >> how are you >> another company i talked to was getting hurt by tariffs, is
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there any way nucor is hurt by tariffs or is it good for the company? >> it was a record second quarter for the company and our second best quarter in the company's history. it was a very good quarter for us >> do you think people believe it's not sustainable, because your company is only benefitting from the tariff and if the tariff went away, the stock would go down? >> let's take a look at the facts. certainly we get a tailwind from the tariffs. they have only gone into full effect in june we're just beginning to see the impact of that if you look at the overall impact of the imports, there's been very little change of the imports on the first quarter of last year and first quarter and half of this year. 2017, imports were about 15 million tons in the first half of this year they've only dropped at 1
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million tons to 14 million tons, a very small change. that difference in supply from imports were more than made up by domestic companies increasing their utilization. >> you did talk about in the conference call you now see the market is being bade on supply and demand >> absolutely. >> allthese tariffs did in you opinion was level the playing feel, correct? >> jim, you heard me say many times, if nucor had a level playing field we could compete we would be very successful and we are and you heard me say we spent lots of money in the down turn preparing for the upturn it's here and we're capitalizing on it and it should be no surprise we had a very strong quarter. >> it seems like an oddity today. just today you put on a 25%
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tariff for trade diversion nobody squawks they put on a tariff everybody squawks when we do it. do you see an im balance between those two? >> absolutely. i have to say it's not surprising other countries are beginning to recognize the threat the massive global steel overcapacity presents to the sustainability of their critical industries like steel. this wasn't a surprise to me at all. >> let's talk about actual business you pointed out this tubular business you got into, people trying to get gas and oil out, this was a home run, wasn't it >> this was more than a home run, jim, this frankly was a grand slam not only did it give great performance as synergy but the synergies were phenomenal. in 2017 the tubular division consumed 900,000 tons of our
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product. that was 900,000 tons we did not have to sell into the open market, which gave us a great advantage in selling the rest of our spot times it is a been a very good acquisition. >> now, i used to cover, well, i used to cover beth lehalf steel. they always -- bethlehem steel they told me you can't get more than 95% of maximum steel utilization. are you at the max at 95 >> one of the best things you can do for me on my show is tell my team they can't get better than 95% utilization when you tell a nour team they can't do something they will find a way to do it. i think we can squeeze a few percent out, it's tough but they will do it our profits will continue to grow, continue to move up the
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value chain and switch our mix to higher volume products and that's why we're investing so much money in galvanizing lines and we're in the process of building three, which provide a higher margins the margins are able to achieve and profitable continue to grow. >> you're still putting more money in building plants, an example what happens when you level the playing field, good companies build more plants to take advantage of. >> exactly you heard me say we invested $8 billion in the down turn and we invested $1.8 billion in very strategic projects that will come on line in 2019 and some further in 2020. we're very excited about these projects, they're strategic to nucor and creating good high paying american jobs for
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american workers >> last question, is anyone squawking at any price increase you put through saying it's unfair >> our customers are appreciative of us making sure they get the steel they need to keep their customers happy we've been able to do that we have down stream business ourselves, many of them. we have found in our down stream businesses, price increases are recognized by the final customer as necessary and they've been accepted >> thank you i'm sticking by my recommendation and you have a very inexpensive stock nucor, i think is a buy! "mad money" is back.
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then the "lightning round" is over are you ready skee-daddy diane in texas diane. >> caller: hi, jim, boo-yah. >> boo-yah >> caller: thank you i want you to know my husband and i are huge fans ofstein because he steered us in the right direction in 2013 and 2014 today's question brings us back to biotech with biogen it seems they're on the cusp of a breakthrough with alzheimer's. i want to get your take. >> this is a hard one. i think they were very promotional and put out their news they failed to make the end points earlier and said they made the end points. if that's true the stock doubles. if not, it gives up 40 points. that's the risk reward you have to make a judgment.
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it's above my pay grade. >> to richard. >> caller: long time fan, young investor, 22 years old, going for long term investing, my ticker is regents financial. >> i like regions financial. not gigantic banks to diane in mexico >> caller: thank you for speaking with me my inquiry is regarding lockheed martin, has a $2 dividend and lost $2 a share from its 53 week high of 63.53. do you think it's possible to recover? >> i do. with my travel trust you can follow if you join my club lockheed is fine don in massachusetts >> caller: hi, jim, how you doing? >> i am well, how about you? >> caller: doing great my stock is u.s. fan corp. usb. >> one of my favorite banks.
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i think you will do well in it over time. not instantly. lenny in new york. lenny! >> caller: hey, jim, how you doing, buddy >> good, how about you >> good. lenny on your opinion in switch, inc. >> something is wrong with that and i will find out why. harm lin texas >> caller: how are you doing >> good. how about you? >> caller: good. thanks for having me on the show in regards to target, do you think it's a good investment right now? >> i like target brian cornell is doing a fabulous job and will throw in the 3% yield target is a winner maniel in north carolina how are you, monil >> caller: big boo-yah the stock is dlk, blackrock. >> blackrock, you're getting a
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rare opportunity to get that stock when it's down, take advantage of it. that ends the "lightning round"! >> "lightning round" sponsored by t.d. ameritrade well, victor, do you have something for him? >>check this out. td ameritrade aggregates thousands of earnings estimates into a single data point. that way you can keep your eyes on the big picture. >>huh. feel better? >>much better. yeah, me too. wow, you really did a number on this thing. >>sorry about that. that's alright. i got a box of 'em. thousands of opinions. one estimate. the earnings tool from td ameritrade. - anncr: as you grow older, -your brain naturally begins to change which may cause trouble with recall. - learning from him is great... when i can keep up! - anncr: thankfully, prevagen helps your brain and improves memory. - dad's got all the answers. - anncr: prevagen is now the number-one-selling brain health supplement in drug stores nationwide. - she outsmarts me every single time.
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to sometimes do a summer reading. every time i get a stock i haven't followed, nobody's perfected. i do research and come back with a more considered opinion rather than cuffing it. after, this is the most interactive show on television sometimes i think of myself as a stock d.j. who occasionally takes requests let's do housekeeping. on june 11th, i got a call from florida who wanted to know about senseonics i said i would research it it is a small medical company that makes glucose monitoring systems. rather than tricking your finger they plant a small sensor under your skin that connects to an external transmitter you can put on your skin and gives you real-time readings in to out. their system just got fda approval late last month
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it's likely going to launch in the u.s. sometime this year. the stock went undramatically avermaet that approval news on june 21st. since then, it's given back a huge portion of its games, why avermaet it surged it did a big offering that was down to $4 and it was brutal. it's come down to $3.77 and basically about where it was when levon asked about it at $3.82. i have good news and bad news. first, understand senseonics is incredibly respective. it has a market gap and brand new product. good news, the stock has already gotten clobbered you're not chasing it if you buy it here and if the company's new glucose monitoring is successful it will make a fortune then we got bad news, the monitoring space, competition,
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has gotten very crowded of late and i'm not sure if these guys have what it takes to compete. not because they're lightweights, they're up against heavy waits. being dexcom, rallying because of the platform and then giants in this thing trying to get into the action, succeeding abbott labs. makes sense. unfortunately diabetes is a growth industry. having seen what dexcome did, i'm careful about this you want to play a continuous monitor story, stick with dex come or abbott labs that i own with my trust. they reported good news yesterday. if you have insight that i don't
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and know doctors that says this is huge, you have my blessing to speculate. without that extra home work, i can't give this one my blessing because i like the other companies in the space so much next up, june 12, mary in connecticut called about atricure they surprise dealing with heart conditions among other things they make the first and only device approved for the treatment of long standing persistent forms of atribulation, a heart monitor and can stick the system into you with a catheter rather than opening up your chest for open heart surgery. the company has an cryosurgery line for pain management and basically they can temporarily damage your nerves that sends
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pain signals to your brain this stock started running in right avermaet mary asked about it for $29 that's avermaet jumping from $15. mary isn't asking this randomly, she's a nurse. she said she has seen more and more of these devices in the operating room that may seem antidotal but exactly what you want to hear. every year we perform 300,000 heart surgeries in this country and 90% of the fib bluelation and only 20,000 get the treatment which is what their lead product does. on an enterprise value to sales basis it is one of the cheapest in the space you have my permission to put a small position only. and avermaet a -- and with a broader sale in healthcare, you
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have horse sense june in michigan asked about live oak bank shares this isn't any old bank. they are an up and coming online based small business lender using technology man, this is growing like a weed, revenue up substantially in the latest quarter, up 63%. you rarely see this. ordinarily we value a bank stock based on its tangible book value, what it would be worth if they closed up stock live oak is very expensive on that basis, that's massive to say jpmorgan far from the biggest bank sells two times its book value and city at its book value. it should be based on price earnings mobile like any other
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profitable growth. on earnings per share basis it's absurdly cheap serving nine times of next year's number. it looks like a bargain. only source of hesitation, live oak reports in one week from today. put in half your position now. if the stock sells off, then you can increase your position it is a buy and i'm glad jeff brought this to our attention. boy, oh boy, do we have smart viewers. stick with cramer! the amount of damage that water could do. we called usaa. and they greeted me as they always do. sergeant baker, how are you? they were on it. it was unbelievable. having insurance is something everyone needs, but having usaa- now that's a privilege. we're the baker's and we're usaa members for life. usaa. get your insurance quote today.
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with tough food, your dentures may slip and fall. new fixodent ultra-max hold gives you the strongest hold ever to lock your dentures. so now you can eat tough food without worry. fixodent and forget it. microsoft and sky works solutions, looks like they reported pretty good quarter, has to do more work. skechers, another disappointment that one may not be right. there's always a bull market somewhere, i promise to find it for you right here on "mad money. i'm jim cramer and i will 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." ♪ neur with an easier and more appealing way to drink healthy beverages. hello, sharks. my name is carter kostler. i'm from virginia beach, virginia, and my company is the define bottle. today, i'm seeking $100,000 in exchange for 20% equity in my company.
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