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tv   Mad Money  CNBC  March 26, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm EDT

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>> well, we now have a phone segment with guy adami at 5:00 a.m. >> eli lilly continues to make all-time highs on fire. >> that does it for "fast money see you tomorrow night "mad money" with none other than jim cramer is on now. >> my mission is simple, to make you money. i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. i promise to help you find it. "mad money" starts now. >> hey, i'm cramer welcome to cramerica i'm just trying to make you money. call me at 800-743-cnbc or tweet me @jimcramer. we start strong today, 141 points up is the dow
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do you know why i think that's happening? part of it is that we've got too many stocks so with a bunch of new ipos on the horizon, the market won't be able to handle all the supply and when supply outstrips demand, prices go lower. i'm focused on this because we're talking about these ipos endlessly. i want you to know what it's going to do to the rest of the market that's why this market needs mergers! and we need them now ♪ alleluia >> before we get unindated from shares like lyft, airbnb, u bechlt r, and the incredible loss making we work. even putting aside the supply and demand of the market, there are tons that could benefit from consolidation. i'm putting this all through the prism of all the ipos. they'll be very exciting and you'll want to get in. lyft, the beginning always works. what needs to be consolidated?
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we're seeing somewhat of a resurgence it rose nearly $60 today oil stocks are rallying much less than you might expect i believe the $60 lid could hold the whole group down like it's done so many times before. there are too many oil companies. i think they need to ban together to make stocks. we think they're oil but it's mostly natural gas, landlocked making it worth next to nothing. now, because they couldn't get it to market now, though, there are new pipelines leading into mexico and that's a terrific market for apache and people will start realizing that apache will be saved my mexico. not a good fit for any of the majors anadarko has been dinged by high oil costs, nearly 40% earnings that gutted the stock in early
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february what else? bp, exxon, chevron, i would pass on exi, the best acreage in the pechlt rmean basin any company that buys apache and andadarko will go higher the red hot group can't seem to get out of its way, energy partners, energy transfer can acquire at will. what should they buy i used to be a big fan of magellan midstream there are far too many in the places where magellan wants to build. i don't think kin dechlt r morgan's business warrants that kind of buying but if he could consolidate the industry, it could prove additive to his company's bottom line. the cloud cohort oh, my god holy cow we have way too many cloud
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companies. cloud-based ceos we've had on the show does a company like guidewire, cloud-based software for the industry, do we still need one more enterprise cloud operator, which is cloudy, and missed the last quarter badly many of these would benefit from being merged how about data new relic stranger things have happened. do you know what could spur this cloud consolidation? when ibm closes on its takeover of head rat i see a major pickup i'm the only one who feels that way. i don't care ibm may have gotten a bargain with red hat no one seems to -- it's extraordinary. it justifies the use premium ipo they paid. other companies will follow in their foot klsprints next group, i can't believe how
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many health care companies there are. the managed care companies, honestly, they do better if there were fewer of them i know the deal is hated but when we spoke to ceo larry merlo, i thought he told a telling story. maybe it's 2020. i've got time. if merlo can execute, they may end up wishing they made deals right here won't be defending obamacare after a texas judge ruled it unconstitutional i am betting today will mark the lows especially as cnc will buy well care and premium. that could ignite the group that no one is expecting it biotech, i don't have time to list all the biotechs. that said, some big pharma outfits need to buy something here they're cash rich but pipeline poor doesn't that remind you of
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bristol-myers? payment space has gotten ridiculously crowded, people, with etfs. five serve snaps up first data i think it makes a ton of sense for facebook to acquire paypal not selling you out as a business same token, it could do even better if it purchased square for more small business exposure they're always talking about small business next up, there's the transportation space you know i've been a fan of xpo. we did say in the '90s, oh, okay fedex or u.p.s. could use more capacity, both in europe and here in america, xpo stock has lost value in the last six months jacobs, sorry i think your company is -- speaking of that, grub had you been. door dash is still private and caviar is owned by square. soon we'll have uber eats for the uber ipo
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now if i were grub hub, i would try to snap up square's noncore caviar business. both stocks would rally. and they wouldn't miss caviar. they don't promote it that much. create massive film and television business. new york post reported viacom and cbs are in talks about merging on their own makes sense since viacom was blm lm blocked out of the at&t bundle because they don't have scale. viacom needs cbs to get that hest run by bob bakich and i could see a much higher move for viacom mccormick, just today, pepsico, they all had good quarters so many package food companies are making comebacks here. do not let kraft heinz cloud your judgment. it's time to start buying them i wouldn't be this concerned
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about the lack of it if i weren't so worried about the coming onslaught of ipos if money managers want to participate in these deals, and they will, they will need to sell stocks that they already own to raise money because they're not getting money in over the transom and that will put pressure on the market apple was flying higher until it got hit by a surprise infringement ruling by the international judge. but all of faang will be under pressure because there's not enough capital to go around. i know no one believes this. i have been attacked on twitter for saying that i learned this in college and i did. i took this class. the truth is, that's what happens. supply ruins demand. bottom line. if this market is going to keep climbing we need to see more deal, deals in health care,
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entertainme entertainment. and i don't know if we're going to get enough of them to sop up the tsunami of newfound supply we are going to start the questions by going to gary in new york gary >> caller: thank you very much, jim, for taking my call. >> yeah. >> caller: given the current rate for the fed, inverted yield curve and generally slow curve in the rest of the world, what should i look for that would guest investors to talk considering fngs and specifically jp morgan is there a level that you would envision the dividend would outweigh -- >> it's a 90 when that level is. i said on squawk on the street this morning that they are -- >> the house of pain. >> -- and i'm not going to welcome anyone in there with me. it is a house of pain! i don't want you sharing my address. stay off my bank's and my cloud. ken in new york, ken >> caller: hey, jim, how is it going? >> couldn't be better. how about you, ken
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>> caller: pretty good i called you, actually, forthe first time in september about the first data corporation after their ceo was on cnbc. >> yeah. >> caller: i bought then it took quite a tumble but then after pfizer came in with an acquisition in january it helped out with the stock this month has been crazy. they picked up this brazilian company. do i hold on to it >> no, ca-ching, caching, that one is done. let's find the next one. >> caller: b-b-b-booyah! how are you jim? >> i'm good. how are you? >> caller: 58 and first-time investor and wondering what your thoughts were on acb and their leadership. >> aurora. if i say something negative about aurora, my twitter feed will have nothing but aurora for
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the next 72 hours. it will be like an aurora borealis i like canopy, kronos. if people like aurora cannabis they can feel free to buy it if you hector me, i ask you to remember, what happened to hector and that homer stuff, huh? i took that class. i took the ipo class, too. don't get in my face deals, deal, deals those are necessary if we're going to get through the onslaught of supply. it's going to be all over us after apple's announcement that it's moving into subscription-based gaming what does it mean for ea with, game on then cloud company is up over 70% over the next year. you probably never heard of it i'll reveal. and then telling signals about where this market could be headed i need you to stay with cramer
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>> announcer: don't miss a second of "mad money." follow @jimcramer. send jim an e-mail to madmoney @cnbc.com or give us a call at 1-800-743-cnbc miss something head to madmoney.cnbc.com. thanks for coming in. no problem. since one our laptops got hacked on a business trip everyone's been a little paranoid. at cdw we get there are threats wherever your people go. so we create a customized solution using the hp elite book with built in security features that will help protect your people and your data. spy, spy, spy! they're actually very nice people. you need it orchestration by cdw and hp
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free starting april 8th. boop! i know a lot of people are confused, thinking what do we make of this topsy turvey market people started freak out about this yield curve, where long-term treasury bonds are giving you lower return than short-term treasuries. historically it's been a pretty reliable signal that we could be headed into a recession. suddenly, telling you the sky is falling. then the average came roaring back it's easy to get sucked into these day-to-day chart ratings how can weget our bearings and figure out where the market may be headed in a long-term basis how do we navigate between the increasingly volatile
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environment? these can be very emotional and your emotions will lead you astray try to stay calm by makingject decisions on empirical observations my colleagues at real money.com where i blog to try to show you to get a better read on this market a terrific track record as of late just getting a beatdown. since then the semi conductor etf has rallied more than 13%. nice move. beginning of october right before the marketwide meltdown, she told us broadcom could be worth buying so how is she feeling right now about the broader market i've got to tell you, it's a little confusing take a look at the weekly chart. she's looking for patterns in the action that tend to repeat themselves in early january she noticed something she likes to call time
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symmetry from the beginning of the s&p's peak in september to lows around christmas, the index declined for 14 weeks we saw similar moves in 2016 and 2015 she mean these moves repeat each other. 14, 14, 14 okay i know it seems silly, right but it's worked. after taking a beating for 14 weeks, the s&p bottomed in late december, okay and has been a rocket ship ever since. broden thinks the index could be headed for 3102, right here. she wouldn't be surprised if we get a substantial pull dlts back before that happened i'm worried about the big amount of supply that i talked about at the top. what do we need to watch br do. en's methodology is taking patterns and running them
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through a prism of key series of numbers discovered by the medieval brilliant mathematician. for whatever reason these symmetries repeat over nature. pinecones. both price, the y axis and the x axis of time in order to find key prices or key dates where the trend is likely to change. when it comes to the s&p 500, coming due in the next couple of weeks between today and april 5th. we are at the fulcrum here br do. en is worried that it might be poised for a negative reversal some time between this two-week window so far the index peaked on the 21st, followed by healthy pullback, which is why she's recommending raising a bit of cash to protect your profits she's talking about this and that, you have to be careful okay can we get a better read on the
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situation? look at the s&p 5 hyundaily chart, okay? one hand, you look at the previous short-term pullbacks we've seen since the bottom of december, they all turned in after $94 of downside. isn't that great right now the s&p is down 42 points from its highs last week. as long as it doesn't fall for more than $94 in the peak, brod nechlt thinks we're fine however if we start to see this steeper decline, that changes thing. here we are, 94. boom got that 94 timing side, since december, previous pullbacks have lasted for two to four weeks -- i'm sorry, two to four trading days. three, three, three, three okay two to four trading days it's now been three days since the peak last week and we've been bouncing nicely as long as this keeps playing out like a garden variety pullback, broden says we'll be okay we'll be fine. if we get hit tomorrow again or thursday, five-day decline,
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that's a bad sign, for her she puts out a floor of support at 2722, where the s&p bottomed earlier this month as long as we hold above the key level, broden tells us the chart son your side. all the traders will be watching that number. if it breaks below that, they'll try to really knock it down. this is the daily s&p 500, one of the queen's favorite tools. broden is watching stock on a day-to-day basis she's watching for buy and sell triggers. specifically, broden likes to keep an eye on the short-term five day averamoving average when it goes above the 13-day it's a bullish crossover you can see where it's worked and then whoa. and, of course, when it goes below 13 day that's a bearish crossover. when broden saw a bunch of
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fibonacci signals, it was about to rollover. five day crossed to the 13 day in october if you were watching, you knew it was time to sell. at the moment it tell us the s&p 500 is in good shape but she urges you to keep an eye on this for something possible to change bottom line. charts suggested by broden suggests to be more cautious, very short term. s&p is still in good shape but fibonacci method suggests that it will roll over in the next couple of weeks. watch the exponential moving day averages just in case it tells you it's time to ring the register my view? nobody ever got hurt taking a profit much more "mad" tonight.
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thought it was game over for gamers once red-hot group, fortnite, took the industry by storm i'll give you my take. then how say little-known cloud player changes things like expedia, door dash i'm talking to the ceo. >> how can the market rally when we've got a pathetic housing start? don't worry. i'll reveal. stick with cramer. your daily dashboard from fidelity.
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what do you do when your business comes under attack by vicious competitors and wall street turns against you that's been the situation in video game space last year, these once red-hot stocks, electronic arts, activision got obliterated
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for you gamers i'm talking about fortn fortnite, gaming sensation that came out of nowhere in 2017, the most popular video game on earth. suddenly, everyone wants these free multi-player battle royale which makes ea and the rest seem irrelevant gave up on traditional game publishers and embraced the fortnite model even when the second biggest launch of all time came out its stock couldn't catch a bid approximate. by the time the new year rolled around the whole group had been written off and left for dead. then something unbelievable happened the worst of the bunch starts making spectacular comeback. why? because ea figured out what you do when a new competitor is bashing their head can't beat them? join them. apex legends, new free to play battle royale game just like
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fortnite no one knew this thing existed until a day before it came out downgrading, downgrading off that quarter wow! it's become insanely popular in a short period of time thanks to apex, ea has gotten its back percent year to date. ♪ alleluia it's a testament of what can go right when ai an old dog of a company manages to learn a new trick. before we get into where i think you can head, you need to understand why this one free to play game has been such a game changer for the stock. for years, this group was on fire ea and a activision would sell you a game and inside the game they let you spend real money to buy all sorts of in-game items
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rapidly growing revenue stream for major competitors. wall street loves recurring revenue. ea and activision only made that money if people keep playing the games. enter fortnite, subsidiary of ten cent, giant chinese company, to 250 million registered players making it one of the most popular titles of all time, sucking up all the air in the room even though the company told you that would not happen fortnite is free you can play it on any device with an internet connection. but once you play they sell you all kinds of stuff inside the game that's how this free game 2.4 billion, with a "b," in revenue, more than doubled the top sales. rise of fortnite has been bad by the incumbents i believe them i don't think they saw this coming either. ea got the worst of it, from its
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peak last summer to its lows, they lost half their value then in august, management slashed their four-yearbookings guidance and delayed release of their next big title, battlefield five and ea stock kept getting hammered and hammered. why not? it had been ages since the company had a genuine blockbuster. and, hey, when ea reported its latest quarter in february, the company disappointed again it was terrible. once again, management was giving us truly hideous guidance stock got slammed, dropped 13% in the news. this time it didn't stay down. since then, they've made a magnificent comeback because of this new game that came out of nowhere. their fortnite killer. no one outside the company even
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knew it existed. it's a free to play online multiplayer battle royale shootout and it is very, very, very popular within eight hours of release, first 72 hours, we learned that more than 10 million people had played the game. with over a million concurrent players. ea stock hit 25 million total players. how about that with well over 2 million people playing at the same time three weeks ago an update on 50 million total players worldwide. 50 million is about one-fifth the size of the fortnite player base, which is pretty darn good especially since this game keeps growing and growing. according to matt forton, apex
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legends generated $92 million for the month of february f these guys could keep that up, we could be talking about $1 billion in annual sales that no one was thinking about apex is popular and increasingly profitable how did electronic arts, of all company companies, manage to pull this off? what happened to the gainl gang who couldn't shoot straight? here is the thing. apex legends is not your normal big-budget video game release. they deviate it up to a run-up of a launch, millions of dollars are spent on advertising once the game comes out they promote the heck out of it, then it puts on sale and the company moves on to the next thing with apex legends, though, ea let the developers, ubsidiary, respawn entertainment, do something different. mainly because they didn't have huge expectations. there was no gigantic advertising push, not even charging for the darn thing. the whole point is to get as many players as possible and sell them stuff inside the game.
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ea paid a bunch of popular video game streamers, people who play games for a living, stream them to twitch, joined forces with the biggest social media influencers. you know how much i like influence influencers, fought leaders, and it worked. plus the last-minute announcement created they're learning the concept now. given that the stock is down 50 bucks, you know what more upside here maybe a lot more upside. if i were running apple, yes, i would pounce on ea and take interactive. they want game exposure, had something in their arcade. this would jump start their arcade, seems like the future of video games, too 50 or 60 billion, they could turn themselves into a gaming powerhouse that say the future of apple is ahead of them.
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do you know how they keep saying it's behind them aren't you tired of that after spending months as fortnite's punching bag, this one usually popular game has turned the whole story around. that's why the stock fired gage in florida. gage >> caller: hi, jim thanks for taking my call. >> of course. >> caller: my question is blizzard is rereleasing a game in the third quarter that is arguably the most incorporated game people will buy it even though they don't like it honestly myself included. how should i trade with this information? >> activision blizzard, look, bobby is a smart guy and i expect him at some point to resurrect this stock, but it's
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still expensive. we need battle royale to get me dwing. alan in new jersey alan >> caller: jim, it's a pleasure to talk with you, sir. >> right back at you. >> caller: i'm a sirius xm subscriber. >> okay. >> caller: i love their sports channels and i listen to cnbc on my car radio. >> genius. >> caller: sirius wants more higher-priced all-access subscription apple wants more services revenue and more uses for the iphone. >> okay. >> caller: with all the talk about good content why don't i hear about sirius xs xm as a takeover target? >> excellent question but apple doesn't like the satellite technology they think it's old and not interactive. you know what? they're smarter about this stuff than i am even though, of course, their past is better than their future or prolog is
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better than -- whatever. how about steve in new york? steve? >> caller: how is it going >> good. how are you? >> caller: i have shared in itv. i was looking to trade this company. i don't know if i should buy or sell. >> no, no, no. they missed. they missed. it's kind of -- uh-uh. uh-uh. they do have a yield we don't want to own that stock for yield. we want it for growth. i don't want you to. electronic arts brought its a game i think it's stock is on the upside digital transformation is fueling rapid change in customer replications i'm talking to an under the radar cloud player that is smoking hot. then time to sound the alarm after a weak housing number? i'll tell you what it might mean for the real economy rapid fire in tonight's edition of "the lightning round. so stay with cramer.
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rebekkah: opioids has taken everything and everyone i've ever loved away from me. everything. i blew my ankle out and i got prescribed pain pills by my doctor. if making my detox public is gonna help somebody i'm all for it. i just wish i would've had a warning.
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i spend a lot much time talking about the cloud. that's where the money is. this industry has grown to the point that i can't always keep track of the players anymore case in point, jeff in
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california called in to ask about five9, the leading purr have aer that helps cut cost and improve. can't beat that. i was hesitant to just recommend them this is an intriguing story. let's dig deeper with the ceo of five9 to learn more about his company and what's driving recent performance, which has been stellar welcome to "mad money. how are you? >> good, thank you. >> i hate it when someone calls me and i don't know the stock. i try to be true to the show you were watching. why don't you answer the viewer about what you do? >> have you ever had a bad experience when calling up a company or texting or e-mailing and you are left wanting that's really because they're using legacy on-prem isz systems that are not able to keep up with businesses as they want to deliver a great experience with
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customers. we are born in the cloud all web based and it is a totally radical departure of what has been done in the past. >> so let's say i call why don't we start with door dash, which i'm talking about tonight. earlier in the show talking about maybe we have too many of these companies but they have to be so customer focused. >> door dash is one of our la e larger customers they're a great example. i know you're a little bit in that business. they drive up into these spikes and we can scale up and scale down, very versatile. >> how there's a hit. i know from our business, you know, between 6:30 and 7:15, we're dead >> our systems, because they handle well over 100,000 agents from thousands of enterprises, we're able to sort of absorb all that load in the cloud if a company were to do this on their own, they would have to
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buy as much infrastructure as they would need for their peaks and we can average that out. >> how do you know i was trying to order from chipotle thursday and sure enough they said it was at 48th street in manhattan and i live in brooklyn and there was no customer help at all what's that? >> that's one of the big problems that customers face we don't do the people side. we only do the software. >> reporter: obviously they didn't have it right. >> they'll get a spike in volume or whatever. if you're trying to call, they'll try to intelligently push you off and say we'll call you back when you're available or if you're a vip you'll get through to an agent or if not you get put for a call back. we integrate all of those together text, e-mail. >> speech to text, that's something that's in your conference call that sounded interesting. >> huge deal for us. i was 18 years old, i got my first job in the call center and took 8,000 phone calls over eight months. >> really?
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hi, how can i help you >> literally, yes. >> i'm rowan can i help you >> yes first, after you take 8,000 calls your brain is predicting at what people are going to ask you. it's the same calls over and over again. >> sure. >> customer says three things, you know where they're going second thing i learned, you can be really good after you take 8,000 calls. that's what customers want, someone who is an expert third thing i learn sthad you want to leave the call center after you've taken 8,000 calls. >> right someone who used to take the call center for a major credit card company and it drove them batty. >> exactly it's one of the underlying reasons why you get bad experience you're talking to people who have been there a short period of time. they're not great at that. we can use ai. >> artificial intelligence. >> yeah, to train the computer, not just listen to 8,000 calls
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but have the computer listen to millions of calls and take all of those calls and learn, basically, what it hears and sit over the shoulder of the agent and provide an expert assistant in real time this is what the caller is talking about. this is what you should say. >> we had a live person on recently did they integrate with you at all? >> they're doing something similar to this but purely in the area of text messaging for very large enterprises zblauler and medium but you're getting bigger >> yes so digitization is the wave and the trend that's pushing us forward for sales force at the head of that we integrate with them so that the agent can get the call message, the e-mail but see who
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are you? when was the last time you called in? so we work hand in glove with sales force, oracle, microsoft, pega. >> existential question, why do you think i had not heard of you? i have a theory. you guys are good at white label. people don't know who you are. you integrate perfectly. how are we supposed to know from a stock perspective when it's you and it's not >> that's why we're on shoet we want people to know about us. thanks for helping we're completely comfortablebling in the background and helping that comfortable. >> i'm not i want people in your stock. it's been such a great performer. that's rowan, ceo of five9, fivn thanks to the viewer for bringing it to my attention. - did you know that americans that bought gold in 2005
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illino illinois bella? >> caller: hey, jim, thank you so much for your time. >> of course. >> caller: thank you for the market update. >> and i'm thinking a stock >> caller: yeah. what's going on with stau? i'm running in a lot of 20 to 25%. i know they have -- >> which one is it i missed it. >> caller: fcau. >> no, no, no we're not a buyer of any auto company. although i invited elon musk to come on during the oral argument i know he follows me closely elon, you're welcome david in michigan. david? >> caller: hi, jim thank you for taking my question. >> of course. >> caller: for all that you do, man. >> you're too kind thank you. thank you. >> caller: my daughter has a question.
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>> what do you think about camping world cwh? >> camping world it's so nice she said that he's the prophet the stock is not that profitable anything -- i think that this stock is bottoming i say that because i think camping is going to make a comeback inventories are lean karen in north carolina. karen? >> caller: hello there, jim. how are you? >> karen, i'm doing well how about you? >> caller: i'm pretty good i have to tell you, jim, you're my happy hour every weekday. >> holy cow! boat tricks. >> caller: that's the truth, i watch you monday through friday. here is my situation. >> yes >> caller: i have been tracking a stock for a while, doing its research on the background and watching the pricing my stock is bx, blackstone group. >> i like this stock
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this is steve schwartzman. i think he has done a good job i would rather buy with him than be banking against him i'm going to say yes thank you for that happy hour. say we pull a couple of coronas, talk about the stock market. jason in alabama jason? >> mr. cramer, how is it going >> good day. how about you? >> caller: oh, good. when are we going to get traction with citigroup? >> you can buy back as much as 8% it trades below tangible book. the handbook says don't sell that said, i feel like you 3% yield i'm depressed. i need sedatives to own it that's not where you want to be.
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i would love mike to come on and tell us why we should stick with citi alex in new york, alex >> caller: jim i wanted to say that was extremely helpful and i'm a proud member of action alert. >> you're very kind. thank you. my travel trust. go ahead >> caller: i'm calling about the stock yeti holdings. >> yeti? get this i go to mexico thursday night, okay do you know with the yeti th thermos on sunday the ice is still up thursday night till sunday you tell me that isn't a product you want to get? i like yeti! keith in michigan. keith? >> caller: good evening, mr. cramer. >> good evening, keith. >> caller: hope you're having a good day. >> my wife has to work really late tonight, close the long shoreman at 11:00, that's a
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bummer probably too much information. what's up? >> caller: it's good. >> thank you. >> caller: marathon. >> it's really well run, the best of that lot do you know what right now the love that it should, 3.4% you can buy that stock and that ends the lightning round! really helped me up my game. i had a coach. math. ooh. so, why don't traders have coaches? who says they don't? coach mcadoo! you know, at td ameritrade, we offer free access to coaches and a full education curriculum- just to help you improve your skills. boom! mad skills. education to take your trading to the next level. only with td ameritrade.
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batman, how could this market rally today after a truly pathetic housing start number for the month of february, down 8.7% to 1 1/2-year low, substantially lower than people expected the weather was terrible in february throughout the whole country. wet. very rare occurrence wet weather is not conducive to home building. very restrict of zoning laws all over america san francisco have made it prohibitive for most builders to break ground you can find starter homes valued for $1.2 million. starter home how about that, huh? doesn't help it in many high-tax states fourthly, student loan debt is ridiculously high, something that causes younger people to keep living with their parents for much longer than previous generatio
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generations. i had to pay rent if my mom stayed one more month. my mom made my room into a den to extenuate the point and this is what really matters, they're building the same number of homes now as they were in 1960, when there were only 180 million not 320 million as we have now all these things were already known. it's not like today's lousy housing charts are a shocker how worried should we be worried as i heard and read all day? it was online all day? uh-uh. weakest in-housing signaling that we are headed into a recession, canary in the coal mine to be completely cliche no, no, no and no. why? our impetuous fed chair jay powell cooled down the houseing where it's more affordable so i bet we get much stronger
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housing starts in the month of march. mortgage rates and raw material costs have been coming down, certainly faster than housing prices the largest home builder, lamar and dr horton, the most affordable i bet they could be huge beneficiaries of pent-up demand now that we've put the bad weather behind us. we've got a very good number from kb homes, they are predicting a very good strong selling season big housing relate ed retailers, home depot and lowes get your head checked if you're sell i selling these. gardening, outdoor furniture, grilling home depot is the best one childhood trust which you can
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follow along with all your decisions by joining depot's done well. lowe's it's more of a turnaround play lowe's has been woefully behind. changing a lot in complacent corporate culture. ellison is reenergizing the chain one store at a time and has a fantastic handle on what lowe's needs if it wants to get more competitive with the depot. an advance you can profit from i like home builders, home depot and i like lowe's. stick with cramer. ♪ to inspire confidence through style. ♪ i'm working to make connections of a different kind. ♪ i'm working for beauty that begins with nature. ♪ to treat every car like i treat mine.
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♪ at adp we're designing a better way to work, so you can achieve what you're working for. ♪
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starts with looking buiat something old,nk and saying, "really?" so capital one is building something completely new. capital one cafes. inviting places with people here to help you, not sell you. and savings and checking accounts with no fees or minimums. because that's how it should be. you can open one from right here or anywhere in 5 minutes. seriously, 5 minutes... this is banking reimagined. what's in your wallet? watch for a wave of managed care just 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." ♪ will be a new addition to an ancient tradition. hello, sharks. my name's neal hoffman from cincinnati, ohio, and i'm here asking for $150,000 for 10% of my company. now, sharks, think about the holiday season.

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