Jim Cramer's Mad Money Review

This site is dedicated towards tracking Jim Cramer's stock picks on his TV show Mad Money. Read about and discuss Jim Cramer's ability to move markets. Be ahead of the stock market. Get the news before its news.

Monday, November 05, 2007

Jim Cramer's Mad Money Stock Recap Nov. 2nd

Friday's show began with Cramer analysing two new stocks Cramer wants you to buy after the big sell off in the market on Thursday. Cramer said he likes to buy supermarket and drugstore stocks after down days because investors consider them to be safe. His picks were Avon (AVP) and Clorox (CLX). Cramer thinks that they both are doing well internationally, that they have good growth prospects, and that the CEOs of both companies have turned things around.Tekelec (TKLC): Cramer talked about his weekly speculative pick. They make telecommunications equipment that is focused on next generation networks, giving it strong growth prospects. Cramer also likes that they just completed a stock buyback, meaning they have more cash than some of his speculative plays. Cramer thinks that the stock could go to $16, and that it might be a buyout target for a larger telecommunications company.After the lightning round, Cramer discussed his Game Plan for next week. He thinks that Citigroup (C) CEO Chuck Prince will either leave the company this weekend, or not at all. If he is still around after Monday, Cramer wants you to move on. Cramer then talked to Diana Shipping (DSX) CEO Simeon Palios about dry bulk shipping rates, and he left Cramer less bullish about the dry bulk shippers than he had been. Cramer brought up his earnings plays for this week. Cisco (CSCO) reports on Wednesday, and Cramer thinks you should buy the stock before then. Hologic (HOLX) reports on Tuesday, and Cramer thinks you should also buy some of their stock before they report. He also said that Foster Wheeler (FWLT) and Allergan (AGN) have gone down in the past after earnings, which he thinks is a chance to get these stocks on sale. Cramer also said that he wants you to sell CBS (CBS) and buy ConEd (ED) because it has higher growth and a larger dividend.Cramer has the CEO of GFI Group (GFIG) on the phone, and they talked about the company's position in the brokerage market, and Cramer said that he is bullish on the stock.

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Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Jim Cramer's Mad Money Stock Recap

Out in the Open: Daktronics (NASDAQ: DAKT - News), Lamar (NASDAQ: LAMR - News), Clear Channel (NYSE: CCO - News) and CBS (NYSE: CBS - News)
Although Cramer has often said that old media is dying, the oldest advertisements, billboards, are " coming back with a vengeance," because they are on the street where they cannot be avoided and are going digital. Daktronics is up 165%, but Cramer recommends buying it because the company "owns the market" in digital billboards, which he believes is the fastest growing form of advertising after the internet. The company also produces scoreboards for sports events. Cramer thinks Lamar is a better acquisition than CBS and Clear Channel, " because it is a pure play and is "going digital faster than any other company."
Safeway's Secret (NYSE: SWY - News)
Since many of the obvious holiday stocks are "played out" Cramer suggested a good oblique strategy for benefitting from the season by investing in Safeway which, in addition to running great stores, owns the $4-5 billion greeting card business, Blackhawk, whose products are sold by Barnes & Noble (NYSE: BKS - News), Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL - News) iTunes, MasterCard (NYSE: MA - News), Nordstrom (NYSE: JWN - News), Home Depot (NYSE: HD - News) and Sears (NASDAQ: SHLD - News). Not many people are aware that Safeway owns Blackhawk, but when this is no longer a secret, the stock should rise, comments Cramer. In addition, Safeway's supermarkets are "financially sound enough to add a half-billion dollars to its buyback program last Friday and offer a dividend," and he would get into the stock before its analyst meeting on Tuesday.
CEO Interview: David Pyott of Allergan (NYSE: AGN - News)
David Pyott discussed the company's developing program for neuropathic pain and its rapid growth in the opthalmology sector. "The great position we have is that Allergan is the largest company in the world in the medical aesthetics space," he said, noting the popularity of breast implants, Botox and Juviderm among plastic surgery customers. Pyott also mentioned an upcoming trial between Juviderm and Medicis' Restylane to see which treatment customers like better and lasts longer. After the interview, Cramer commented that Thomas Weisel Partners' downgrade of Allergan was unfair, and that he would back up the truck as soon as the stock's price dips.
-SeekingAlpha

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Monday, November 27, 2006

Key Media Consolidation Insight

The media sector will be dominated by a handful of companies that produce or distribute entertainment, despite a proliferation of new technologies and companies vying to deliver programming to homes and handheld devices, a leading media analyst said on Monday. Merrill Lynch analyst Jessica Reif Cohen sees consolidation in distribution, even as new players like phone companies begin to compete with cable operators in offering Internet, television and voice services. "There will be three to five large distributors ... there's roughly four or five large content companies, and lots of other players," Cohen told the Reuters Media Summit in New York. Within the cable segment, Comcast Corp. (NASDAQ:CMCSA - News) and Time Warner Cable are likely to dominate, and the remaining players will be much smaller and possibly controlled by private investors, Cohen told the Reuters Media Summit in New York. Time Warner Cable is part of Time Warner Inc. (NYSE:TWX - News). Phone companies Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ - News) and AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T - News) are taking the lead in building up video services and might ultimately buy satellite providers like DirecTV Group Inc. (NYSE:DTV - News) or EchoStar Communications Corp. (NASDAQ:DISH - News).
"We would expect there'll be consolidation on that side," Cohen said. "Whether its DirecTV and EchoStar, or EchoStar being sold to one of the telephone companies." Cohen, who joined Merrill Lynch in 1994 as managing director and senior media and entertainment analyst, is among the top ranked in the industry. WHO'S BUYING, and WHO'S SELLING? Wall Street is also eyeing media sector mergers and acquisitions among smaller film and television producers including DreamWorks Animation SKG Inc. (NYSE:DWA - News). "Would DreamWorks be an obvious acquisition candidate? It makes sense to me," Cohen said. The two companies created by the January split of Viacom Inc. (NYSE:VIA-B - News) from broadcaster CBS Corp. (NYSE:CBS-A - News) could also be in the market for purchases, with some market speculation that either might also seek to go private. "I think you'll see with the separation of Viacom and CBS there are things that they used to have and they don't have that they may want to build up again," Cohen said. Viacom and CBS separated in January in a bid to appeal to different classes of shareholders. Since the split, the stock of CBS, once considered saddled with the slower-growing TV and radio units, has performed better than MTV Networks-owner Viacom. "There's a lot of speculation (over) one side or the other (being) taken private," Cohen said, adding that she thought it was unlikely. "I don't know that there's a willing seller there." Media mogul Sumner Redstone controls both Viacom and CBS.
Source: Reuters.com

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