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.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Jim Cramer's Mad Money Stock Recap Mar. 28

Breaking Up is Good to Do: Heinz (NYSE: HNZ - News), Cadbury Schweppes (NYSE: CSG - News), American Standard (NYSE: ASD - News), Clorox (NYSE: CLX - News), ConAgra Foods (NYSE: CAG - News)
Cramer remarks "catalyst shareholder" Nelson Peltz has given valuable advice to HNZ and CSG and on March 15, CSG announced it is breaking up. He comments such a move has been good for other companies such as ASD, and discusses two other companies which could make "a cool 25% on your investment" with a split. He notes private equity firms are looking even at "tired old brands," and thinks Clorox's brand combination "makes no sense whatsoever." In addition, Cramer comments that keeping Conagra's problematic mixture of brands is like making a sandwich out of too many ingredients, and since both companies are in "the sweet spot of value creation" they could successfully spin-off their brands or sell them to private equity firms. Even if CLX and CAG don't split up, they have little downside, are cheap and good stocks to own in an ecomonic downturn, said Cramer.
Benefit of the Doubt: Jim Sinegal, the CEO of Costco (NasdaqGS: COST) and Lawrence Montgomery, CEO of Kohl's (NYSE: KSS - News)Continuing his series on CEOs who deserve the benefit of the doubt, Cramer thinks investors should have faith in Costco's Jim Sinegal, in spite of the stock's decline following the implementation of a stricter return policy. He says although COST may not be finished going down, he would trust Sinegal. Cramer added it is "ludicrous" that Wall Street does not trust Lawrence Montgomery of KSS, since the stores offer quality merchandise at fair prices. While he does not strongly recommend the stock at $75.75, Cramer says to buy KSS once it dips.
Mad Mail: Sirius Satellite Radio (NasdaqGS: SIRI), XM Satellite Radio (NasdaqGS: XMSR), Take-Two Interactive (NasdaqGS: TTWO)
Cramer predicts SIRI will rise to $5 if it merges with XMSR, but if not, it would drop from $3ред26 to $1 or $2 and XMSR would be "wiped out." TTWO's numbers are nonexistent, said Cramer who liked the stock but would not buy it, because without a deal, it will go lower.
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Thursday, March 08, 2007

Jim Cramer's Stop Trading Mar. 7

Take Two Interactive (NasdaqGS: TTWO): Cramer admitted he was getting behind the "most poorly managed company in America" because he believes in Steve Cohen, who wants to take the company over. Although Cramer thinks the company should have been shut down by the feds "a la Enron" he predicts that Steve Cohen is going to bust the shorts and comments Cohen has always worked well independently.
Joy Global (NasdaqGS: JOYG): The entire sector is being overdone on the downside, said Cramer, and although JOYG missed the previous quarter, Cramer notes the company has a strong cash flow.
UnderArmour (NYSE: UA - News), Adidas , Dick's Sporting Goods (NYSE: DKS - News): Lagging marketing expenditures for Adidas and Reebok means an open playing field for UA to move into Dick's Sporting Goods, according to Cramer, who notes that UA hardly got a scratch in the selloff and predicts it is heading into the $50s. Cramer also comments DKS is well-managed.
Ciena Corp (NasdaqGS: CIEN), Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU - News) and Tellabs (NasdaqGS: TLAB) and Verizon (NYSE: VZ - News): Cramer says CIEN needs a win as Verizon is making its choice. He thinks CIEN has a better chance than ALU and TLAB.
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