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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Jim Cramer's Mad Money Stock Recap Feb. 20

Jim Cramer, Mad Money, NTRI, MRT, DRI, LU, AMZN, Ebay, UNH
Rule #1: Resisting the Business Cycle, United Health Group (NYSE: UNH - News)
Cramer discussed more rules from his books: Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World, and Jim Cramer's Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich. His first rule deals with the business cycle which is largely controlled by the Federal Reserve's raising and cutting interest rates. When rates are reduced, the economy gets stronger, and investors should buy cyclicals such as "the dirty, smokestack stocks that make things like machinery, cars and minerals." When the Fed raises rates, the economy gets weaker, and it is time to get out of cyclical stocks and into companies that produce consumer staples, such as food and drugs. "You can't own cyclical stocks when the economy stinks, and you should stay away from the consumer staples when the economy's stronger," Cramer said, adding that this applies even if a company has strong fundamentals. He recalls his error of holding on to UNH when the economy picked up, and said that the selloff during the boom was a much bigger factor in the stock's decline than UNH's involvement in an options-backdating scandal.
Rule #2: "Analysts are never bullish enough on good stocks, and ... never bearish enough on bad stocks.": Ebay (NasdaqGS: EBAY), Amazon (NasdaqGS: AMZN) and Lucent (NYSE: LU - News)
The reason for the second rule is that analysts covering a stock are dealing with an entire sector for which they must find some stocks that are buys, sells and holds. "The Street will almost always treat a sector that's en fuego as being a lot less en fuego than it actually is," he said. Knowing this, investors can more easily spot which sectors are hot but underappreciated.He noted that this happened with oil stocks during certain times in the past few years when the sector was hot. Even the companies that were neglected or had a "sell" rating went up anyway. It can work the other way too, and Cramer thinks that analysts should have stayed bearish on eBay, Amazon and Lucent for a longer period of time.
Rule #3: Don't Be a Snob, Darden (NYSE: DRI - News), Ruth's Chris Steakhouse (NasdaqGS: RUTH), Morton's (NYSE: MRT - News)
Because analysts inhabit an upper-class bubble, Cramer says they often miss out on companies that make low-end or mid-grade products. While they can more easily relate to stocks such as RUTH and MRT, most analysts missed out on 50% of Darden's big move between January 2005 and March 2006 because they turned their noses up at Red Lobster and the Olive Garden.
Rule #4 : "Whenever a stock is being heavily shorted and heavily hyped at the same time, it's time to sell that stock," NutriSystem (NasdaqGS: NTRI)
Hype and a large short interest do not mix, but create a battleground where an investors should fear to tread, and Cramer commented, "You don't do something as risky as shorting a stock unless you're a well-educated investor who has done his or her homework on the thing." One can do research on a stock page on Yahoo or Google finance to see the percentage of shares that are shorted, and a large percentage of shorts indicates that there is a problem the bulls don't know about or do not want to face, as was the case with NTRI, which had problems with its distribution model. "So when all the analysts are having their lovefest with the stock, and you have an army of shorts sitting on the sidelines, you should see a red flag," Cramer said.
"Past performance is not indicative of future success."
Cramer warns viewers not to rely on past successes as a model for future investments, since "stocks have no memory and you could lose big." Investors should aim to make money, but not to feel "invincible" if they do and should avoid following the same patterns. Cramer recommended playing by the rules outlined in his books for successful investing.

Published By SeekingAlpha

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Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Jim Cramer's Mad Money Stock Recap, Jan. 15th

Monday's show was a rebroadcast of a program that first aired on December 28, 2006.
Rule #1: Resisting the Business Cycle, United Health Group (NYSE: UNH - News)
Cramer discussed more rules from his books: Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World, and Jim Cramer's Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich. His first rule deals with the business cycle which is largely controlled by the Federal Reserve's raising and cutting interest rates. When rates are reduced, the economy gets stronger, and investors should buy cyclicals such as "the dirty, smokestack stocks that make things like machinery, cars and minerals." When the Fed raises rates, the economy gets weaker, and it is time to get out of cyclical stocks and into companies that produce consumer staples, such as food and drugs. "You can't own cyclical stocks when the economy stinks, and you should stay away from the consumer staples when the economy's stronger," Cramer said, adding that this applies even if a company has strong fundamentals. He recalls his error of holding on to UNH when the economy picked up, and said that the selloff during the boom was a much bigger factor in the stock's decline than UNH's involvement in an options-backdating scandal.
Rule #2: "Analysts are never bullish enough on good stocks, and ... never bearish enough on bad stocks.": Ebay (NASDAQ: EBAY - News), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN - News) and Lucent (NYSE: LU - News)
The reason for the second rule is that analysts covering a stock are dealing with an entire sector for which they must find some stocks that are buys, sells and holds. "The Street will almost always treat a sector that's en fuego as being a lot less en fuego than it actually is," he said. Knowing this, investors can more easily spot which sectors are hot but underappreciated. He noted that this happened with oil stocks during certain times in the past few years when the sector was hot. Even the companies that were neglected or had a "sell" rating went up anyway. It can work the other way too, and Cramer thinks that analysts should have stayed bearish on eBay, Amazon and Lucent for a longer period of time.
Rule #3: Don't Be a Snob, Darden (NYSE: DRI - News), Ruth's Chris Steakhouse (NASDAQ: RUTH - News), Morton's (NYSE: MRT - News)
Because analysts inhabit an upper-class bubble, Cramer says they often miss out on companies that make low-end or mid-grade products. While they can more easily relate to stocks such as RUTH and MRT, most analysts missed out on 50% of Darden's big move between January 2005 and March 2006 because they turned their noses up at Red Lobster and the Olive Garden.
Rule #4 : "Whenever a stock is being heavily shorted and heavily hyped at the same time, it's time to sell that stock," NutriSystem (NASDAQ: NTRI - News)
Hype and a large short interest do not mix, but create a battleground where an investors should fear to tread, and Cramer commented, "You don't do something as risky as shorting a stock unless you're a well-educated investor who has done his or her homework on the thing." One can do research on a stock page on Yahoo or Google finance to see the percentage of shares that are shorted, and a large percentage of shorts indicates that there is a problem the bulls don't know about or do not want to face, as was the case with NTRI, which had problems with its distribution model. "So when all the analysts are having their lovefest with the stock, and you have an army of shorts sitting on the sidelines, you should see a red flag," Cramer said.
Rule #5: "Past performance is not indicative of future success."
Cramer warns viewers not to rely on past successes as a model for future investments, since "stocks have no memory and you could lose big." Investors should aim to make money, but not to feel "invincible" if they do and should avoid following the same patterns. Cramer recommended playing by the rules outlined in his books for successful investing.

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Saturday, December 30, 2006

Jim Cramer`s Mad Money Stock Recap

Rule #1: Resisting the Business Cycle, United Health Group (NYSE: UNH - News)
Cramer discussed more rules from his books: Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World, and Jim Cramer's Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich. His first rule deals with the business cycle which is largely controlled by the Federal Reserve's raising and cutting interest rates. When rates are reduced, the economy gets stronger, and investors should buy cyclicals such as "the dirty, smokestack stocks that make things like machinery, cars and minerals." When the Fed raises rates, the economy gets weaker, and it is time to get out of cyclical stocks and into companies that produce consumer staples, such as food and drugs. "You can't own cyclical stocks when the economy stinks, and you should stay away from the consumer staples when the economy's stronger," Cramer said, adding that this applies even if a company has strong fundamentals. He recalls his error of holding on to UNH when the economy picked up, and said that the selloff during the boom was a much bigger factor in the stock's decline than UNH's involvement in an options-backdating scandal.
Rule #2: "Analysts are never bullish enough on good stocks, and ... never bearish enough on bad stocks.": Ebay (NASDAQ: EBAY - News), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN - News) and Lucent (NYSE: LU - News)
The reason for the second rule is that analysts covering a stock are dealing with an entire sector for which they must find some stocks that are buys, sells and holds. "The Street will almost always treat a sector that's en fuego as being a lot less en fuego than it actually is," he said. Knowing this, investors can more easily spot which sectors are hot but underappreciated.He noted that this happened with oil stocks during certain times in the past few years when the sector was hot. Even the companies that were neglected or had a "sell" rating went up anyway. It can work the other way too, and Cramer thinks that analysts should have stayed bearish on eBay, Amazon and Lucent for a longer period of time.
Rule #3: Don't Be a Snob, Darden (NYSE: DRI - News), Ruth's Chris Steakhouse (NASDAQ: RUTH - News), Morton's (NYSE: MRT - News)
Because analysts inhabit an upper-class bubble, Cramer says they often miss out on companies that make low-end or mid-grade products. While they can more easily relate to stocks such as RUTH and MRT, most analysts missed out on 50% of Darden's big move between January 2005 and March 2006 because they turned their noses up at Red Lobster and the Olive Garden.
Rule #4 : "Whenever a stock is being heavily shorted and heavily hyped at the same time, it's time to sell that stock," NutriSystem (NASDAQ: NTRI - News)
Hype and a large short interest do not mix, but create a battleground where an investors should fear to tread, and Cramer commented, "You don't do something as risky as shorting a stock unless you're a well-educated investor who has done his or her homework on the thing." One can do research on a stock page on Yahoo or Google finance to see the percentage of shares that are shorted, and a large percentage of shorts indicates that there is a problem the bulls don't know about or do not want to face, as was the case with NTRI, which had problems with its distribution model. "So when all the analysts are having their lovefest with the stock, and you have an army of shorts sitting on the sidelines, you should see a red flag," Cramer said.
"Past performance is not indicative of future success."
Cramer warns viewers not to rely on past successes as a model for future investments, since "stocks have no memory and you could lose big." Investors should aim to make money, but not to feel "invincible" if they do and should avoid following the same patterns. Cramer recommended playing by the rules outlined in his books for successful investing.
Published By SeekingAlpha

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Jim Cramer's Real Money Radio Recap. Nov. 28

Google (NASDAQ: GOOG - News), Tribune (NYSE: TRB - News), Apple (Other OTC: APPL.PK - News) and Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO - News) -Cramer is not worried that Google is down today, because it is "taking over the world;" kids are glued to YouTube and enjoy the "spontaneous fun" of its short videos. Cramer comments that the company was aware of the possible "cratering" of its shares after the takeover, that it was not purchasing "unmonetizable assets," nor was it worried about "bogus copyright issues." Traditional media needs to wake up, according to Cramer, who thinks that TRB could have bought YouTube after selling the Chicago Cubs. Cramer encouraged buying Google 20 points down, or even $1 down. On a side note, Cramer thinks it's a good sign that people were buying "annointed" stocks Cisco and Apple on a down day. He predicts that Apple will move from $91.19 to $100 and Cisco will increase from $26.93 to $30.
Housing: The Worst is Over - Cramer reiterated his prediction that the housing crisis is winding down and should be finished in six months. He and his wife experienced this firsthand when, after moving their real estate investments to Mexico because they could not make substantial profits in the U.S., they managed to purchase for $450,000 a home in the U.S. that would have cost a million two years ago. "There are genuine bargains out there," he said. "Maybe this is how bottoms are formed."
Foreign Exchange: Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM - News), Starbucks (NASDAQ: SBUX - News), Lucent (NYSE: LU - News), Wynn Resorts (NASDAQ: WYNN - News), Las Vegas Sands (NYSE: LVS - News), Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT - News), Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ - News) and Schering-Plough (NYSE: SGP - News) - Even though China and India have "incredible growth" potential, Cramer says that few companies can really make a go of it in Asia the way Yum and Starbucks will in a few years. Thus far, Cramer says that "no one has been able to make money off of these markets," apart form WYNN and LVS in Macau. Although some are confident in WMT because of its proposed expansion into India, Cramer is doubtful that the WMT will appeal to Indians, who may agree that it is a "crummy" place to shop. On another note, Cramer says that it is time to stop being negative on drug stocks in spite of the Democratic Congress "given the power of pharma and the positive way seniors view the Medicare Part D plan." He would buy JNJ and SGP on weakness.
Published By SeekingAlpha

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Saturday, November 18, 2006

Bush OKs $11.8B Lucent (LU) Sale to Alcatel

President Bush has approved the proposed $11.8 billion takeover of Lucent Technologies Inc. by French-owned Alcatel, saying the merger of the two telecommunications equipment companies does not present any major national security concerns.
White House press secretary Tony Snow, traveling with Bush in Hanoi, Vietnam, said Friday night the president agreed with the recommendation of the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, or CFIUS, to allow the deal to go through, removing the last major regulatory hurdle to the combination of the two companies.
The merged company will become one of the world's largest telecommunications equipment suppliers, generating about $25 billion in sales and accounting for about an 18 percent share of the market. The combined company will trim about 9,000 jobs, saving $1.8 billion over three years.

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