Business

Cramer Remix: These big banks are buys even in this interest rate environment

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday that a number of bank stocks are worth buying, despite signs that the economy is weakening and the Federal Reserve won’t be raising interest rates this year.

The banking cohort that have reported earnings thus far — Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs — combined made $29.5 billion, which the “Mad Money” host called “astonishing.”

“Let’s just say that they’ve become a lot more attractive, here, after this week,” he said. “These are extraordinary profits. When you make that much money, you stock deserves to trade at a higher valuation than they certainly have been getting before did before these numbers.”

  • JP Morgan: The bank is working in all facets including credit quality, commercial bank and expenses very good, Cramer said. At 11-times 2019 earnings estimates and a 3% yield it’s a buy, he said.
  • Citgroup: It’s a buy with better-than-expected revenues and earnings, and trading for 9.3-times this year’s earnings estimates with a 2.5% yield, he said.
  • Goldman Sachs: Revenue topped expectations by more than $600 million and the stock trades “cheap” at 9.4-times 2019 earnings estimates, making it a buy, Cramer said.
  • Bank of America: The company’s revenues and earnings are consistent and it’s a money machine, making it a buy at 10.4-times this year’s earnings estimates, he said.
  • Wells Fargo: “When it comes to the major banks, the only questionable quarter came from the troubled Wells Fargo, which just can’t seem to get its efficiency ratio down enough,” Cramer said. If they bring in a new CEO, “who knows?”

Catch his full thoughts here

A tale of two economies

People shopping at a Costco store

Scott McIntyre | Bloomberg | Getty Images

There are two economies at play right now and “right now they’re out of sync” based on the earnings results that Wall Street has seen thus far, Cramer said.

The American consumer is still strong, as evident in the results the banks are posting, but the railroad company CSX is telling a different tale, he said.

Shares of CSX fell more than 10% in the session after the transport giant missed on earnings per share and revenue in the second quarter. The company now believes revenue will fall as much as 2% in 2019 after originally forecasting growth as high as 2%, prompting CEO James Foote to call the economy “one of the most puzzling I have experienced in my career.”

Go deeper here

Big Tech goes to Washington

Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer and founder of Facebook, holds his phone after the morning session at the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, July 13, 2018.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Facebook should ditch its cryptocurrency project and buy Square, the payments platform run by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey that has a $34.2 billion market cap and an established bitcoin play, Cramer said.

Cramer was initially a fan of the social media giant’s planned foray into the digital money market with its announced Libra coin, but changed course after seeing Big Tech get grilled in antitrust hearings on Capitol Hill. Facebook should just drop the concept, Cramer said.

“It’s clearly doing more harm than good,” the host said, addressing the message beyond viewers and to Facebook leadership. “Instead, just take some of your money, you want to get into payments, just go buy Square [for] $70 billion … [and] blow out Square’s payments network worldwide. Square Cash is going to be Facebook Cash.”

Read more here

Another round

Samuel Adams lager

John Bohn | The Boston Globe | Getty Images

Cramer recommended investors buy into the turnaround story of Boston Beer Company.

The Samuel Adams beer maker, after years of declining revenue, has seen its share price more than double and break above $400 in “one of the most spectacular comebacks I’ve ever witnessed,” the host said.

“Losing stocks can become winners again when bold management makes smart decisions and bites the bullet,” he said. “I think this is an important story because it shows you how companies that were written off and left for dead can, indeed, make themselves relevant again if they have great management.”

Read more about the comeback here

Cramer’s lightning round: Amazon, Shopify leave no room for this retailer

In Cramer’s lightning round, the “Mad Money” host zips through his thoughts on callers’ stock picks of the day.

Core Laboratories: “I think at the end of the week we have Schlumberger … that’s been a real disaster, frankly, and we’re going to find out more. Let’s use that as the example and make that whether we should buy Core Labs or not. “

Triplepoint Venture Growth: “I’m familiar with it, which is a problem because you can’t be familiar with it. It’s kind of one of those OPEC businesses. We don’t really know what’s in it .. so I’m going to have to say don’t buy, don’t buy.”

The Cato Corp.: “You got it at a good price to be able to skidaddle. That’s a marginal retailer. There’s no room for marginal retails in a market dominated by Amazon and Shopify. “

Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Schlumberger, Amazon, Shopify, Facebook, JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs.

Questions for Cramer?
Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBC

Want to take a deep dive into Cramer’s world? Hit him up!
Jim Cramer TwitterFacebookInstagram

Questions, comments, suggestions for the “Mad Money” website? [email protected]

Articles You May Like

Trump says he will give RFK Jr. a major health role if he wins the White House. Here’s what that means for patients, drugmakers
How the ‘vibecession,’ global economic uncertainty are influencing investors this election year
China urges U.S. cooperation as Trump trade threat looms
Average age of first-time homebuyers is 38, an all-time high. Here’s what that says about the real estate market
Here’s what a Trump presidency could mean for your taxes

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *