Cramer Remix: I’d be a buyer of VMware on weakness

Visits: 7

VMware reported a top-and-bottom line beat in its quarterly report Thursday, but it’s stock tanked as much as 7% in after-market trading.

Investors frowned on the cloud software company’s move to acquire both Carbon Black and Pivotal Software at a grand enterprise value of $4.8 billion, but CNBC’s Jim Cramer took a contrarian.

“I like the cloud security space and I’m going to say buy VMware on weakness, the stock’s come down too much,” the “Mad Money” host said.

As of Thursday’s market close, VMware shares are nearly $60 below its all-time trading high of $206.80 from May. The information technology firm is a big player in data center virtualization, which allows multiple users to access a physical server via cloud computing.

VMware is a subsidiary of Dell Technologies.

“The company acts as a kind of consultant for businesses that are looking to migrate to the cloud. Once you make that switch, they’ll help clients make sure everything’s running smoothly and even provide security,” Cramer said. “They have a great relationship with Amazon.”

Get a deeper understanding of stocks in the cloud computing space here

Waiting on the Fed

Chris Wattie | Reuters

Cramer insisted that there is enough economic data that warrant the Federal Reserve to “take preemptive action here and cut interest rates.”

The comments come a day prior to a speech Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is expected to deliver at an annual meeting of central bankers and economists in Jackson Hole, Wyoming on Friday.

“The economy may be in good shape now, but if we keep getting more and more tariffs it could deteriorate,” the host said. “In that case, the Fed needs to cut rates as insurance, bringing our short-term interest rates closer to the rest of the world’s.”

Read more here

Checking in on Salesforce

Keith Block, co-chief executive officer of Salesforce.com Inc., speaks during the opening keynote at the DreamForce conference in San Francisco, Sept. 25, 2018.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Modern corporations have shifted focus to partner with companies that are value-focused, Salesforce‘s Keith Block said.

That’s why Salesforce joined about 200 other businesses to proclaim that pleasing shareholders is no longer their main goal, Block said. The co-CEO was responding to a question from Cramer about how the company is having an “Impact Per Share” — what companies are doing to promote eco-friendly and sustainability initiatives.

On top of catering to shareholders, “it’s about stakeholders, it’s about your employees, it’s about you partners and suppliers. It’s about the community, it’s about the environment,” Block said in a one-on-one interview. “When we speak to CEOs all over the world, they want to know what our values are all about. And if they’re going to bet their business on us, they want to be aligned with those values.”

Get more here

Recurring revenue in cloud services

Mike Tuchen, CEO, Talend

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

Talend CEO Mike Tuchen told Cramer about the opportunity the open-source data integration platform is finding in transitioning from on-premise service to the cloud, in terms of annual recurring revenue.

The company has watched the cloud arm grow from 14% in its third quarter of 2018 to 43% in its most recent quarter this year, he said.

“That business for us is growing well over 100% and that really is demonstrating that the opportunity that we have as we become a 100% cloud player,” Tuchen said. “We’ll be over 50% cloud in terms of new ARR by the end of this year.”

Catch the full interview here

Cramer’s lightning round: The utility stock you want to own and hold

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

Nextera Energy: “It’s the only real growth utility that any of us follow. It’s an aggressive grower, it’s fantastic, and if you own it you hold it.”

General Mills: “I would hold it because General Mills is becoming … much more natural and organic than it’s foes and I think it’s really working.”

Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Salesforce.com and Amazon.com.

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