Mad Money's Jim Cramer says Alcoa's earnings were disappointing, but the company is very well-run and moving in the right direction. Taking a closer look at the aluminum producer and the global economy, with Klaus Kleinfeld, Alcoa CEO.
Mad Money's Cramer likes the consistent returns on this high tech stock, and drills down to find out more about the company's future in the oil patch, with Dave Demshur, Core Labs president/CEO.
Mad Money host Jim Cramer, says he is tossing the red flag before the next play, because on a day when the averages got pummeled, earnings and Europe still plague the markets.
Mad Money's Cramer takes a look at the charts, as interpreted by Bert Dohman, to see where the range-bound S&P 500 and Value Line Composite Index are likely headed, and says the message is clear: stay cautious.
Cramer discusses e-commerce with top executives at two private companies that are revolutionizing online shopping, with Kevin Ryan, Gilt Groupe co-founder/CEO, and Andrew Dunn, Bonobos co-founder/CEO.
Walmart is back in the game, says Mad Money's Jim Cramer and could be poised to break out, now that the company has gotten its act together and is once again posting healthy same store sales number.
Mad Money hosts Jim Cramer explains KMP's merger with El Paso is a huge endorsement of natural gas; Statoil buying Brigham Exploration tells investors that foreigners recognize the US shale play; and ETP selling its propane biz to AmeriGas makes it a more attractive stock.
Mad Money host Jim Cramer says the frustrating thing about the market right now is stocks all trade together. It's not that the earnings can't be trusted, it's that the futures are too powerful, and their levels are set in Europe.