Go Symbol Lookup
Loading...

Fiscal Cliff Fiasco Boon for Tech Trades?

 Text Size  
Published: Wednesday, 12 Dec 2012 | 2:03 PM ET
Nicole Urken By:

Research Director, Mad Money

Following is an exchange between Mad Money host Jim Cramer and his researcher Nicole Urken about the fiscal cliff.

From: James Cramer
Sent: Monday, October 22, 2012 3:18 PM
To: Nicole Urken
Subject: No Huddle

We talk a lot about the fiscal cliff on the network, and we should because on conference call after call we are hearing CEOs say that uncertainty in Washington over the budget is casting a pall on their own businesses.

From: Nicole Urken
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2012 12:07 PM
To: James Cramer
Subject: Re: No Huddle

Hearing this from EMC today—From conference call: "These economic and political uncertainties are affecting business confidence, and this is affecting IT spending rates." What we've also heard from IBM/NTAP/others previously.

Richard Drury | Photodisc | Getty Images

Nicole's Research

Third quarter results and fourth quarter outlook have been tainted by uncertainty over fiscal cliff negotiations, something that has of course dominated airwaves. But what is an investible way to play a resolution (whether it be before year end or early next year)?

Answer: The QQQ, the ETF based on the Nasdaq 100.

Why?

It is a play on capex cycles for enterprise if we see some normalization on business underspend that has persisted this year. Tech has been out of favor since the end of September but has recently caught a bid on changing sentiment.

Read More: Scaling the Abyss - 9 'Buys' If We Fall Off Fiscal Cliff

Following are some of the key components of the QQQ:

First there's Cisco (CSCO), Oracle (ORCL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Intel (INTC).

- Cisco just held its analyst day, and it is focusing on evolving from being a leading communications equipment supplier to a #1 IT vendor. This one has more juice in it, with M&A remaining key to future growth not to mention returning cash to shareholders. That said, would look for a bit of a dip for entry point

- Oracle reports next Tuesday and while it is running into the quarter a bit, valuation remains reasonable with expectations muted. The driver of course is software, and once we get a return of enterprise spending, this name will benefit. After all, companies do want to spend to increase revenue growth and improve productivity, but we need certainty before they outline their budgets

- If you want to try to catch a trade in two laggards? Look no further than Microsoft and Intel. Microsoft is down and out on very muted expectations for Windows 8 and the surface tablet, but at these levels, we could see an interesting entry point.

Intel has been a dog, down 15 percent year-to-date as it has dug in its heels on Moore's law. But with a CEO transition forthcoming and potential upside in corporate spending, you could see an interesting January effect trade for this one. Read More: Microsoft Kicks Up Its Surface Tablet Offerings

- Next page for more

 Print
Third quarter results and fourth quarter outlooks have been tainted by uncertainty over fiscal cliff. But what is an investible way to play a resolution?
  Price   Change %Change
CSCO ---
ORCL ---
MSFT ---
INTC ---
GOOG ---
AMZN ---
AAPL ---
EMC ---

Contact Inside the Madness

  • Showtimes

    Monday - Friday 6p | 11p ET
  • Cramer is host of CNBC's "Mad Money," and co-anchor of the 9 a.m. ET hour of CNBC's "Squawk on the Street."