KEY POINTS
  • "The most important thing to watch next week is Twitter — we're watching for a president who slags China regularly," CNBC's Jim Cramer says.
  • "While I think he's got a point, the stock market hates it, so be prepared to use any trade war-inspired weakness as a buying opportunity," the "Mad Money" host says.

Wall Street is still in wait-and-see mode as investors yearn for progress in trade talks with China and learn how tensions impact businesses, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Friday.

Shares of Broadcom tanked nearly $16 after the semiconductor giant said the trade war could dent operations by billions of dollars. The market, however, didn't seem to flinch, with the major indexes slipping 0.52% or less during the session.