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Jim Cramer: These companies with ‘visibility’ have stocks ‘worth buying’


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Jim Cramer: These companies with ‘visibility’ have stocks ‘worth buying’

Big fund investors are willing to pay up for a stock, as long as the underlying company can back it up with visibility, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Friday after another week full of earnings reports.Visibility is Wall Street lingo referring to a corporation’s projection of future performance.”Listen for that word: visibility. If the company has…

Jim Cramer: These companies with ‘visibility’ have stocks ‘worth buying’

Big fund investors are willing to pay up for a stock, as long as the underlying company can back it up with visibility, CNBC's Jim Cramer said Friday after another week full of earnings reports.

Visibility is Wall Street lingo referring to a corporation's projection of future performance.

“Listen for that word: visibility. If the company has it, I bet it's a stock worth buying,” the “Mad Money” host said, emphasizing it “allows the analysts to model the future with more accuracy.”

Executives of publicly traded companies were less willing to give an outlook in the wake of the Great Recession that tanked the market over a decade ago. Company forecasts were thrown out of whack during the global financial crisis, Cramer said, which was brought on by a crash in the U.S. housing market.

Over the course of the Great Recession, from December 2007 to June 2009, the S&P 500 fell about 35%. The broad index of 500 large-cap stocks at one point lost more than half its value, bottoming at 666.79 in March 2009, according to FactSet. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq Composite both suffered comparable declines in the same timeline.

Since the mid-March bottom, the S&P 500 has rallied almost 530% through Friday's close, FactSet said, in the longest bull market on record.

“Now, though, visibility's making a comeback. Maybe enough time has passed, maybe business is just better. I don't know,” Cramer said.

The former hedge-fund manager often advises against buying a stock that rallies in the days leading up to the company's quarterly earnings report. He once said a “gentle dip ahead of earnings can be the best vaccination against a sell-off,” in the event the numbers miss Wall Street estimates.

“What I do know is that we're seeing stocks run up into earnings and then go still higher because management's able to make a claim that the future's brighter than the past,” he said Friday.

Semiconductor maker Nvidia, cloud-communications provider RingCentral, data analytics firm Alteryx and software giant Microsoft all fit into this bucket, according to Cramer.

Nvidia shares, for example, gained almost 15% from the start of February before investors received fourth-quarter results that beat analysts' estimates Thursday afternoon. The stock surged 7% to $289 in Friday's session.

“Even though this stock flew into the so-called print, it jumped again because they gave you not only a beat and raise, but they talked about a clear path in conversational artificial intelligence,” Cramer said. “AI inference is here, right now. And this story is still so early that there's nothing to fear about the future.”

Disclosure: Cramer's charitable trust owns shares of Nvidia and Microsoft.

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