Cramer Remix: After a 20-year hiatus, this stock is finally back

In This Article:

  • CNBC's Jim Cramer details Nokia's recent turnaround and explains how it could get even more attractive.

  • The "Mad Money" host also sits down with the CEO of Centene, who addresses the State of the Union.

  • In the lightning round, Cramer says this is a great level to buy one of his favorite stocks.

After years of struggling to compete with lower-cost Chinese counterparts, European telecommunications companies Nokia NOKIA-FI and Ericsson ERIC.B-SE stand to win big from the U.S.-China trade war, CNBC's Jim Cramer argued Wednesday.

"These once-beleaguered companies now have a chance to win the race for 5G supremacy ," he said on "Mad Money." "Their equipment might be more expensive than what the Chinese can make. Sometimes I think a lot of people would say it's even lower quality. Actually, I think the majority might say that. But you better believe neither Sweden nor Finland are pressuring their companies to spy on their customers."

Which stock wins out? Cramer thought both companies' most recent earnings reports were solid, with Ericsson delivering strong sales and a bullish outlook for the year ahead and Nokia issuing good headline numbers. And even though Nokia's stock dropped on what some saw as weak outlook for the first half of 2019, Cramer didn't agree with the move.

"The truth is Nokia's stock soared higher when Ericsson posted good numbers the week before, and stocks that run up into earnings tend to sell off even on strong numbers. Now, Nokia's American shares are at $6.05, which, to me, is crazy," he said. "I prefer Nokia here, both because it's too cheap here and because it has a better portfolio of end-to-end solutions. I have not recommended Nokia since 1997."

Click here for Cramer's full take.

Centene CEO simmers

The decline in shares of Centene CNC after its much better-than-expected earnings report stumped even its Chairman and CEO, Michael Neidorff, he told Cramer in a Wednesday interview.

"I used to think, 'The market's irrational.' This one I don't understand," Neidorff said on "Mad Money." "Every number was solid, no noise in the quarter, no noise in the year, executing superbly."

Shares of Centene lost 1.03 percent overall in Wednesday's trading session. Part of the weakness could've been tied to President Donald Trump 's State of the Union address, the CEO said, citing his "policy, not politics" refrain.

"We have all kinds of ideas and an active Washington office promoting things that are good public policy," he told Cramer. "It's all about access, high-quality care, lower cost. That's what we're focused on."