Jim Cramer: Young, retail investors may drive DoorDash IPO

Описание к видео Jim Cramer: Young, retail investors may drive DoorDash IPO

"This newer brand of investors I've been profiling on "Mad Money" have a lot of capital," CNBC's Jim Cramer said Wednesday ahead of DoorDash's highly anticipated IPO. "DoorDash is used by a lot of younger people, both in the suburbs and in the cities, so I think you're going to see incredible enthusiasm. I wish that people would use limit orders, but that is a parlance, that they don't understand." Subscribe to CNBC PRO for access to investor and analyst insights: https://cnb.cx/2Vtntx6

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday he believes there is “rabid money” interested in upcoming technology IPOs, but he urged younger investors not to chase after DoorDash once the third-party delivery company goes public.

“When people know the brand, the younger investors just say, ‘You know what, get me some,’” Cramer said on “Squawk on the Street,” “DoorDash is used by a lot of younger people, both in the suburbs and in the cities, so I think you’re going to see incredible enthusiasm.”

DoorDash, which began trading Wednesday, sold shares in its initial public offering at $102 apiece, above its targeted range of $90 to $95. The stock later opened at $182 per share Wednesday, putting DoorDash’s market cap at $57.8 billion.

Before it opened, Cramer urged young investors to be careful about chasing the stock. The “Mad Money” host previously advised investors to buy it at only below $100 per share.

“I don’t want them to lose what discipline they have because then we’re starting to get into a 1998, 1999 period,” Cramer said, referencing speculation in tech stocks fueled the dot-com bubble.

DoorDash is the first IPO in a late-year consumer technology wave, which includes the expected debut of online home rental marketplace Airbnb on Thursday. Online stock trading app Robinhood, also favored by younger investors, reportedly hired Goldman Sachs to lead a potential IPO next year.

There is just a general appetite for public offerings from tech companies, Cramer said. “There’s plenty of money, rabid money. I think there’s money that basically says, ‘We don’t really care what that opening price is going to be,’” he added. “There’s not going to be a lot of discipline in a lot of these market buyers. They’re not going to put a price limit on it.”

DoorDash, in particular, has experienced tremendous growth during the coronavirus pandemic, with stay-at-home orders leading to more consumers opting to have food delivered to their door. The company’s order volume was $16.5 billion through the first nine months of this year, up from $5.5 billion in the same window of 2019.

Many on Wall Street are wondering what happens to DoorDash’s business once the worst of the pandemic subsides.

While acknowledging that people will choose to dine at restaurants instead of ordering delivery, Cramer said, “I don’t think DoorDash goes away.” He also noted there could be more restaurants in business as the health and economic situations improve, expanding the market for DoorDash. Cramer temporarily shuttered his own restaurants in New York City due to the pandemic.

Despite DoorDash’s surge in 2020, Cramer said there are worrisome aspects to its business that warrant investor consideration.

“I think it’s more of a duopoly than it’s been before because of Uber Eats. Good business. Great business? I don’t know. It’s still a delivery system,” Cramer said. “They’ve made a suburban footprint, which is really brilliant but … in the end, we know that the moat is only as good as the fact that they have low prices and they’ve got good technology.”

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