Editor's note: To provide an additional resource for "Mad Money" viewers and TheStreet.com readers, Jim Cramer is offering the research notes he used for a recent show.
On my "Mad Money" TV show Tuesday night, I featured a segment in which I explained to viewers how to identify potential takeover targets. (To read the entire recap of the show, click here.) Each of the technology names on this list is a profitable company that represents a good takeover target. Their shares could be bought with acquisitions in mind. To come up with this list, my research team and I looked at stocks that have taken a beating in the market lately -- for instance, those that got hammered due to the backlash from the options-backdating scandal. Remember, it's important to do your homework before diving into a stock. Here are the 10 stocks I believe could benefit from potential takeovers, and the reasoning behind each. Broadcom(BRCM Quote) This company is hated. It's getting killed on the options backdating scandal and its guidance was also not so hot. It has trailing 12-month (TTM) free cash flow of $478 million, and its free-cash-flow yield of 4.6% is high for a semiconductor company. Broadcom's shares trade at 14 times trailing 12-month EBITDA, which is not terribly cheap but many high-growth tech stocks are trading over 20 times EBITDA. Possible partners: Texas Instruments, Intel Western Digital(WDC Quote) Working in this hard-drive maker's favor is the fact that Seagate Technology's(STX Quote) purchase of Maxtor(MXO Quote) is likely to boost pricing in the industry, and we will see huge growth in hard drives in coming years, despite the entrance of flash. The shift of the PC into an entertainment center is a major driver of hard-disk business, plus TVs are getting hard drives, video-game consoles are getting big hard drives, and then there are TiVos too -- this is huge business. This stock is trading at just 6.4 times EBITDA, with an enterprise value (EV) of $3.2 billion. Its most probable suitors are private equity/LBO firms because the Department of Justice might come down on Seagate if it tried to take it down.




