Google at $600 Isn't So Eye-Popping

04/22/06 - 09:59 AM EDT

Jim Cramer

Editor's Note: This is a bonus column from Jim Cramer, whose commentary usually appears only on RealMoney. It originally appeared on RealMoney on April 21 at 2:47 p.m. EDT. We're offering it today to TheStreet.com readers. To read Cramer's commentary regularly, please click here for information about a free trial to RealMoney.


Google's(GOOG Quote) stock price is a simple calculation, just like all the others, but it's made more opaque here because of the high dollar amount of the stock. When I write that my new price target on Google is $600, people get confused.

We know now that the company, which we thought could earn $9 and not much more than that, now can earn $10. We have to figure out what to pay for that $10 in earnings with the stock price. We have to solve for the M, as I say in Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World, to get to the P, or share price. The company's growing about 30%. We should be willing to pay up to 2 times the growth rate. Why 2? Because anytime I have paid more for a stock, I have felt like I was speeding too fast and was too worried about getting thrown out of the car! I was too worried about a pending crash.

Less than that? Not even an issue. If you can get it for less than that, you should be thrilled. I say that because there aren't many stocks that are growing at 30% a year that are selling for less than 60 times earnings. Why should this one be different?

Remember, this is an S&P 500 stock now. People who run money look at all of the S&P stocks, what rate they're growing at and what they sell for. If they can find any other 30% growers, they will discover that they are paying twice that rate as a multiple at a minimum.

That, to me, means, algebraically that's what you are going to have to pay, nothing less. If you can get it for less some time in the near future, please do so.

I don't think it will happen. Too cheap!

Random musings: Speaking of too cheap, give me a break that Halliburton(HAL Quote) isn't up more. You are so close to getting two companies on this one, you can taste it, and you know they are worth at least $90, and with oil at $75, probably more like $100. ... Remember, most of Wall Street still believes that oil is going back to the mid-$50s! Oh man, is that wrong. Don't you think that someone has to break ranks and take up the forecast for oil prices next week? I sure do.

At the time of publication, Cramer was long Halliburton.

Jim Cramer is a director and co-founder of TheStreet.com. He contributes daily market commentary for TheStreet.com's sites and serves as an adviser to the company's CEO. Outside contributing columnists for TheStreet.com and RealMoney.com, including Cramer, may, from time to time, write about stocks in which they have a position. In such cases, appropriate disclosure is made. To see his personal portfolio and find out what trades Cramer will make before he makes them, sign up for Action Alerts PLUS. Listen to Cramer's RealMoney Radio show on your computer; just click here. Watch Cramer on "Mad Money" at 6 p.m. ET weeknights on CNBC. Click here to order Cramer's latest book, "Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World," click here to get his second book, "You Got Screwed!" and click here to order Cramer's autobiography, "Confessions of a Street Addict." While he cannot provide personalized investment advice or recommendations, he invites you to send comments on his column by clicking here.

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