Outspoken TV personality Jim Cramer talked Tuesday with his CNBC crew about how banks are sweating the possibility of Elizabeth Warren as president.

“When you get off the desk and talk to executives, they’re more fearful of her winning,” he said, adding that he’s been hearing the phrase, “She’s got to be stopped,” echoing around Wall Street of late.

While bank execs might have reason to be concerned of what Warren could mean for their company and their shareholders, Adam Best of “The Left” podcast doesn’t really see that as a negative for prospective voters.

“This is the greatest Warren campaign ad possible,” he says:

Warren, described as “a champion of the left wing for her bank-bashing and wealth-taxing proposals,” is a “very compelling figure on the stump,” Cramer said. He predicted she’s going to win Iowa, whose caucuses are set for Feb. 3. If that happens, he continued, “it would be a suboptimal situation for the banks.”

CNBC’s David Faber agreed. “It’s another reason why companies are being implored to do things now... because, come early to mid-2020 if Elizabeth Warren is rolling along, everybody is going to be like, ‘That’s it,’ ” he said.

Someone else liked it, too: “I’m Elizabeth Warren, and I approve this message,” the senior senator from Massachusetts said in a tweet:

An email from Team Warren also keyed on the CNBC segment, saying she’s taken on — and beaten — banks and Wall Street CEOs before.

“Maybe they’re scared of Elizabeth’s plan to stop Wall Street from looting our economy,” the email read. “Or her proposal for an Ultra-Millionaire Tax, which would pay for Universal Child Care and early education, canceling student loan debt, universal free two-year and four-year public college and technical school, and then some.”

Or maybe, her campaign claims, it’s because her approach as president will put American workers ahead of corporate profits and bonuses.

“Elizabeth is running to be the best president that their money can’t buy,” Team Warren wrote. “And her ideas for big, structural change have Wall Street executives shaking in their freshly polished leather shoes. They know we can win.

With 18% support, she’s trailing only Vice President Joe Biden, at 30%, in the Real Clear Politics polling average. Sen. Bernie Sanders is in third, followed by Sen. Kamala Harris and Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind.

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