Cramer s Mad Money Recap: Facebook, Merck, Nvidia
Jim Cramer explains the smart way to pick winning investments in stocks, IPOs and SPACs.
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There s a lot more to investing than just owning index funds, Jim Cramer told his Mad Money viewers Tuesday. Anyone who tells you picking individual stocks is a fool s game is just plain wrong, Cramer said. It s a lot easier to find winning investments than you think.
There is certainly a place for index funds in your portfolio. If you re just starting out, your first $10,000 should be in an index fund. And if you don t have the time or inclination for a little homework, then index funds are the place to be. But for everyone else, there are better ways to make money.
Cramer s Mad Money Recap: Chevron, Exxon Mobil
Jim Cramer says ahead of the Fed meeting that oil price hikes are likely temporary, yet he s still a fan of some energy stocks.
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Jun 15, 2021
The market is betting that crude oil will keep heading higher, forcing the Federal Reserve to take action, Jim Cramer told his Mad Money viewers Tuesday. But, unlike the market, Cramer is betting there will be little change in the Fed s language when it speaks tomorrow.
There s nothing wrong with the market being led by oil, as long as the rest of the industrials are following close behind. In this case, oil stands alone, and is moving higher not because of rising demand, but because of lower supply.
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Mar 16, 2021
If we ve learned anything during this pandemic, it s that betting on the end of the world is a fool s game. It was a year ago Tuesday that the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 3,000 points to its 2020 lows, and Jim Cramer marked the occasion by reminding his Mad Money viewers that panic is never an investment strategy.
A year ago, little was known about COVID-19. Investors feared that we were doomed to repeat the mistakes of the financial crisis, where help was too little, too late and our entire financial system almost collapsed.
But the pandemic was a health emergency, not a financial one. And unlike 2008, this time, the Federal Reserve, the Treasury and lawmakers all acted quickly, adopting a by any means necessary approach to getting stimulus out quickly.