Cramer says market needs a ‘total give up’ to find a bottom and signal an all-clear to buyers

FAN Editor

The stock market needs to get worse before it can get better, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Friday.

“I’m looking for a day where people just say ‘I give up,'” Cramer said on “Squawk Box,” heading into another wild trading day, with both the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 now in correction territory.

“We have to have a total give up, and I still think that we haven’t had the give up that I’d like to see. We’re starting to get it,” he added, ahead of stocks turning positive Friday.

Investors shouldn’t look to companies like Chevron to save them, the “Mad Money” host said.

Chevron shares were losing roughly 5% after the energy giant Friday morning reported mixed quarterly results. The company’s stock hit an all-time high in the prior session.

Apple shares were jumping more than 5%, adding to gains following strong earnings late Thursday. The tech bellwether’s strength failed to inspire the market early Friday but then helped it higher.

“We have to have these stocks go down … and when they all go down, then I think we finally get a bottom,” Cramer said. “It’s clear that we’re in a phase for people to say, ‘Get me out’ … you’ve got those periods of denial, and now there is just acceptance, and I think people are going to say, ‘I can’t take it anymore.'”

Cramer said, “You don’t want no hope and no help from any of the companies,” but the sellers need to exhaust themselves before buyers can step back into the market.

Recalling the Gulf War’s impact on the market in the early 1990s, he added: “We used to get recovery on Friday. People would be afraid to go in shorter on the weekend.”

“Maybe that’s kind of where we might be,” he said.

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Home remodeling could finally cool, bringing these stocks back to earth

Next to Netflix, home renovation may have been the biggest stay-at-home play of the pandemic. From new home offices to expanded decks to basement gyms, homeowners have been upgrading and expanding their spaces at record rates for the past two years. That trend appears to be slowing down.  After big […]

You May Like