“Unlimited Firepower? Jim Cramer Weighs In on Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin Bet”


We recently published a list of Jim Cramer Discusses These 12 Stocks & Says Mag 7 Stocks Are A Thing Of The Past. In this article, we are going to take a look at where MicroStrategy Incorporated (NASDAQ:MSTR) stands against other stocks that Jim Cramer discusses.

In a fresh appearance on CNBC’s Squawk on the Street, Jim Cramer couldn’t stop talking about the stock market bloodbath on Monday that saw the S&P and Dow indexes post their worst day since December and the NASDAQ post its worst day since 2022. He started out by reiterating that the era of Magnificent 7 stocks appeared to be over. “I think this is a very crucial day and I just want to say, what I was saying was historically empirical, not hysterical and crazy,” Cramer shared. “I was looking at the Magnificent 7 for when Michael Hartnett created from Bank of America, and he did in May of 2023. And, what’s happened is this that we no longer have the top seven were, Magnificent 7,” he added.

Cramer stated that the Mag 7 stocks “were just about what was big market cap.” Recalling the banking crisis of 2023, he added: “And it was about what happened . . .this is the time of the banking crisis, two years ago. And that’s when this group asserted itself and they were responsible for all the gains. And that’s over. It’s hard to be Magnificent 7 when you’re not in the top seven.”

Television shows were on his mind when discussing the Mag 7’s fall from grace. Cramer likened Mark Zuckerberg’s social media company to Vin Tanner, who was played by Steve McQueen in the television series called the Magnificent 7.  “[T]hat’s Steve McQueen obviously,” said Cramer. McQueen “was a great charitable guy, covered his death when I was in LA,” he shared.

Further elaborating on how the Mag 7 stocks were no longer the most valuable companies on Wall Street, Cramer shared that the world’s largest brick-and-mortar retailer was “at one point, was flirting with number ten,” which was Elon Musk’s car company. Naturally, this made him wonder: “So how are we supposed to, if we go back in time how this was created. They were the top seven. And, it was just not enough juice. They had nothing to do with each other. That’s been revealed.”

When his co-host Carl Quintanilla pointed out that the selloff was more than just the top stocks as 160 S&P names fell 4%, Cramer shared:

“I was looking at the stocks that have a market cap of five billion. That have fallen, fallen fifty percent since the election. . . .These are really good companies. So what I’m saying is this that we have overwhelm in tech. We have ways to get out of this.”



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