Jim Cramer is unfazed by Tuesday's sell-off: 'You should expect them, even hope for them'

by · CNBC

Key Points

  • CNBC's Jim Cramer said he's unfazed by Tuesday's sell-off because that's exactly what the market needs when stocks surge too fast.
  • He explained that these pullbacks present opportunities for investors to buy quality stocks at a discount.

CNBC's Jim Cramer said he's unfazed by Tuesday's sell-off in AI stocks because it's exactly what the market needs.

"Rain is to gardening as sell-offs are to the stock market," the "Mad Money" host said. "You should expect them, maybe even hope for them. We just don't realize it at the time."

Stocks retreated on Tuesday following a Wall Street Journal report that said OpenAI missed internal growth targets, raising questions about spending across a bunch of artificial intelligence-linked stocks. After weeks of parabolic gains, Cramer said a reset was inevitable.

He pointed to the late 1990s when stocks climbed relentlessly with barely any meaningful declines before a wave of selling from companies and insiders crushed the market.

While Cramer believes that the current AI leaders are serious companies with rosy prospects, he said even strong names can overheat. That's why he welcomed the negative report.

"I loved the article … because it gave us the rain I was looking for," he said.

The report helped drive declines in AI-linked stocks like Arm, Advanced Micro Devices, Dell Technologies, and Corning, which surged in recent weeks.

Still, Cramer thinks the long-term AI story remains intact. He said days like Tuesday are why he urges investors to trim stocks that are making parabolic moves. Locking in profits at higher prices makes it easier to step in and "take advantage of the rain" whenever it arrives, he said.

"The pros … [take] a little out of the stock on each day of the parabolic move," he said. "Then, if the stock drops 5-7% from where you first sold you begin to buy it back."

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