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To: KevRupert who wrote (1164)3/9/2001 11:36:21 PM
From: Jack Hartmann  Respond to of 1822
 
Is it a coincidence he never refers back to his mistakes?

I think Cramer yammers so much he forgets what he wrote and only remembers the stinging losses and most of the victories. That's why I want to see if he will stick out the portfolio for the year. He's down 4%.

Jack



To: KevRupert who wrote (1164)3/12/2001 12:39:51 PM
From: KevRupert  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1822
 
James Cramer's View On Warren Buffet:

"When Will Warren Wise Up?"


thestreet.com

"Bored by Buffett's Picks"


thestreet.com

Interesting to note: Cramer was pleased in the past few days that George Gilder referred to Cramer as a Buffet type. Cramer thought that analogy was a compliment and not an insult. A year ago Cramer thought Buffet was out of touch. (Cramer has recently attacked Gilder's stock picking record.)



To: KevRupert who wrote (1164)4/9/2001 9:58:35 PM
From: KM  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1822
 
Check this one out and note the date. Right at the beginning of the worst selloff of them all LOL" A near perfect environment, indeed, but to be short, not long.

A Near-Perfect Environment
By James J. Cramer

Originally posted at 7:05 AM ET 9/5/00 on RealMoney.com




Click here for the latest from James J. Cramer.

How exciting is a fall tape after a summer where people really took vacation and the market did nothing but creep back up to old highs?

Let's face it, we had a drama-less summer. Other than a mean-spirited selloff in July -- perhaps when Soros sold off the last of his techs -- we did nothing but silently move higher to the point where nobody's laughing at Dow 12,000 and NDX 5,000 anymore. In fact, I get the impression that you couldn't ask for a better environment. The personal computer industry is strong, the oil price is high and about to go lower, the candidates are fighting over themselves not to impact the stock market negatively and interest rates keep going lower.

Into that backdrop, we have financials nearing highs but still reflecting low expectations. We have cyclicals appearing ridiculously cheap. We have techs poised to go back to where they were before the spring selloff. And we have drugs coiling up, ready to put on a big move, as Gore's rhetoric turns into nothingness come November, because he's a much better friend of research than Clinton ever will be.

The only things still left to avoid are those companies that make their living designing Web sites. It looks like that business, which was so hot last year, is ceasing to be much of a business at all, as every publicly traded Web company seeks to get profitable with what it has and the private markets remain shut to new capital for dot-coms. Maybe forever.

In that kind of environment, it pays to do what you have to do every time it looks like we have a soft landing. You buy tech, and not just high-growth tech. You buy the boxmakers and the IBMs of the world. And you watch as they take the market higher.