Barron's online did a comprehensive review of Jim Cramer's Mad Money stock picks, and the results are unsurprisingly mediocre:
Cramer, by all accounts, had a stellar career as a hedge-fund manager. And he is held out by CNBC as the guy who can help viewers make big money. But a comprehensive and careful review of his stock picks by Barron's finds that his picks haven't beaten the market. Over the past two years, viewers holding Cramer's stocks would be up 12% while the Dow rose 22% and the S&P 500 16%, according to a record of 1,300 of the CNBC star's Buy recommendations compiled by YourMoneyWatch.com, a Website run by a retired stock analyst and loyal Cramer-watcher.
We also looked at a database of Cramer's Mad Money picks maintained by his Website, TheStreet.com. It covers only the past six months, but includes an astounding 3,458 stocks — Buys mainly, punctuated by some Sells. These picks were flat to down in relation to the market. Count commissions and you would have been much better off in an index fund that simply tracks the market."
We'd normally advise people to go ahead an watch CNBC's Mad Money because of its entertainment value, but Cramer is so good at making his picks sound like can't miss investments opportunities that even I've occasionally been tempted to fire up E*Trade and dive in. Mad Money no longer sullies my TiVo. I watch Jeopardy instead.
Mad Investors
Barron's online did a comprehensive review of Jim Cramer's Mad Money stock picks, and the results are unsurprisingly mediocre:
Cramer, by all accounts, had a stellar career as a hedge-fund manager. And he is held out by CNBC as the guy who can help viewers make big money. But a comprehensive and careful review of his stock picks by Barron's finds that his picks haven't beaten the market. Over the past two years, viewers holding Cramer's stocks would be up 12% while the Dow rose 22% and the S&P 500 16%, according to a record of 1,300 of the CNBC star's Buy recommendations compiled by YourMoneyWatch.com, a Website run by a retired stock analyst and loyal Cramer-watcher.
We also looked at a database of Cramer's Mad Money picks maintained by his Website, TheStreet.com. It covers only the past six months, but includes an astounding 3,458 stocks — Buys mainly, punctuated by some Sells. These picks were flat to down in relation to the market. Count commissions and you would have been much better off in an index fund that simply tracks the market."
We'd normally advise people to go ahead an watch CNBC's Mad Money because of its entertainment value, but Cramer is so good at making his picks sound like can't miss investments opportunities that even I've occasionally been tempted to fire up E*Trade and dive in. Mad Money no longer sullies my TiVo. I watch Jeopardy instead.
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