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Why You Shouldn’t Listen to Jim Cramer

By Larry Swedroe | Aug 3, 2009 |

CNBC’s Jim Cramer has become one of the most recognizable faces in the investment world. His Mad Money has been one of the network’s most watched shows. This week, we’re going to take a look at some of the “wisdom” Cramer has given to his followers. As you will see, while profitable for CNBC, the advice handed out by Cramer is almost always detrimental to investors.

Consider the following. On his show Cramer stated: ”It’s ‘hogwash’ for those on Wall Street to tell individual investors that the market is too hard, and that they should just go with mutual funds or index funds … While index funds are a valuable and welcome innovation for investors, they’re not a way for average investors to play the market. Using only index funds, investors will have a hard time even matching the market, and will never beat it … When it comes to investing, picking the right stocks and knowing when to sell, are the two skills that keep investors ahead of the markets, and not struggling to keep up.”

The problem is that there is neither any evidence nor any logic to support Cramer’s statements. Consider Cramer’s statement about index funds not being able to beat the market. Of course they won’t. But they won’t underperform either (before considering their low expenses) — which is what many individual investors do. And investing should not be about beating the market. Instead, it should be about adopting the strategy that will give you the best chance of achieving your goals. Now to the evidence.

Professors Brad Barber and Terrance Odean have done a series of studies on individual investors. The following summarizes their findings:

Would you have done better listening to Cramer’s picks? The study “Is the Market Mad? Evidence from Mad Money,” examined his performance and found that after Cramer recommended a stock, its volume typically soared and there was an overnight rise in prices. However, the gains turned out to be temporary as prices completely reversed, turning the “gains” into nothing more than market impact costs for the buyers. Bottom line: Cramer’s picks had negative value to naive investors who reacted to the buy recommendations.

A fitting conclusion to this post is this story related by Taylor Larimore of the Bogleheads Investment Forum. Larimore attended a March 2000 investment conference in Miami where Cramer was the keynote speaker. During Cramer’s speech, he told the audience to get paper and pencil and write down a list of 10 “Winners of the New World.” Fifteen months later, Money magazine reported that his list had cratered 82 percent. Accountability ruins the game.

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  •  
    1

    Kathy Kristof

    08/03/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    Nicely done. I once was the mid-day keynote speaker at an
    investment conference and went early to hear Jim Cramer, who
    was the morning keynote. I was so horrified by his advice that I
    spent the bulk of my time explaining to the audience why they
    should ignore him. The problem here is that he's entertainingly
    bad, so people are amused as they lose their money.

  •  
    2

    mzhuang

    08/05/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    I did a check Jim Cramer's top 10 predictions in the beginning of 2008. If you did the opposite of his predictions, you would have made big money.

    http://www.investment-fiduciary.com/2009/03/14/checking-jim-cramers-2008-top-ten-predictions/

  •  
    3

    kevinaom

    08/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    Jim Cramer is a typical T.V. Sales person. He is nothing more
    than Billy Mays selling Oxy Clean except Jim Cramer is selling
    stocks. He makes a lot of money for his friends who profit,
    not off the advice, but off the trades people make.

    And, in the end, the only thing people like Cramer really care
    about is that you trade and you trade a lot. That is where
    THEIR big money is made. Not in the actual stock.

  •  
    4

    kevinaom

    08/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    As a side note, I posted a similar conclusion on a blog entry I
    made in April of 2009 at: http://polybius.blogs.com/left_of_way/2009/04/jim_cramer_is
    _a_fool.html

  •  
    5

    kevinaom

    08/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    Sorry, the link did not go all the way for some reason:

    http://polybius.blogs.com/left_of_way/2009/04/jim_cramer_is
    _a_fool.html

  •  
    6

    hahuntley

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    Everybody wants to bash poor old Jim these days. Maybe it's because they only hear what they want and are too lazy to follow some of his rules. Like do your homework, be diversified and he cautions against buying the next day after a recommendation. I do not doubt that many of the stocks he recommended to buy have cratered, but he was also recommending that you sell. He has helped me pay for college tuition, weddings and vacations. Thanks, Jim.

  •  
    7

    steve.mathys

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    [quote hahuntley] He has helped me pay for college tuition, weddings and vacations. Thanks, Jim.

    Congratulations! You've obviously done very well for yourself. But one data point should not a recommendation make.

  •  
    8

    kdelfau

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    There are often two hidden problem that crop up with this type of day trading:

    1) If you manage to make a profit off of Cramer's advice, a good chunk of it will be eaten up in trading fees

    2) The tax implications of day trading (as well as the complexity of a tax return with a ton of trades) can really throw investors for a loop come tax time. Many investors don't understand the tax consequences of their stock trading actions, including short-term capital gains, wash sales, etc.

    Kristin
    www.delfautax.com

  •  
    9

    Chalo

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    Jim is OK for what he is: entertainment and a decent source for leads. The above statements are funny as I would not appreciate comparisons to the average investor. Most people are lazy and would do better in Vegas. Jim tells it like it is as far as how much time it takes to study the market and to make sure one sticks with industry leaders (unless one has inside information we should know about:) Like Warrren said stick with an industry(s) you know and be an expert in the key financials for that industry(s). The actual stock picks Jim hands out are worthlesss. However I have made good money on some of his leads and appreciate the interviews with senior executives. Jim really is giving out much information which is basic 101 stuff but people are listening to the wrong things. He is but a piece of a very complex and vast puzzle. The average investor can not read company financials and they have no idea what the economic stats mean or how they should be used. A case in point is that the Dow is at 9400 plus today which is based on what? One in nine people is on welfare, the unemploymnet figures are bad, individual savings are way up but we know consumer spending is 70 percent of GDP. Yet the number is 9400. People have lost there minds but I did not loose money last year and you wont catch me loosing money this year either.

  •  
    10

    wkb2texans

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    I follow the same rule of thumb for my personal investing that I use when buying a car, house, boat, etc: be wary of the advice/opinion of competitors who bad mouth their competitors.

  •  
    11

    LocationIsland

    08/12/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    What, Cramer's worse than the other talking heads out there? I agree with wkb2texans' comment above...you always need to consider the source.

    Take Larry here; he's is a professional money manger that runs a pay-to-play shop, I'm sure he'd try to dissuade everyone from making their own investment decisions.

  •  
    12

    PC Repair

    08/18/09 | Report as spam

    TV Spot Attacks!

    I wonder is this story would run if Cramer's show was on CBS?

  •  
    13

    bored2tears

    08/18/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    Like anyone with more than a scintilla of sense, I do not listen to Cramer.

    And this column has given me every reason to accord Swedroe's advice the same treatment.

  •  
    14

    svigneault

    08/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    steve.mathys:Congratulations! You've obviously done very well for yourself. But one data point should not a recommendation make.

    You mean like the author of this article did?

  •  
    15

    rrusson_z

    08/19/09 | Report as spam

    Where's the angry mob?

    It's truly exasperating that Jim Cramer still has a job in the public eye after John Stewart's takedown back in March:
    http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-march-12-2009/jim-cramer-pt--2
    Catch clips of Jim showing how he and friends rig the game when he's not on TV at 1:10, 2:00, 6:05, and 6:30. Absolutely shameful.

  •  
    16

    MarkWolfinger

    08/19/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Why You Shouldn't Listen to Jim Cramer

    I used to find Cramer fun to watch. He's very bright and has agood sense of humor. But he truly misleads the masses.

    That is a very bad thing and his show harms investors. But, it gets good ratings and that's the bottom line.

    Mark Wolfinger
    http://blog.mdwoptions.com

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Larry Swedroe

Larry Swedroe is principal and director of research for The Buckingham Family of Financial Services. He has authored or co-authored seven books, including The Only Guide to a Winning Investment Strategy You'll Ever Need.

Larry Swedroe

Larry Swedroe is a principal and the director of research for Buckingham Asset Management and BAM Advisor Services. He has also worked with Prudential Home Mortgage and Citicorp, totaling nearly 40 years of managing financial risks for major corporations and advising individuals on ways to do the same.

His opinions and comments expressed on this site are his own and may not accurately reflect those of the firm.

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