“Mad Money” host Jim Cramer startled Bitcoin investors Friday, panicking swaths of investors on Crypto Twitter after the former crypto skeptic issued a bullish call.
Fielding a question from a Florida-based investor during the show’s Lightning Round Thursday, Cramer said that the Bitcoin-buying firm MicroStrategy is a less attractive investment than Bitcoin itself, from his occasionally dubious perspective.
“I’ve got to tell you it’s a Bitcoin play—I prefer to actually own Bitcoin,” Cramer said of MicroStrategy, noting that the influential investment firm Citron Research disclosed a short position in the firm this week. “All I can tell you is, own Bitcoin. That’s a winner.”
ICYMI: @jimcramer SAID “ALL I CAN TELL YOU IS, OWN BITCOIN, THAT’S A WINNER”
Cramer, who said that he bought a farm and boat by selling his Bitcoin and Ethereum holdings in 2022, flipped bullish on Bitcoin earlier this year. In January, he acknowledged that “you can’t kill” Bitcoin, while describing its resilience in the face of regulators as a “technological marvel.”
Long-time crypto critic Jim Cramer appears to have had a change of heart—at least regarding Bitcoin. “You can’t kill it,” the Mad Money host said on CNBC’s Squawk on the Street show on Tuesday.
Along with Warren Buffett and his late business partner, the CNBC host has been notoriously bearish on cryptocurrency. But Cramer says Munger missed the boat on Bitcoin.
“The late Charlie Munger, who was so brilliant on so many things, was blind to this,” Cramer said.
Cramer's comments come as the number...
Despite his months-long embrace of Bitcoin, Cramer’s praise Thursday was viewed on Crypto Twitter as a potential bear market omen. Tinged with a sense of tongue-in-cheek irony, it was as if Cramer’s Bitcoin praise was conducive to the sky falling.
“IT’S SO OVER,” crypto influencer Tiffany Fong wrote on Twitter (aka X).
BREAKING: CNBC’s Jim Cramer has flipped bullish on #Bitcoin, urging his audience to invest. He calls it a “winner” during his latest segment.
In other words, the Bull Market just signed its death certificate. I'm maxing out 48 lines of credit and shorting with my life savings.… pic.twitter.com/tlk3Jls8EK
“In other words, the bull market just signed its death certificate,” self-described analyst Jacob King wrote. “I’m maxing out 48 lines of credit and shorting [Bitcoin] with my life savings.”
As the crypto and finance community have grown skeptical of Cramer’s advice, some investors have honed in on an “inverse Cramer” trend. Doing the exact opposite of what the "Mad Money" host views as favorable moves, a now-defunct ETF once brought that strategy to Wall Street.
“It’s over,” an account called Inverse Cramer proclaimed on Twitter (aka X), a dismal declaration that had racked up more than 500,000 views on the platform in a matter of hours.
BREAKING: Jim Cramer says market action anticipates a Harris win
Even though Cramer has profited from selling crypto, he admitted a year ago that his selling may have been “premature.” At the time he recognized the gravity of his unrealized Bitcoin profits, the asset traded hands around $38,000, an 18-month peak at the time.
Following the collapse of FTX in 2022, it appeared that Cramer was leaving crypto behind for good, encouraging investors to do the same. “It’s never too late to sell an awful position, and that’s what you have if you own these so-called digital assets,” Cramer recommended.
While the “Mad Money” said that he’d prefer to own Bitcoin over MicroStrategy shares, he once encouraged companies to adopt Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset like MicroStrategy has. The firm’s trove of 331,200 Bitcoin is currently worth $32 billion, per Bitcoin Treasuries.
“Every treasurer should be going to their boards of directors and saying, ‘Should we put a small portion of our cash in Bitcoin?’” Cramer said in 2021. “I think it’s almost irresponsible not to include it.”
Coinbase has now overtaken two of the world's largest securities exchanges in terms of transaction revenue, according to a crypto analyst from the private bank Coutts.
The crypto exchange generated $5.75 billion in transaction revenue over the past 12 months, compared to just $4.54 billion for the Nasdaq, where many of the world’s most valuable companies, including Apple, Google, and Microsoft, are traded.
Coinbase also surpassed the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong, the HKEX, which generated $2.67 b...
After several extended reviews since June this year, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has finally approved the first spot exchange-traded funds combining Bitcoin and Ethereum.
The agency has authorized Nasdaq to list the Hashdex Nasdaq Crypto Index US ETF and the Cboe BZX Exchange to list the Franklin Crypto Index ETF, according to a filing released Thursday.
"The proportion of bitcoin and ether to be held by each Trust will be based on free-float market capitalizations," the filing...
Dogecoin (DOGE) fell 12.4% in the past 24 hours as a broader market decline continues, triggered by the Federal Reserve's latest economic outlook.
The meme coin has dropped to $0.31, while trading volume surged 67% to $10.25 billion as holders repositioned their bags. It's now down 35% from its 2024 high of $0.47.
Despite the pullback, Dogecoin's market capitalization remains at $46.6 billion, maintaining its position as the seventh-largest crypto.
Powell's hawkish comments about higher-than-exp...