FEATURED SLIDESHOW
Who Is The Worst CEO?Mad Money needed new inductees for its
Wall of Shame, so we asked viewers for
nominations.
RECENT POSTS
- Lightning Round: Priceline.com, Citigroup, Transocean and More
- Lightning Round OT: STEC, ICICI Bank and More
- Herbalife Vs. Hedge Funds
- Cramer Jeers J&J, Applauds Abbott
- Cramer: In This Relay-Race Market, Who Gets Baton Next?
- Cramer's Trade on Status-Conscious Consumers
- Mad Mail: Buy the Berkshire Hathaway Split?
- Lightning Round: American Express, McDonald's, Frontline and More
- Lightning Round OT: Ciena, Kinder Morgan Energy and More
- Don’t Pay Up for This Trade-Down Retailer

MAD MONEY FEATURES
Watch the Lightning Round whenever and wherever you want.
Grab this all-in-one application and get recaps of the show sent right to your desktop or blog.
Admit it: You've always wanted to hit the "They
know nothing!" button. Here’s your chance.
Check out Cramer on set, back to school, behind the scenes and more.
Buy Cramer books, bobbleheads and other Mad Money merchandise.
Pick up the phone! It's Cramer! New Mad Money sounds for your cell phone.
Mad Money's mobile. Get show highlights sent to your phone.
The media is always trying to explain the market’s actions. Even if they don’t know for sure, they feel compelled to attribute cause. So when the Dow loses 201 points and the S&P 500 drops 28, as they did on Monday, investors get a number of different reasons for the move.
Today The New York Times pointed to “resurgent fears about the struggling economy,” while The Associated Press blamed “global economic worries.” Hey, maybe declining crude prices were the culprit. That sounds legit, doesn’t it?
The truth is that all of these reasons are wrong, Cramer said. Investors took the market down because of pricing. Stocks had gotten too expensive, with no fundamental basis for the move, so we sold off.
Interestingly, though, something very similar happened last month, at least in terms of the sell-off itself. In May, the market saw a five-day streak of losses in a six-day period, only to be followed by a four-day rally. Investors who got in at the bottom earned 5%. Cramer thinks that history may repeat itself, especially as the end of the quarter approaches and mutual funds look for top-performing stocks to boost their numbers.
Where will they look? Probably the S&P 500’s top-ten list. Cramer likes Huntington Bancshares [HBAN
Loading...
()
], down 9.5% but still holding above its latest secondary offering price, and Lincoln National [LNC
Loading...
()
], which just raised a significant amount of cash through stock and bond issuance, taking the risk of bankruptcy off the table.
Apple [AAPL Loading... ()
While it’s true that history doesn’t always repeat itself, and there’s no guarantee that last month’s snapback rally will return, Cramer said that these kinds of sell-offs tend to recharge the market. And that’s just what he’s expecting.
Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBC
Questions for Cramer?
Questions, comments, suggestions for the Mad Money website?



