KEY POINTS
  • "This idea that investing can be fun is a throwback ... to the '80s and '90s, where you had some incredible bull runs and no one thought it was just horrible and stupid to like stocks," CNBC's Jim Cramer says.
  • "And if that's the case, well guess what: the rally could last a lot longer than most people expect," the "Mad Money" host says.
  • There are companies working, and investors can "happily buy them into weakness if you've done the homework and you believe in their prospects," he says.

A new generation of investors is getting the impression that owning individual stocks can be "fun and it can be rewarding," CNBC's Jim Cramer said Monday.

The prior demographic, particularly the millennial cohort, learned that buying individual stocks is "too risky," he said, due to the skyrocketing valuations of internet companies before the turn of the century. That's when people gravitated toward buy-and-hold index funds, he added.