This Investment Strategy Beat Warren Buffett
A tongue-in-cheek look at how betting against Jim Cramer's TV stock picks would have tripled your money — a lesson about crowd psychology dressed up as an investing strategy.
- Doing the opposite of Cramer's advice turned $1,000 into $3,400, beating both ChatGPT and Warren Buffett by wide margins.
- The point isn't that Cramer is a bad investor — he mirrors what the crowd is already excited about, right when they're most excited.
- His CEO interviews often come exactly when those companies have something to sell to the public.
- Betting against him is really betting against peak hype and peak emotion, not against him personally.
- It boils down to the oldest rule in investing: be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.
Outlook: The takeaway is timeless — chasing the crowd at its most euphoric usually loses, so watch sentiment rather than headlines.