For more than a year, I took Mad Money host Jim Cramer’s investing ideas and gave them a thumbs up or thumbs down according my own technical analysis and views. Here at OptionsHouse, it’s not about telling you what to do, but rather offering some strategies for you to explore based on your own individual opinions.
We all have a right to agree or disagree with Cramer and while I have great respect for the man, I can’t say that I am in full agreement with all of his recommendations. Furthermore, as options traders, we can take his thesis and augment it into acceptable risk for our individual personalities and risk tolerances.
Watching my DVR recording of Friday’s program, I actually liked what Cramer had to say about investing after the crash (I think this was taped earlier). He talked about the difference between trading and investing and how today’s market participants perhaps need to be an amalgam of the two. I happen to agree with Cramer’s suggestion that traders learn as much as they can about a company, although even with soup-to-nuts knowledge of a company and its business, you can still find yourself in a losing position. This is due to factors beyond the quality of a company’s product or their ability to sell that product or service to the public. Cramer noted this when he talked about a company’s stock price becoming “un-glued” from its fundamentals.
Frankly, while I agree that huge variances from typical price-to-earnings (p/e) ratios may be a reason to buy or sell a stock, it still doesn’t ensure success. It may, however, increase the probability of a longer-term trade coming into profitability because of the anticipated “reversion to the mean” an overbought or oversold stock may experience. (more…)

Jim Cramer, host of CNBC’s lively (and often controversial) Mad Money program, weighed in on Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) late last week. The pundit still calls the stock a solid buy and said that if financial regulation passes, investors won’t be able to “find bank stocks anywhere near where they are” so he encourages people to pull the trigger now. BAC is set to report earnings on July 16 (expiration Friday) ahead of the opening bell.
Last week, during his infamous “Lighting Round” on CNBC, Jim Cramer opined on Teva Pharmaceutical Industries (NASDAQ: TEVA), saying it might be a candidate to buy on the dip given its recent pullback. The eccentric Mad Money host said that even with health care stocks in reversal mode, it could be time to start buying.
Last week in an episode of Mad Money, Jim Cramer said that while he likes Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold (NYSE: FCX) as a company, he would put it on his “sell” list for now. He cited concerns such as exposure to China’s slowing economy or the stock’s recent run. From December 2008 through mid-January this year (14 months’ of activity), the stock gained more than 400%; since another visit to its January peak six weeks ago, the shares have given back roughly one quarter of their value and are below potential resistance at the 200-day moving average.
Jim Cramer again highlighted Ford Motor (NYSE: F) shares in a recent episode of Mad Money. The bombastic TV analyst screamed that buying Ford shares is a smart move, particularly for long-term investors. This past 14 months, Ford has seen a tremendous rally, from a low of $1.65 in March 2009 to a peak of $14.57 in April 2010. The shares lost a bit of ground in the past two weeks, but now appear to be attempting to rally once again. In Tuesday’s session, the stock closed marginally higher at $12.31.
Are you a Cramer fan or do you just like Nike’s products? Jim Cramer offered a “screaming buy” on Nike (NYSE: NKE) shares on a 
Jim Cramer praised
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