Anthropic · Microsoft · CNBC Technology
CNBC's Jim Cramer confirmed stock sell-offs can be painful for investors
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"Tailspins can be mighty nasty," Cramer said Tuesday on "Mad Money.
Key facts
- Within a few weeks, the stock slid from around $130 to near $100 as fears mounted, but has since rebounded sharply as those worst-case scenarios failed to materialize
- However, he said the return of former CEO Stephen Hemsley in May 2025 helped restore investors confidence
- After a down day like Tuesday's session, where all three major U.S. averages fell roughly 0.6%, Cramer pointed to several high-profile examples of stocks that staged strong recoveries
- First is CrowdStrike, which saw its shares plunge in 2024 after a faulty software update disrupted millions of Microsoft systems globally
Summary
CNBC's Jim Cramer said stock sell-offs can be painful for investors, but they can also create opportunities for those willing to look past fear-driven narratives and focus on fundamentals. After a down day like Tuesday's session, where all three major U.S. averages fell roughly 0.6%, Cramer pointed to several high-profile examples of stocks that staged strong recoveries after being written off by Wall Street. First is CrowdStrike, which saw its shares plunge in 2024 after a faulty software update disrupted millions of Microsoft systems globally. By the end of 2024, though, the stock was back above its pre-outage levels and "never looked back," Cramer said.