Cramer Remix: Facebook and Amazon suffered from 'guilt by association' after Alphabet's earnings shortfall
Cramer Remix: Facebook and Amazon suffered from 'guilt by association' after Alphabet's earnings shortfall · CNBC

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  • "Amazon and Facebook actually saw their stocks go down today based on the theory that if Alphabet's doing badly, everybody's doing badly," CNBC's Jim Cramer says.

  • "Alphabet had a shortfall because they're losing business to Amazon and Facebook," the "Mad Money" host says.

  • "In a rational world, Amazon and Facebook would've rallied on the news that they're beating the stuffing out of Alphabet," he says.

Shares of both Facebook FB and Amazon AMZN fell during the session through no fault of their own, CNBC's Jim Cramer  said Tuesday.

He said the two Internet giants took a hit because of "guilt by association" in the FAANG group with Google. The search engine is a subsidiary of Alphabet GOOGL , which missed the revenue mark by nearly $1 billion during the first quarter of 2019.

"Amazon and Facebook actually saw their stocks go down today based on the theory that if Alphabet's doing badly, everybody's doing badly. That's just stupid. Nonsense," the "Mad Money" host said. "Alphabet had a shortfall because they're losing business to Amazon and Facebook."

Alphabet's shares slumped 7.5% on the day. Amazon and Facebook dipped 0.61% and 0.71%, respectively.

Alphabet's issues were specific to the company, Cramer said, as Facebook and Amazon both met Wall Streets expectations in their quarterly reports. Google's weakness in advertising sales could mean that they're losing share to the two leading e-commerce and social media platforms.

"In a rational world, Amazon and Facebook would've rallied on the news that they're beating the stuffing out of Alphabet," Cramer said. "Hey, at least you can buy the winners into weakness here — the market's stupidity can be your opportunity."

A windfall from the tree

Cramer said investors who bought Apple ahead of its first-quarter report made the right gamble.

The host typically does not recommend buying a stock ahead of earnings, in case the company delivers a bad report. But the tech giant did not disappoint on Tuesday.

"Not only did Apple deliver a nice top- and bottom-line beat, but China, the major source of weakness last quarter, is turning around," Cramer said. "When I spoke to [CEO] Tim [Cook] about it, I was surprised how bullish he was."

While iPhone sales were down 17%, Cramer pointed out that Apple management said it picked up at the end of the quarter. Growth in the wearables segment and the nascent services business could make for a great second quarter, he added. Apple held its quarterly conference call after the market closed Tuesday.