Jim Cramer Calls General Motors (GM) Selloff ‘Ridiculous, Ridiculous, Ridiculous’

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We recently published a list of Jim Cramer Discusses These 10 Stocks, The Fed Chair & Lower AI Costs. In this article, we are going to take a look at where General Motors Company (NYSE:GM) stands against other stocks that Jim Cramer discusses along with insights on The Fed Chair & Lower AI Costs.

In his appearance on CNBC’s Squawk on the Street aired before the day of the Federal Reserve’s latest interest rate environment, Jim Cramer shared how Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell would have to fine-tune his remarks in line with President Trump’s sentiments about interest rates. The President made hard-hitting statements earlier this year when he stated that he would demand central banks worldwide reduce interest rates as oil prices were dropping.

Sharing his thoughts on the Fed chair, Cramer stated “Yeah, I think that, uh, Jerome Powell knows how to punt better than anyone I’ve ever seen. I mean, he’s, I just think he’s just not going to take the bait. I think he’s going to say listen we gotta see what happens.” Cramer stated that Powell would keep his options open because of the dynamic nature of today’s markets. After all, it was only last week that Wall Street’s favorite AI GPU stock was the most valuable company in the world. And now, it’s in third place.

Cramer outlined that “I think people are [inaudible] to recognize, that it’s not like we know everything. Things are so fluid.” He also linked the fluidity with investors’ urge to invest with President Trump’s every statement. “That first it’s the Iron Dome mention, I just talked about [the company that makes missiles for the Iron Dome], well [it] has this terrific drone killer system, which they’ve shot down a huge number of these.” Cramer added that while the President might want the “drone killer” as well, it doesn’t mean that the statement would mean to buy stock. He added “A lot of off-the-cuff comments, and you can’t react to all of them. So I think that Jay Powell would be best to say you know what, we have to wait and see.”

The Federal Reserve announced its latest interest rate decision today. As expected, the central bank kept rates unchanged, but the uncertainty in its statement meant that the flagship S&P index bled 0.8% while the broader NASDAQ index lost 1.1%. Investors were particularly spooked by the fact that the Fed’s latest comments didn’t include the usual inflation “has made progress” statement that had previously reassured them that progress on the inflationary front was occurring and could lead to future rate cuts. In other words, the door is now open for the central bank to raise rates further this year if need be, despite an adamant President who believes otherwise.