Jim Cramer Says Electronic Arts (EA) Missed the Mark – Here’s Why

In This Article:

We recently published a list of Jim Cramer Discussed These 12 Stocks & Elon Musk Vs Sam Altman. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Electronic Arts Inc. (NASDAQ:EA) stands against other stocks that Jim Cramer discussed.

In a fresh appearance on CNBC’s Squawk on the Street, Jim Cramer started out by commenting on European stock markets. At the start of the day, markets were doing well and European stocks had actually outpaced American stocks in year-to-date performance. Cramer was surprised by their performance because he was “getting a lot of reports about how people are more negative about Europe than ever.” In fact he quoted the manager of one of the largest asset management firms in the world informing him about the “unmitigated negativity” surrounding European stocks.

Cramer reiterated his favored investing approach and reminded users about the need to look deeper than simply analyzing broader market performance. He shared that the strong European performance might “be short lived, because I’m trying to find companies that are doing really well in Europe. And I can’t really find them.” On the flip side, Cramer was able to find many companies “that are doing well in the United States.”

Naturally, when discussing top-performing US stocks, one firm that’s unavoidable is Wall Street’s favorite AI GPU stock whose GPUs are powering up all AI models. The stock had opened lower during the day, and Cramer pinned its performance on “negative things over at Korea!” These ‘things’ concerned the earnings report of Korean memory manufacturer SK Hynix, whose report had created doubts in investors’ minds about the demand for AI GPUs.

His latest stock market comments aren’t the only ones this year. In an earlier show, Cramer remarked on the breadth of market performance as opposed to the rise of just one or two indexes. He had outlined that despite the breadth that markets were experiencing, “the S&P oscillator I follow, [inaudible] is slightly overbought, there’s a lot more room.” Cramer added that even though technology stocks continued to impress, “there’s a considerable part of the market that has done nothing. Nothing for years. And that’s coming on.” He didn’t hold back about small-cap stocks either. The CNBC host believes “That stuff doesn’t work. People always try to chin that up. And then somebody sells a big small cap derivative.”

Another hot topic in the media, particularly after President Trump’s inauguration, has been the role that the ultra-wealthy might play in the US government. Cramer outlined previously that electric vehicle and aerospace billionaire Elon Musk has had a large role to play here. He shared that if you go back over the councils that were disbanded post-Charlottesville, what you would see are a lot of traditional industrialists and drug companies.” Cramer added that these individuals represented traditional wealth in America and they “were the people that were not drawn to, by Elon Musk. Elon Musk has changed the equation.”