Jim Cramer Says ‘But There Is A Sense That Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) Is The Way To Play Robot’

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We recently compiled a list of the Jim Cramer Discussed These 11 Stocks Before The DeepSeek Sell-Off. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) stands against the other stocks.

In a fresh appearance on CNBC's Squawk on the Street, Jim Cramer cautioned viewers to not be caught up by the energy that's gripped the US stock market since President Donald Trump resumed charge. "Things are happening very fast. And I want so much to slow it down," he stated. Cramer mentioned an article that mentioned "the burst of energy, some good, some bad," adding that not every remark made by the President is investment advice. He believes that "a lot of people want to do that. [treat all of Trump's remarks as investable]" They wanna do oil and gas, they wanna do with interest rates," he added and shared "They have to remember that he doesn't have the authority" particularly when it comes to determining interest rates.

Cramer further commented on the state of America's non-tech industrial economy and how it tied in with the President's desire for lower rates. According to him "I just think the industrial economy justifies everything that Trump wants to lower rates." Yet, as consumer spending has remained robust despite high rates, Cramer added that "the consumer economy, says don't lower rates." He believes that if the president took a look at "how great things are at small to medium-sized business. Where the real strength's coming since his election," he would be hard-pressed to press for further rate cuts.

Energy was another topic on the CNBC host's mind. Commenting particularly on natural gas and its demand in today's era of AI data centers, Cramer shared "People only want to be in this business. Want to own stocks in this business because it's going to be the biggest thing that we export." However, he believes that these investors need to ask themselves "Are we going to export so much that domestically because we need it for the data centers, that the customer's going to be squeezed by uh nat gas prices." The surge in exports and data center demand could very well lead to higher natural gas prices for consumers. According to Cramer "Nat gas could go to five. That would be something."

Not only is Cramer interested in energy, but the President ran his election on the promise of increasing America's oil production and requiring oil companies to drill more. However, the CEOs that he's spoken to "are all saying listen, we're going to hold."