Jim Cramer admits he was wrong about Bitcoin — ‘I was premature’

Bitcoin

Markets commentator Jim Cramer has tacitly admitted he was wrong about Bitcoin (BTC), saying he was premature in calling for investors to sell the cryptocurrency. 

In a Nov. 22 segment of his CNBC Mad Money show, Cramer responded to a caller who inquired about buying shares in Bitcoin miner CleanSpark, saying that anyone who likes Bitcoin should increase their exposure to it.

“Look, if you like Bitcoin, buy Bitcoin. That has always been my view. And for a while, I liked it, and I decided that money had been made, but I was premature.”

Cramer added that despite not having made perfect calls on Bitcoin previously, he’d still “made a lot of money” from his investment in it.

On Dec. 5, 2022 — when Bitcoin was trading for $17,150 — Cramer urged investors to sell all their crypto investments no matter the cost, saying it was “never too late to sell an awful position.” The price of Bitcoin has rallied 118% since, with BTC currently changing hands for $37,390. 

Cramers’ predictions, along with his on-again-off-again love-hate relationship with crypto, have become a popular meme throughout investing communities over the past few years, with many pointing out his uncanny ability to make incorrect calls at key moments.

Related: Bitcoin to $1M post-ETF approval? BTC price predictions diverge wildly

In August 2022, a crypto trader claimed to have doubled the size of his portfolio simply by trading in the opposite direction to what Cramer recommended.

Two months later, on Oct. 6, an investment fund filed for an “inverse Cramer ETF” — a financial instrument designed to return results on trades “that are approximately the opposite of, before fees and expenses, the results of the investments recommended by television personality Jim Cramer.”

Magazine: This is your brain on crypto — Substance abuse grows among crypto traders

Articles You May Like

Trump picks Scott Bessent as Treasury secretary
States eye green bonds, superfund and cap-and-invest programs to fund resilient infrastructure needs
Wisconsin village in court fight over terminated transportation fee
Trump says he will hit China, Canada and Mexico with new tariffs
Transit lobby pushing Congress for $57.5 million in stalled funding