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JIM CRAMER UNVEILS HIS FIVE WAYS TO SPOT A MARKET BOTTOM
BENEFITS OF THE ACTION ALERTS PLUS MONTHLY CALL

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Current market conditions have mostly met his five rules for spotting a market bottom:

  • Rule No. 1. Don't stay too negative when the market sees a crescendo of sell volume and noted bears have begun to turn bullish.
  • Rule No. 2. Concentrated, large buying from insiders can't be ignored and most likely should be embraced.
  • Rule No. 3. When a particular company faces a persistent parade of bad corporate news but its stock stops going down, you have the possibility of a very good, lasting bottom.
  • Rule No. 4. Look for high-quality companies that have become "accidental" high yielders -- offering 4% or better yields not due to dividend hikes, but because their stocks' prices have fallen so much.
  • Rule No. 5. If a company with a good track record of buying back stock announces a new buy back program (especially one representing more than a fifth of the firm's market capitalization), management likely believes that the stock has bottomed out.
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Cramer's Take: Power Ranking of FANG Stocks

How To Know When A Stock Bottoms Out
On Bad News

How To Walk A Market Tightrope

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JIM CRAMER UNVEILS HIS FIVE WAYS TO SPOT A MARKET BOTTOM
BENEFITS OF THE ACTION ALERTS PLUS MONTHLY CALL
HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE CALL
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Current market conditions have mostly met his five rules for spotting a market bottom:

  • Rule No. 1. Don't stay too negative when the market sees a crescendo of sell volume and noted bears have begun to turn bullish.
  • Rule No. 2. Concentrated, large buying from insiders can't be ignored and most likely should be embraced.
  • Rule No. 3. When a particular company faces a persistent parade of bad corporate news but its stock stops going down, you have the possibility of a very good, lasting bottom.
  • Rule No. 4. Look for high-quality companies that have become "accidental" high yielders -- offering 4% or better yields not due to dividend hikes, but because their stocks' prices have fallen so much.
  • Rule No. 5. If a company with a good track record of buying back stock announces a newbuyback program (especially one representing more than a fifth of the firm's market capitalization), management likely believes that the stock has bottomed out.