Missed Jim Cramer's Exclusive Members-Only Monthly Call?
RECAP OF WHAT YOU MISSED
JIM CRAMER UNVEILS HIS FIVE WAYS TO SPOT A MARKET BOTTOM
BENEFITS OF THE ACTION ALERTS PLUS MONTHLY CALL
Direct Access to Jim Cramer
Insights into Trading Decisions
Get direct access to Jim Cramer as he addresses your pressing issues about the market
Receive a deep-dive analysis of the major buying and selling decisions of the Action Alerts PLUS portfolio
Cramer will walk you through the state of play in the current market
Current market conditions have mostly met his five rules for spotting a market bottom:
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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.
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Rule No. 2. Concentrated, large buying from insiders can't be ignored and most likely should be embraced.
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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.
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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.
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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.
Cramer's Take: Bank Stocks Are Going To Have An Unprecedented Level Of Merger Activity
How To Know When A Stock Bottoms Out
On Bad News
How To Walk A Market Tightrope
RECAP OF WHAT YOU MISSED
JIM CRAMER UNVEILS HIS FIVE WAYS TO SPOT A MARKET BOTTOM
BENEFITS OF THE ACTION ALERTS PLUS MONTHLY CALL
Missed Jim Cramer's Exclusive Members-Only Monthly Call?
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.