Stock-Picker Showdown: Blodget vs. Cramer
January 30, 2007, 8:22 am
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/01/30/stock-picker-showdown-blodget-vs-cramer/
Henry Blodget has some harsh words for James Cramer, the popular market pundit who hosts CNBCâs âMad Moneyâ show. Writing in a column for Slate, Mr. Blodget, the former Internet analyst, calls Mr. Cramer âperhaps the worst thing to happen to the financial security of average Americans since the crumbling of the Social Security systemâ. And thatâs before he really gets going.
In an aside to his column, Mr. Blodget mentions that the Mad Money Machine, a blog that reviews Mr. Cramerâs stock recommendations, calculated that Mr. Cramerâs stock picks returned 0.2 percent in 2006, as compared with last yearâs 22.5 percent from a portfolio of passive index funds. But that apparently is not the real problem, according to Mr. Blodget, who argues that, given the poor odds that the amateur investor already faces in speculating on stocks, Mr. Cramerâs strategy offers mom-and-pop stock pickers too much risk with too little reward.
(We would also point readers to last yearâs working paper from students at the Kellogg School of Management, which concluded that buying Mr. Cramerâs stock picks was a losing proposition.)
Mr. Blodget goes on to concede that, as sheer entertainment, Mr. Cramerâs show is âmesmerizing reality TV.â He also takes pains to say that Mr. Cramer is âsmart.â In the end, Mr. Blodget seems to believe that warning about Mr. Cramerâs advice is a pointless task: âThe more I thought about Cramer, the more I realized that pointing out that he gives terrible investment advice would be like pointing out that the sun rises.â
The excoriation by the former Merrill Lynch research analyst, who was sued by regulators and private investors for hyping research to bolster the fortunes of the firmâs banking clients, and ultimately barred from the securities industry, is not without some irony.
Mr. Blodget, who recently published âThe Wall Street Self-Defense Manual: A Consumerâs Guide to Intelligent Investingâ, has been the subject of some bitter opinion pieces. A few weeks ago, MarketWatchâs Wall Street columnist, David Weidner, expressed ire over Mr. Blodgetâs recent punditry. Mr. Weidner said that it was a âsign of the apocalypseâ that Mr. Blodget is allowed to comment on bad stock-pickers, adding that âBlodget himself lost a bundle in tech stocks.â
January 30, 2007, 8:22 am
http://dealbook.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/01/30/stock-picker-showdown-blodget-vs-cramer/
Henry Blodget has some harsh words for James Cramer, the popular market pundit who hosts CNBCâs âMad Moneyâ show. Writing in a column for Slate, Mr. Blodget, the former Internet analyst, calls Mr. Cramer âperhaps the worst thing to happen to the financial security of average Americans since the crumbling of the Social Security systemâ. And thatâs before he really gets going.
In an aside to his column, Mr. Blodget mentions that the Mad Money Machine, a blog that reviews Mr. Cramerâs stock recommendations, calculated that Mr. Cramerâs stock picks returned 0.2 percent in 2006, as compared with last yearâs 22.5 percent from a portfolio of passive index funds. But that apparently is not the real problem, according to Mr. Blodget, who argues that, given the poor odds that the amateur investor already faces in speculating on stocks, Mr. Cramerâs strategy offers mom-and-pop stock pickers too much risk with too little reward.
(We would also point readers to last yearâs working paper from students at the Kellogg School of Management, which concluded that buying Mr. Cramerâs stock picks was a losing proposition.)
Mr. Blodget goes on to concede that, as sheer entertainment, Mr. Cramerâs show is âmesmerizing reality TV.â He also takes pains to say that Mr. Cramer is âsmart.â In the end, Mr. Blodget seems to believe that warning about Mr. Cramerâs advice is a pointless task: âThe more I thought about Cramer, the more I realized that pointing out that he gives terrible investment advice would be like pointing out that the sun rises.â
The excoriation by the former Merrill Lynch research analyst, who was sued by regulators and private investors for hyping research to bolster the fortunes of the firmâs banking clients, and ultimately barred from the securities industry, is not without some irony.
Mr. Blodget, who recently published âThe Wall Street Self-Defense Manual: A Consumerâs Guide to Intelligent Investingâ, has been the subject of some bitter opinion pieces. A few weeks ago, MarketWatchâs Wall Street columnist, David Weidner, expressed ire over Mr. Blodgetâs recent punditry. Mr. Weidner said that it was a âsign of the apocalypseâ that Mr. Blodget is allowed to comment on bad stock-pickers, adding that âBlodget himself lost a bundle in tech stocks.â