
CNBC’s Jim Cramer said investors who feel they missed out on the year’s biggest winners should be thankful for Wednesday’s market rotation.
“It’s an opportunity to sell the losers high and switch to the winners at a discount,” the “Mad Money” host said Wednesday. “In this market, we often look back and beat ourselves up for not taking advantage of the strongest stock breaks. This is one of those breaks. Don’t blow it.”
On the first day of the new quarter, investors swapped many of the year’s biggest winners, including AI infrastructure stocks, for some of the market’s biggest laggards. Kramer said such rotations are common at the beginning of a new quarter, but cautioned that many reversals are short-lived. Instead, investors should take advantage of this pullback to add companies with more sustainable tailwinds, he said.
“Rotations never last one session, but they rarely last more than two or three sessions,” Kramer said.
Cramer said the recent selloff in AI infrastructure stocks creates a potential buying opportunity. he reiterated his bullish view on micron, corning, AMD, applied materials and ram researchHe maintained that demand for semiconductors and data center equipment remains strong despite recent selling pressure. Cramer’s Charitable Trust, a portfolio used by the CNBC Investment Club, owns Corning stock.
Kramer notes that one notable exception to his framework for rotating investments is that Metasoared Wednesday after a slow start to the year. The exception comes as Wednesday’s rally was fueled by reports that the company plans to launch a cloud computing business. He said this development fundamentally improves Meta’s long-term prospects and diversifies the company beyond advertising by adding what he calls a lucrative intercompany revenue stream. Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares in Meta.
“I said Meta could make a lot of money just by announcing that it would rent out excess computing power through cloud infrastructure businesses like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure,” he said. “I think they have more room to operate because their cloud business is quickly profitable.”
Still, he cautioned, not every rebound is worth chasing. In line with his framework, Cramer said Wednesday’s recovery for software companies looks like this: sales force and ServiceNowtogether with packaged food manufacturers general mills and sports apparel company nikemay be temporary. Kramer’s Charitable Trust sold its position in Nike on Wednesday after another disappointing earnings report the night before.

