Jim Cramer: Obama is a recession. McCain is a depression.

by SixofNine 7 Replies latest jw friends

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Jim Cramer: Obama is a recession. McCain is a depression.

    What will New York look like a year from now? The answer: bad and probably worse, and perhaps downright catastrophic. Three degrees of awful. The first step was passing the bank-bailout legislation. Now that it’s done—and if it didn’t get done we would have been looking at a guaranteed economic collapse—the critical issue will be presidential leadership. And while any president will be an improvement over the current one, there is a growing belief on Wall Street that Barack Obama has the capacity to lead us out of this wilderness while John McCain does not. I’ll go a step further: Obama is a recession. McCain is a depression.

    Wall Street usually favors Republicans when it comes to managing the economy, but this time around the financial community is skeptical. John McCain has done everything he can to avoid talking about the economy, lest he be tarred with the brush of George Bush’s ineptitude. And when McCain has attempted to step into the fray, he’s been far from reassuring. First, he insisted that the fundamentals of the economy were sound; then he turned around and told us it was the end of the economic world as we know it, and suspended his campaign to scramble back to Washington and save the day on the bailout bill—only to have little visible effect

    For all his talk of being a maverick, McCain looks an awful lot like President Bush on the credit crisis: He doesn’t seem to understand Wall Street or Main Street, he is dogmatically anti-regulation, and his economic team is a joke. Carly Fiorina almost destroyed the onetime best technology company in America, Hewlett-Packard, and Meg Whitman took eBay, the best dot-com player, and turned it into a mediocre franchise that has no growth. Both are perceived by Wall Street to be also-rans who are on the team because they have nothing else to do.

    Obama is no messiah, of course, but there’s a reason the Street sees him as a more capable manager of the credit crisis. He seems to understand the complexity of the problem, and while he’s nobody’s populist, he’s at least perceived as less tone-deaf to everyday Americans’ problems than his opponent. Obama also has a better team, in the likes of Larry Summers, the renowned economist and former Harvard president who probably knows more about this crisis than anyone, and Warren Buffett, the smartest man in business, period. And Obama is a globalist, in an age where the world’s economies are increasingly interdependent.

    More: http://nymag.com/news/businessfinance/bottomline/51007 /
  • Octarine Prince
    Octarine Prince

    bump

    Wild Man Cramer is a genius.

    He is too concerned with his professional reputation, and making money, to make this call based on anything biased.

  • TopHat
    TopHat

    Cramer is a scammer. He is still raging mad over Mayor Guillani arresting in handcuffs his corrupt buddies at Goldman sacks office.

  • Robdar
    Robdar

    Cramer was all for the bailout. Looks like he didn't know what he was talking about. Although I do have to give him credit for seeing this thing coming. He was screaming about the crash months before it happened and the talking heads on tv were pooh-poohing him.

  • Big Tex
    Big Tex

    Are you sure about his non-support? Dunno, I haven't followed him.

    He's got an interesting message here:

    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/27045406#27045406

    His quote:

    "If you need your money in the next 5 years, take it out now."

  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW

    Cramer Rocks!!..He`s good at seeing the big picture.....And..He "Man`s Up",when he "Screw`s Up"..You can`t ask more than that from a person...............Clint Eastwood...OUTLAW

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    I'm just surprised that a guy is always ranting so emotionally when I catch him on TV can write with the coherence and clarity of his words above.

  • Robdar
    Robdar
    Are you sure about his non-support? Dunno, I haven't followed him.

    Yah, I am sure he supported the bail out. I watched him on Morning Joe discussing it. He said it was necessary, that something had to be done. However, a few days later when he saw that the bailout wasn't working, he stepped forward and said, "If you need your money in the next 5 years, take it out now." I am glad the man knows how to change his mind. It's just another reason why I like him.

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