
As CNBC’s Squawk Box celebrated its 30th anniversary, Jim Kramer reminiscent of the Wall Street mood of that time. He said more investors were excited about individual stocks and were optimistic about making money in the market than they were back then, but he suggested that his attitude was back to what it is today.
“The early days of Scoebox are very similar to the market we are in, and a welcoming return to form,” he said.
When he was a contributor to the show, Kramer recalled several years before he became the host of “Mad Money,” saying it was a program that “democratizes” stocks that “democratizes” market information and makes it more accessible to people.
But market excitement in the ’90s changed to “pandemonium” when Dotcom’s bubble burst, Cramer said. Investors who “didn’t ring the registration” with either profit have overcome catastrophic losses, he continued. He said that many people then felt that owning individual shares was too risky.
Kramer said investors today feel that they realize that there is money to make in the market, saying that such feelings are “around recognition, not greed.” Large individual stocks earn big profits in a short time, he continued, referring to one of the most continually advantageous themes on the market: data centers.
“I think it’s been enough time to realize that stocks, like stocks like Oracle, Nvidia, Palantir, etc., should talk about a single stock compensation,” he said. “Because it’s back and people are making their fortunes.”

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