Friday, March 13, 2009

Jim Cramer Shorting Stocks, Manipulating Markets, Saying The SEC Doesn't Understand


From Huffington Post (bet you'd never see that name here, huh?)

In light of the current economic crisis, and withthe hullabaloo ignited recently by Jon Stewart over the accuracy of CNBC's reporting, we thought it might be useful to revisit this shocking 2006 interview Jim Cramer gave to TheStreet.com's Aaron Task.

In it, the host of Mad Money says he regularly manipulated the market when he ran his hedge fund. He calls it "a fun game, and it's a lucrative game." He suggests all hedge fund managers do the same. "No one else in the world would ever admit that, but I could care. I am not going to say it on TV," he quips in the video.

He also calls Wall Street Journal reporters "bozos" and says behaving illegally is okay because the SEC doesn't understand it anyway.

Here are some gems:

-On manipulating the market: "A lot of times when I was short at my hedge fund, and I was positioned short, meaning I needed it down, I would create a level of activity before hand that could drive the futures,"

-On falsely creating the impression a stock is down (what he calls "fomenting"): "You can't foment. That's a violation... But you do it anyway because the SEC doesn't understand it." He adds, "When you have six days and your company may be in doubt because you are down, I think it is really important to foment."

-On the truth: "What's important when you are in that hedge fund mode is to not be doing anything that is remotely truthful, because the truth is so against your view - it is important to create a new truth to develop a fiction," Cramer advises. "You can't take any chances."

2 comments:

midnight rider said...

You might be brought up before The Committee, have your credentials revoked, surrender your first born and a case of Tequilla for mentioning HuffenPuff here.

Epaminondas said...

It's a question of motivation

Those who MANIPULATE money to create their own wealth have far more motivation to invent ways to do this than the SEC will ever have to think up way they might do this

Greed vs govt salaried workers?

RUKIDDING?