Jim Cramer has a message for retail investors: stop expecting billionaire hedge fund managers to help you get rich. They're not in that business.
"Billionaires won't save you—they're out for themselves," the CNBC host and former hedge fund manager wrote recently. It's a blunt assessment, but Cramer stands by it. He says he can count on a couple of fingers the number of billionaire hedge fund managers who've actually tried to help other people's capital appreciate. The rest? They're more interested in spreading fear and pushing retail investors to dump their holdings.
The Billionaire Playbook: Fear Without Accountability
According to Cramer, too many everyday investors get spooked out of good positions because they listen to warnings from the ultra-wealthy that amount to little more than fearmongering. The kicker? "Billionaires never apologize for their negativity. They always portray themselves as responsible actors no matter what. Because they don't need to. They already have their money," he wrote.
This creates a fundamental mismatch. Billionaires operate with an entirely different risk profile than retail investors. Cramer argues they avoid taking chances unless success is nearly guaranteed, which means they're unlikely to share stock ideas that would actually benefit average investors trying to grow their wealth. Their worldview simply doesn't align with someone building a portfolio from scratch.
When Protecting Wealth Beats Growing It
Cramer traces this insight back to early in his career when he was asked to advise an heiress worth billions. His instinct was to recommend stocks, but his boss shut that down immediately and told him to stick with safe municipal bonds. "You only need to get rich once," the boss said. Looking back, Cramer now sees that as exactly the right call. "For her, protecting capital mattered more than growing it."
That's the reality for billionaires. Once you've made your fortune, the game changes completely. Risk becomes something to avoid, not embrace. And that's fine for them, but it creates a problem when retail investors start following their lead.
Ignore the Noise, Trust the Fundamentals
Cramer's broader message is clear: everyday investors need to stop chasing loud voices promoting fear, especially when those voices belong to people with vastly different financial goals and massive safety nets. He encourages individuals to stay grounded in the fundamentals of their own investments rather than reacting to doomsday signals from the bond market or billionaire forecasts.
"Do not listen to the people who examine the curve of the bond market and decide that they should sound the alarm about the future, which includes selling perfectly good stocks," Cramer wrote. "Pay attention to the fundamentals of your stocks, not the bond market's indications."
In his view, building wealth in the stock market comes down to discipline, learning from your mistakes, and tuning out the noise. Especially when that noise comes from people who aren't playing the same game you are.