When Good News Becomes Bad News
CNBC's Jim Cramer had some choice words for investors Tuesday after watching them dump high-growth stocks in response to what should have been celebratory news: the U.S. economy is doing really, really well.
The "Mad Money" host described the market reaction as a "big freakout" that "never ends," with investors panic-selling everything from NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA) to cryptocurrency stocks, quantum computing names, and data center plays. His take on the selling? "It is just stupid."
Here's what happened: the government reported that the U.S. economy grew 4.3% in the third quarter, crushing expectations of 3.3% and marking the fastest expansion rate since Q3 2023. You'd think investors would celebrate. Instead, they hit the sell button.
The Rate Cut Calculus
The logic behind the selloff goes something like this: when the economy is running hot, the Federal Reserve has less reason to cut interest rates. Strong economic data reduces expectations for near-term rate cuts, which puts pressure on rate-sensitive assets like growth stocks. According to the CME FedWatch tool, the probability of a 25 basis point rate cut in January plummeted from 19.9% to 14.4% within just 24 hours of the GDP release.
For high-growth tech stocks that trade on future earnings potential, higher rates for longer means those future cash flows are worth less today. It's basic finance, but Cramer clearly thought the reaction was overblown.
The Recovery and The Holdouts
As it turned out, Cramer might have been onto something. While several stocks from the popular "Mag 7" cohort of tech giants dipped in pre-market trading, they recovered in subsequent sessions to close higher. The knee-jerk panic didn't stick.
Here's how the 24-hour scorecard looked:
NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA) gained 3.01% to close at $189.21, recovering nicely from its early morning stumble.
Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) edged up 0.40% to $486.85.
Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) climbed 1.62% to $232.14.
The cryptocurrency names weren't as fortunate. Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN) dropped 2.26% to $242.30, while Strategy Inc. (MSTR) also closed in the red. But that had more to do with volatility in Bitcoin (BTC) itself than the GDP data.
Quantum computing stocks took it on the chin too, with Rigetti Computing Inc. (RGTI) sliding 6.58% to $25.11.
Déjà Vu All Over Again
This wasn't even the first time this exact scenario played out. Nvidia shares also dipped in pre-market trading back in August when the second-quarter GDP numbers came in better than expected. Same song, different verse.
The pattern reveals something about how jumpy investors have become around rate expectations. Every data point gets analyzed for what it means for the Fed's next move, and stocks whipsaw accordingly. Sometimes the panic sticks, sometimes it doesn't. This time, at least for the big tech names, cooler heads prevailed.




