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    Cramer explains why a market bottom can be hard to catch


    Last week's sell-off was a 'tremendous opportunity' to buy quality stocks, says Jim Cramer

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer continued his discussion of last week’s massive decline, explaining why it can be difficult for investors to recognize and take advantage of a market bottom.

    “There will be other buying opportunities in the future, other crazy sell-offs, but let’s remember that, very often, these market meltdowns are driven by nothing,” he said. “What happened two weeks ago was pure market mechanics — nothing to do with the fundamentals — so keep that possibility in mind the next time the averages get clubbed.”

    Stocks rallied on Thursday, with the S&P 500 advancing roughly 8% from its intraday bottom during the Aug. 5 sell-off. Stronger-than-expected consumer spending data eased investors’ fears of imminent recession.

    The sell-off occurred in part because investors were taken by surprise when the Bank of Japan raised its benchmark interest rate to its highest level since 2008, Cramer said. Many had borrowed and then invested large sums in global markets but scrambled to sell these assets once the borrowing rate increased.

    Further, investors were spooked when famed investor Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway sold billions in stocks, including nearly half of its stake in Apple and shares of Bank of America, a longtime Berkshire holding.

    To Cramer, these factors turned out to be “incredibly flimsy reasons to sell,” saying the Japan carry trade issue was “a one-off,” not a persistent problem. He also indicated that Berkshire Hathaway’s moves might not truly be cause for alarm, saying some investors follow Buffett and “end up extrapolating to the point of absurdity.”

    Cramer also described why buyers fled during the sell-off, saying some have been unimpressed with earnings season so far. He said while some companies are doing well, many didn’t raise their full-year forecasts, which makes their stocks less attractive to Wall Street.

    “So, very few stocks seemed like enticing buys at that moment,” he said. “Even though the selling turned out to be based on pretty much nothing, hardly anything looked like it was ‘pounceable,’ so to speak, like you wanted to buy it on the dip.”

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