
Jim Cramer attributes market resilience to Big Tech's earnings success
"Now, some of that may be because…the Fed has to cut, maybe even before September — I mean, that's how weak the employment numbers are," he said. "But at the heart of the market's resilience is, well…the Magnificent Seven."
The indexes closed in the red on Friday as investors worried about a much weaker-than-expected labor report and President Donald Trump's modification of "reciprocal" tariffs on a number of countries. But stocks reversed course on Monday, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 1.34%, the S&P 500 added 1.47% and the Nasdaq Composite surged 1.95%.
The market doesn't seem to be concerned that Trump suddenly fired the Bureau of Labor and Statistics Commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, and accused her of manipulating jobs data, Cramer said. Many of stocks that had been strong on Thursday but sank on Friday proceeded to recoup their losses during Monday's session, he pointed out.
Cramer reviewed recent earnings from the tech titans, starting with Microsoft. He called the quarter "flawless," saying the company seems to be doing well in every segment of business. He noted that its cloud infrastructure division, Azure, saw a huge acceleration in growth. Cramer was also impressed with some figures from Meta's recent report, especially management's claim that 3.5 billion people use at least one Meta product a day.
Alphabet is seeing success throughout the company, Cramer said, including its Google search business, Youtube and AI product, Gemini. He also said the Waymo business is building a nice lead over the rest of the autonomous vehicle space. Apple had a "tremendous" report, Cramer continued, emphasizing its better-than-expected growth. He was encouraged by management's comments on artificial intelligence innovations in the future. Amazon also did well, Cramer continued, with good results from retail sales and advertising revenue, as well as decent numbers from the web services division.
While Cramer said Tesla's vehicle business is poor, he said it's doing very well as a tech company. He suggested it's worth owning for its autonomous driving and robots. Although Nvidia has yet to report, Cramer expressed optimism about the chipmaker and demand for its products.
"Even though the Mag Seven has one hand tied behind its back with Tesla, we had tepid reactions to Apple and Amazon's numbers," he said. "The fact is that these companies, loaded with cash, not outrageously expensive — nation states, I call them — with multiple revenue streams and tight expenses, just can't be beat by any stretch of the numbers or the imagination."
Click here to download Jim Cramer's Guide to Investing at no cost to help you build long-term wealth and invest smarter.Disclaimer The CNBC Investing Club Charitable Trust owns shares of Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Alphabet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Tom's Guide
4 minutes ago
- Tom's Guide
I biked 12 miles with the Apple Watch 10 vs Samsung Galaxy Watch 8, and there's a clear winner
The Apple Watch Series 10 is the best smartwatch for iPhone users in 2025, and also one of my favorite smartwatches ever. The Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 is similarly one of the best smartwatches for Android, especially if you're after useful Gemini AI features. But which one is the best for biking? To find out, I biked 12 miles wearing the Apple Watch Series 10 on my left wrist and the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic on my right wrist to determine which of these two popular smartwatches is the more competent fitness tracker. As a control, I ran Strava on my handlebar-mounted iPhone 12 Mini. I also set a course for a familiar route, one I've recorded with Strava multiple times prior. Each smartwatch is packed to the gills with fitness tracking and wellness monitoring tech, including built-in GPS, altimeters, heart rate sensors, body temp sensors, and more. You also get a wide variety of fitness tracking modes. In fact, either can autodetect basic workouts like walks, runs, swims, and bike rides without user input. However, for this test, I manually started the tracking app on both to ensure the best results possible. So, which smartwatch, the Apple Watch Series 10 or Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic, proved to be more accurate when it comes to tracking a roughly 12-mile bike ride through a mix of forested and urban areas? Read on. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. The Galaxy Watch 8 is the world's only wearable device with the brilliant Gemini AI voice assistant app built right in. In fact, you can customize a button to open it with ease. The Classic model also features a nifty rotating bezel for navigation. You additionally get best-in-class sleep tracking insight and loads of fitness and wellness tools. Apple's newest device is the brand's thinnest and lightest, while boasting the largest display to date. Sleek and comfortable on the wrist, the Series 10 is a supremely well-rounded smartwatch with more wellness monitoring, fitness tracking, smart, and safety features than you'll know what to do with. The Apple Watch Series 10 and Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 are fairly evenly matched spec-wise across the board. They each represent the non-tough-built, i.e., non-Ultra, flagship models in either brand's respective lineups. While the Apple Watch Series 10 comes in two sizes (42mm and 46mm), the Galaxy Watch 8 comes in three: 41mm, 44mm, and the 46mm "Classic" edition with rotating bezel. For this test, I used the larger Apple Watch and the Galaxy Watch 8 Classic. Comfort-wise, the Series 10 felt a lot better on my wrist throughout my ride than the larger/heavier Samsung. The Galaxy Watch 8's larger case size does allow for a multi-band GPS antenna, compared to a single-band antenna in the Series 10. With my bike route winding through a mix of heavily wooded and densely urban portions of Seattle, Washington, I fully expected the Samsung watch to slightly outperform the Apple Watch regarding distance and elevation tracking data. However, the previous time I pitted the Apple Watch 10 vs the Galaxy Watch 8 in a 5,000-step walk test, the Apple Watch came out on top despite its single-band GPS. Did Apple have a repeat upset win here? Check the results for yourself below. Apple Watch Series 10 Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Strava Distance 11.66 miles 11.73 miles 11.79 miles Elevation gain 735 feet 639 feet 665 feet Average speed (moving) 11.3 mph 12.3 mph 12.2 mph Max speed 20.5 mph 23.8 mph 25.4 mph Average heart rate 165 bpm 166 bpm n/a Max heart rate 178 bpm 180 bpm n/a Calories burned 652 calories 621 calories n/a Battery drain 16% 10% n/a According to Strava, during my one-hour bike ride, I covered nearly twelve miles in distance and gained 660+ feet in elevation. My average moving speed was around 12.2 mph, and my fastest speed was a little over 25 mph. Across the board, the Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Classic churned out nearly the same stats as Strava. Sure, the device likely undercounted my total elevation gain by as much as 26 feet, but that's better than overcounting by as much as 70 feet, as the Apple Watch appears to have done. While Apple's total distance data is close enough, both the average speed and max speed appear quite low. As noted above, having recorded this route numerous times prior, I've come to expect a max speed of right around 25 mph and an average speed somewhere between 12 and 15 mph. (Note: Neither smartwatch was piggybacking off a smartphone's location data for this test; I didn't even bring a Samsung phone with me and disabled the ability in the Watch app on my iPhone.) Moving on, heart rate and calories data match up nicely between the Apple Watch and Samsung, something that's oh-so heart-warming to see. However, the Apple Watch Series 10 used a bit more battery to track my excursion compared to the Galaxy Watch 8. Interestingly, in my previous test between these two, it was the Samsung that exhausted more battery. Cupertino may've taken the crown in the first showdown between these two fitness-tracking wearables, but in this bout, it's Mountain View coming out on top with the more accurate workout tracking data. That said, having extensively tested both of these devices, either is a great choice to help you keep tabs on your workout journey. We may be splitting hairs with the results here, but I'd trust either to accurately track my progress over time. In fact, the Galaxy Watch 8's new Running Coach feature and Apple's new Workout Buddy tool both promise personalized, real-time AI coaching. Stay tuned for more in-depth reporting on both, along with a deep dive comparison of these two watches. Which smartwatches or fitness trackers should I test next in a head-to-head competition? And what workout should I do? Let me know in the comments below.


Business Insider
32 minutes ago
- Business Insider
U.S. Stock Futures Rise as Wall Street Rebounds, PLTR Stock Pops
U.S. stock futures traded higher on Monday night, following a positive trading session. Futures on the Nasdaq 100 (NDX), the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), and the S&P 500 Index (SPX) were up 0.2%, 0.15%, and 0.18%, respectively, at 10:20 p.m. EDT on August 4. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. In after-hours trading, Palantir (PLTR) stock surged over 3% after announcing quarterly revenue exceeding $1 billion for the first time. On the other hand, Hims & Hers Health (HIMS) stock dropped more than 12% following a Q2 revenue report that fell short of consensus estimates. In Monday's regular trading session, the S&P 500 staged a rebound, jumping about 1.5% and ending a four-day losing streak. The Nasdaq Composite also saw a strong gain of nearly 2%, while the Dow Jones climbed 1.3%. At the same time, the small-cap Russell 2000 jumped over 2%. Looking ahead, investors are focused on a new round of corporate earnings reports on Tuesday, with major companies like Pfizer (PFE), Yum! Brands (YUM), Snap (SNAP), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), and Rivian (RIVN). Key economic reports such as trade deficit and Services Purchasing Managers Index are also due on Tuesday morning.
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Asia Morning Briefing: BTC Rebounds Toward $115K as ETF Flows Return, but Traders Still Price Tail Risk
Good Morning, Asia. Here's what's making news in the markets: Welcome to Asia Morning Briefing, a daily summary of top stories during U.S. hours and an overview of market moves and analysis. For a detailed overview of U.S. markets, see CoinDesk's Crypto Daybook East Asia begins its trading day, bitcoin (BTC) is changing hands at just over $115K, staging a modest rebound from last week's selloff that saw over $1 billion in leveraged longs liquidated and BTC briefly test $113K. The bounce comes amid signs of stabilization in institutional flows, with Bitwise reporting $18.74 million in net inflows, a potential reversal after one of the largest ETF outflow days on record last Friday. The latest correction, which marked BTC's third straight Friday selloff, was driven by a hawkish macro cocktail: weak U.S. jobs data and a fresh wave of tariffs from Washington, triggering a broader risk-off mood in both equities and crypto. Altcoins bore the brunt of the move, with SOL falling nearly 20% on the week and ETH losing close to 10%. Yet despite the drop, QCP Capital remains cautiously optimistic. 'The broader structural setup remains intact,' the firm wrote in a Monday note, citing BTC's highest-ever monthly close in July. QCP views the selloff as a leverage flush rather than a trend reversal, pointing to historical post-rally shakeouts that cleared the path for renewed accumulation. That said, market hedging behavior suggests investors aren't ruling out deeper downside. On Polymarket, traders currently assign a 49% probability that BTC dips below $100,000 before the end of 2025 — up 2 percentage points from the day prior. The pricing reflects a market that's still on edge, with downside tail risk priced in despite supportive long-term fundamentals such as regulatory clarity, growing stablecoin adoption, and tokenization initiatives. The next catalyst could come during the Asia trading day as U.S. issuers report flows, which typically happens by mid-day Hong Kong time. If ETF inflows continue and implied volatility begins to compress, it may provide the confirmation needed for the market to embrace the buy-the-dip narrative and shake off the macro jitters that have kept it stuck in neutral. Market Movers: BTC: Bitcoin is trading back above $115,000, signaling early signs of market stabilization. ETH: Ether is holding steady around $3,700, with Polymarket traders showing confidence it will break above $4,000 sometime in August. Gold: Gold extended its rally for a third session on Monday, rising to a two-week high as soft U.S. economic data boosted expectations of a September Fed rate cut, with CME traders now pricing in an 86% chance of that happening. Nikkei 225: Asia-Pacific markets opened higher after U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled plans to sharply increase tariffs on Indian exports. Japan's Nikkei 225 rose 0.54% at the open. S&P 500: Stocks rebounded Monday, with the S&P 500 rising 1.47% to 6,329.94, snapping a four-day losing streak and marking its best session since May. Elsewhere in Crypto: DCG's Barry Silbert Returns to Grayscale as Chairman Amid IPO Push (CoinDesk) Former Chancellor Osborne Warns UK Is 'Completely Left Behind' on Crypto (Decrypt) Pantera leads $20 million raise for OpenMind's decentralized operating system for robots (The Block) Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data