CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Tuesday that investors obsessed with the selloff in Nvidia and other AI companies are approaching the market with the wrong mindset. In his view, owning artificial intelligence stocks requires conviction — and if you don’t have it, there’s a whole world of safer, slower-growth names to choose from.
“You either believe in artificial intelligence or you should just stay away,” Cramer said.
Cramer said that too many investors treat markets as a zero-sum fear game: they buy only after stocks rally and sell the moment they fall. He says the people who’ve missed out on huge gains over the past decade are the ones who couldn’t tolerate weakness or trust the companies they owned.
That philosophy underpins his long-running support for the Magnificent Seven — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla. Cramer said the companies earned their trillion-dollar valuations through consistent execution, enormous profits and the ability to adapt when their core businesses face pressure.
He pointed to Tesla as a prime example: when electric-vehicle competition intensified and profits were squeezed, the company didn’t change, but investor perception did. Shares rebounded from steep declines after the narrative shifted toward self-driving technology and robotics.
Nvidia is now facing a similar moment of doubt.
Shares have been hit hard by concerns that Alphabet is relying more on its own AI chips, developed with Broadcom, instead of Nvidia’s flagship processors. Reports that Meta may also purchase Google-designed chips added to the pressure. Those developments came on the heels of a strong Nvidia earnings report that nonetheless sent the stock tumbling into the mid-$180s, with further declines after the Meta news.
Cramer acknowledged that the concerns are real but argued that selling Nvidia now would repeat the same mistake he made with Alphabet, which he exited before the stock doubled.
“If you don’t like Nvidia, you don’t have to own it. Nobody’s putting a gun to your head,” Cramer said. “Don’t let the door hit you on the way out.”













































