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- “The market needs to get a little more oversold because it’s not just Russia, it’s the Fed. So we just got to tread carefully,” CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Tuesday.
- Cramer said he thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin will do what he wants to do and won’t be swayed by punitive economic actions: “I think they’re bee stings.”
- Give that backdrop, Cramer wasn’t prepared to yet to give the all clear on the market. “It’s foggy,” he said of the Russia crisis and the Fed’s fight against inflation.
CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Tuesday the stock market may have “another couple days of this uncertainty,” until it becomes clear whether Russia will invade Ukraine or whether Moscow will stop with recognizing the independence of Luhansk and Donetsk, two breakaway regions there.
“The market needs to get a little more oversold because it’s not just Russia, it’s the Fed. So we just got to tread carefully,” the “Mad Money” host said.
“I don’t trust this market because every time that we think something good is going to happen, Putin pulls the rug out from under us. I don’t know why this time will be different,” Cramer said on “Squawk Box,” ahead of Tuesday’s open on Wall Street.
As Cramer was speaking, U.S. stock futures were way off overnight lows as world leaders started to apply more pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin economically to halt his aggressions toward Ukraine.
- The U.K. on Tuesday announced targeted sanctions against five Russian banks and three wealthy individuals.
- One day after a rare U.N. Security Council emergency meeting, the U.S. expects to announce more sanctions targeting Russia on Tuesday.
- Germany said Tuesday it’ll halt certification of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline designed to bring natural gas from Russia directly to Europe.
Cramer said he thinks Putin will do what he wants to do and won’t be swayed by punitive economic actions: “I think they’re bee stings.”
Stocks fell on Tuesday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average sliding about 300 points shortly after the open, a bit weaker than futures were indicating late in the morning.
Give that backdrop, Cramer wasn’t prepared to yet to give the all clear on the market. “It’s foggy,” he said of the Russia crisis and how aggressive the Federal Reserve might be in fighting inflation.
The market expects seven Fed interest rate increases in this year, starting next month.
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