Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cramer had previously co-hosted the CNBC program Kudlow & Cramer (2002–2005) alongside Larry Kudlow. Cramer said, "It was a traditional sort of financial-news and stock-picking show, and it did all right." [5] Mad Money was conceived by Susan Krakower, [27] [43] who served as CNBC's interim head of prime-time programming.
On 2007-10-19, Fast Money was broadcast live from the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, CA. [14] This special edition also covered that day's 367-point plunge on the Dow, which coincidentally, occurred 20 years to the day it lost 508 points, or 22.6% of its value on Black Monday.
Jim Cramer, 67, is an American TV personality, journalist, author and former hedge fund manager who is known for hosting "Mad Money" on CNBC and for co-founding the website The Street. Cramer, who ...
Cramer was born in 1955 in Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania (a suburb of Philadelphia), to Jewish parents. [1] [4] [5] Cramer's mother, Louise A. Cramer (1928–1985), was an artist.. Cramer's father, N. Ken Cramer (1922–2014), owned International Packaging Products, a Philadelphia-based company that sold wrapping paper, boxes, and bags to retailers and restaur
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
After news of a plummeting stock market Monday, a CNBC host encouraged Americans to vote for Donald Trump for a better financial future - a comment that drew immediate outrage online.. With the ...
Liz Claman (Morning Call, Cover to Cover, Wake Up Call, Market Watch, Today's Business, This Morning's Business, and Before the Bell; now a co-anchor at Fox Business) Tom Costello (Today's Business; now a correspondent for NBC News) Ted David (The Money Wheel, Market Wrap, Morning Call; retired in May 2008)
On CNBC's "Mad Money Lightning Round" , Jim Cramer said there was really no reason for a sell-off in Brink's Company (NYSE: BCO ). He thinks the quarter was great and he wants to buy the stock. ...