TLDR
- Cramer declares the market environment has deteriorated and recommends waiting to buy stocks
- Robust jobs data pushes Fed rate cut probability to near zero, with 96% chance of no June action
- Apple stock tumbled approximately 7% following lackluster investor response to its developer event
- Alphabet’s massive $80B capital raise for AI infrastructure may siphon liquidity from equities
- SpaceX’s highly anticipated IPO risks market disruption if shares surge then crash post-debut
Jim Cramer has reversed course on his market optimism, cautioning investors that key factors supporting his previous bullish view are deteriorating. During a recent CNBC “Mad Money” segment, the veteran market commentator advocated for a wait-and-see approach.
“I am not that bullish,” Cramer stated. “My bullishness can wait. I think you will get a better time to buy than right now.”
Strong Employment Data Erases Rate Cut Expectations
The primary catalyst behind Cramer’s more defensive posture is the May employment report. The economy added 172,000 nonfarm payroll jobs, exceeding consensus forecasts. The unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3%.
While robust job creation typically signals economic health, it presents a problem for equity markets. Solid labor market conditions eliminate the Federal Reserve’s rationale for monetary easing.
According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, markets are pricing in a 96% probability the Fed maintains its current rate stance at the June 17 policy meeting. A Reuters economist poll revealed that 70% anticipate zero rate reductions throughout 2026.
Cramer suggested the employment strength could even justify a rate increase, though few mainstream economists share that extreme view. Regardless, the takeaway remains clear — monetary policy loosening is off the agenda.
Apple’s Disappointment and SpaceX’s Uncertainty
Apple presented another concern for the market strategist. Shares declined roughly 7% during the June 4-10 period after the company’s 2026 Worldwide Developers Conference. Announcements regarding Siri’s partnership with Google Gemini left investors underwhelmed.
“Apple is a leader, maybe the leader, and I don’t want to lose the leader of this stock market,” Cramer explained.
Additionally, Alphabet recently closed an enormous $80 billion equity offering to finance artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion. Cramer expressed concern that if additional tech giants pursue similar capital-raising strategies, it could drain available investment capital from the wider market.
The upcoming SpaceX public offering introduces further complexity. The space exploration company’s IPO carries an estimated $1.7 trillion valuation. While Cramer acknowledged strong initial demand should prevent opening-day losses, he warned of potential overvaluation leading to subsequent collapse.
“What happens if it opens too high simply because there’s not enough stock to go around, and then we watch a sickening decline after that moment?” he questioned.
What This Means for Market Participants
Despite the S&P 500 maintaining approximately 6% gains year-to-date, Cramer is counseling restraint. He believes more attractive buying opportunities may emerge for patient investors.
Regarding SpaceX particularly, Cramer advised that only investors with extremely long time horizons should consider participating at the IPO price — jokingly recommending limit orders “for your grandchildren.”
For the immediate future, Cramer sees the risk-reward equation tilted unfavorably for investors entering positions at prevailing market levels.



