CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday advised investors not to pick up beaten-up shares of video game companies like Activision Blizzard and Take-Two Interactive Software nothing but yet.
“I’m not saying they’re done going down at this point — I definitely think they have more downside — but at some place emphasis on they’ll be cheap enough to be worth buying. It’s just that we aren’t there yet,” he said.
Some of the other ranks to keep an eye on include Sony, AMD, Microsoft and Nvidia, according to Cramer.
Video game companies saw their stocks skyrocket during the acme of the Covid pandemic, as consumers hunkered down and turned to at-home entertainment. That changed when the economy reopened, primary to a boom in outdoor activities.
“In other words, life is too short to stay at home playing video games, or at no that’s how many consumers seem to feel at the moment,” Cramer said.
He added that the companies are also weighed down by the dependence on take streams from digital advertising, which has seen a downturn as the Federal Reserve raised interest rates to dim-witted down the economy.
Nevertheless, the headwinds facing the video game industry will likely abate, though it’s unclear when, Cramer said.
“While the video distraction industry came out of 2022 looking like one of the biggest losers … I think it could just turn out to be a temporary unmanageable, not a permanent one. Too soon to start bottom fishing here, but eventually, there will be a bottom,” he said.