June was a brutal month for the Magnificent Seven. The group shed roughly $2.3 trillion in market value and is down more than 13% since mid-May.
While memory chip makers and networking vendors supplying the AI buildout have outperformed, the hyperscalers writing the checks have taken the hit.
Jim Cramer owns six of the seven in his Charitable Trust. On July 9, he told Mad Money viewers who are thinking about selling that they are misreading what is actually going on.
Jim Cramer’s warning to investors selling Mag 7 stocks
Cramer’s message on Mad Money was aimed at a specific habit he sees investors falling into: treating the Magnificent Seven as a single trade. Buying or selling all seven as a block, without distinguishing between their individual businesses and AI timelines, is where he thinks people are going wrong.
“One day, one of these companies is going to announce on its conference call that it is raising forecast because of its AI products, and you are going to see a rally in all of them, a rally that will be so powerful that you kick yourself for missing out on it,” Cramer said.
“We get one, just one, of these heavy hitters saying its AI business is now profitable, then you can forget about owning a commodity semiconductor stock,” he added. “Instead, you’ll go for the hyperscaler that’s spewing so much cash flow it won’t even know what to do with the money.”
Why Cramer says the Mag 7 selloff is a misread of what is actually happening
Investors have been watching these companies pour hundreds of billions of dollars into AI infrastructure and asking when the returns show up.
Until a hyperscaler announces on an earnings call that AI is driving revenue growth, the spending reads like a cost center. That is what has been weighing on the group all summer.
Cramer’s read is different. He thinks these companies are not spending blind. They are looking at demand signals Wall Street does not have access to, and the capex reflects what they are seeing in their own pipeline, not recklessness.
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He used Meta as a specific example. The company announced on July 9 that it plans to begin manufacturing its own AI chip in September 2026, expanding computing capacity to 14 gigawatts next year, according to Reuters.
Investors sold the stock on the news, interpreting it as a sign that capital spending has no ceiling. Cramer said that reading misses the point.
“I think that they’re looking at a book of demand, saying it’s really good, and we’re going to be able to make it so that we can meet that demand,” he said.
On Zuckerberg specifically: “Maybe we should lean in and recognize that he knows more about his company’s prospects than we do. He’s demonstrated that time and again.”

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The mistake Cramer says investors keep making with Mag 7 stocks
Each of the seven companies has a different AI story.
Alphabet’s runs through Google Search and Cloud. Amazon’s flows through AWS. Microsoft’s is in Azure and Office. Meta’s is embedded in its ad stack and increasingly its own hardware.
Apple’s lives inside devices. Nvidia makes the chips everyone else buys. Tesla is building autonomous driving systems.
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Lumping all of that into one trade and selling it when any one name disappoints is what Cramer thinks investors are doing. He has stayed long six of the seven through the entire correction because his read is that this is a sentiment problem, not a business problem.
The companies are still generating huge cash flows. The AI buildout they are funding is not going away.
Cramer’s position is that the investors waiting for certainty before buying back in will find they have missed the move by the time that certainty arrives.
What Cramer says could trigger a powerful Mag 7 rally
One earnings call. That is Cramer’s catalyst.
He needs one major hyperscaler to announce it is raising guidance because AI products are profitable, and he believes the rally that follows would sweep across all seven names, regardless of which company made the announcement.
The Q2 earnings season starts later this month. Meta reports on July 29. Alphabet and Microsoft follow in late July. Amazon reports in early August.
Each of those calls is a window, as TheStreet reported in covering Cramer’s recent views on the group.
What Mag 7 investors should watch in the second half of 2026
The trade that has worked in 2026 is owning the AI suppliers and avoiding the AI spenders. Micron jumped nearly 8% on July 9. Sandisk has outperformed.
The logic is simple: These companies get paid regardless of whether the hyperscalers’ AI bets work out.
Cramer thinks that trade reverses the moment a hyperscaler shows AI is working. When that happens, money rotates back into the Mag 7, and the investors who sold into the correction find themselves chasing.
The Magnificent Seven still control the AI infrastructure the rest of the economy is being built on. Their combined market cap is in the tens of trillions. These are not companies the market forgets about.
Cramer’s point is that investors who are treating the current underperformance as a verdict on the group are going to find out they were wrong when the next earnings season gets going.
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