
Cramer Picks Obama in Landslide; 'Analysts' Converge on Estimates
NEW YORK (
) -- Two "news" stories passing like ships in the night...
The speed and intensity of the 24-hour news cycle renders it difficult for most of us to make connections between seemingly unrelated articles. Over the weekend, however, I stopped and stared at two spectacles -- one that went viral, the other that went way under the radar -- long enough to make an association.
Led by
Business Insider
, the standard media hacks and even some otherwise credible outlets such as
The Atlantic
came together to skewer
CNBC
and
TheStreet's
Jim Cramer for predicting President Obama will win Tuesday's election in a landslide with 440 electoral votes.
This is what 98.5% of the media do. A handful instantly produce the easy answer; the rest follow like the uncritical
cut-and-paste, let's link to somebody else's work for page views
hounds that they are.
Few take the time to look for meaning, deeper messages or connections between seemingly unrelated events or concepts.
Almost everybody, in unison, branded Cramer a fool for being so far outside the lines of consensus.
It's unfortunate that Cramer had to take to
to explain himself, but such is life in a world that prefers dichotomy in lieu of nuance and black-and-white over 50 shades of gray (that last one might not be true, but you get the point).
In
over the weekend, Jack Hough wrote a solid piece titled "When Bold Analysts Say Buy" that sheds unintentional light on the Cramer blowup.
Riffing on Wall Street analyst earnings estimates, Hough writes, "Bold forecasts have
become scarce ... Estimates are more closely huddled together than at any time since 1986."
At the same time, research from the University of Texas shows that when revised estimates "move away from the consensus" they "are more likely to prove accurate than those that move toward it."
Hough pulls a few examples.
An analyst at Bernstein Research upped her 2013 EPS estimate on
Humana
(HUM) - Get Report
, which reports Monday, to $9.20 a share, way above the consensus of $7.14. That's about as "extreme" as Cramer's call on the election.
At the micro level, we're talking apples and oranges. I get that.
From a macro perspective, however, if you follow the stock market and can't stand wishy-washy, lazy analysts who all come to the same conclusions
sans
unique flavor, you should appreciate how Cramer stands out against most everybody else who calls Obama vs. Romney neck-and-neck or pretty close.
They put themselves in a situation where they can't be wrong. This is not about being credible or doing careful analysis.
The cats who put the popular vote at a split or go with 290 to 248 or 277 to 261 in the electoral college set themselves up not to fail. Even if they're wrong, they're right.
Who's going to take a pundit to task for missing Ohio and Minnesota or even Pennsylvania? If a miss there throws off your prediction, you walk away unscathed with the benefit of the doubt.
The same goes for a Wall Street analyst who blends in with the crowd. They're making the safe bet.
I like to give Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster
for being an an
Apple
(AAPL) - Get Report
cheerleader. He probably deserves more credit than that.
He stands out, in part, because he's bold. And he's not afraid to walk the line between "objective analyst" and living, breathing human being with an opinion. There's a ton to be said about that.
While he might end up "wrong" on some of his more "extreme" Apple takes, he, along with Brian White at Topeka and Eric Jackson of Ironfire Capital, tend to stimulate the best conversation around one of the market's biggest battleground stocks.
And, more importantly, when it gets down to what really matters -- what Apple does over the long haul -- they have been consistently on the mark.
And, even more important
than that
, like Cramer, Munster, White and Jackson give all of the other guys -- unable to muster an original thought if their lives were on the line -- something to talk about.
At the time of publication, Rocco Pendola held no positions in any of the stocks mentioned in this article
.
Rocco Pendola is
TheStreet's
Director of Social Media. Pendola's daily contributions to
TheStreet
frequently appear on
CNBC
and at various top online properties, such as
Forbes
.









