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Mad Money w/ Jim Cramer

Cramer’s 20th Anniversary Special: Nvidia’s Rise to the Top 8/26/25

Mad Money w/ Jim Cramer

CNBC

News, Investing, Business

4.43.9K Ratings

🗓️ 26 August 2025

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Jim Cramer takes a special look at one of the biggest stock stories of his career: Nvidia. In this episode, Cramer breaks down how the chipmaker went from a niche graphics company to an AI juggernaut—and how he’s tracked the stock along the way. Cramer reflects on what Nvidia's rise means for the market, the future of tech, and the investors who bet big.

Transcript

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0:00.0

My dad taught me how to save money. Jim Kramer showed me how to invest money.

0:06.2

He has made nothing short of just a massive impact on our lives.

0:11.4

The thing that you need to hear is that you helped. And if you helped, you keep doing it.

0:16.1

I've always liked Nvidia. NVDA is one of the few winners in the PC supply chain.

0:21.6

NVIDIA. Invidia, darn it, deserves the accolades.

0:25.6

NVIDIA is the one that I've made the most money on.

0:28.6

He was early in learning about AI and he was early in recognizing its potential.

0:33.6

And then he went and told everybody the story of NVIDia.

0:36.6

It's probably 30% of my

0:39.5

portfolio and it's worth over a million dollars. We need to analyze why so many people didn't

0:47.0

want to buy a stock that tacked on a record $277 billion in one day, clipping a record formerly held

0:53.7

by META for the largest single

0:55.8

session gain in stock market history.

0:59.8

First, let's just say, I did my best to get you in it.

1:04.6

I've been recommending Nvidia endlessly off mobile times a week, both here and in the

1:08.1

club for a decade now.

1:09.8

I knew early on that I had

1:10.9

the fastest, by far the fastest processors, much faster than traditional computing, because one of my

1:15.9

old hedge fund clients was on the board of Intel back in the day. It was always upset that

1:20.1

Intel refused to get into the speedy graphics processing unit business. But then CEO Andy Grove

1:25.1

bridled good thought, because back then, gaming chips were considered low end and not good for much of anything beyond pretty video game graphics.

1:35.1

They were cheap, they were cheesy, they were worthless to him.

...

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