Cramer: Here's the problem with correction calls

Cramer: Here's the problem with correction calls

CNBC's Jim Cramer said Wednesday that while he believes it is almost necessary for investors to call for a marketwide correction, they could end up missing investment opportunities.

"The fact is that if you don't call for a correction you're going to look silly. And I think that's part of the problem with this market," Cramer said on " Squawk on the Street ." It's almost as if it's universal. We've got to call for a correction because there is too much easy money. The problem with that is that then you miss Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC)."

On Monday, Charter Communications (NASDAQ: CHTR) announced it had agreed to buy the cable company for $195 a share, or about $55 billion.

"You could make enough money on [the] Time Warner Cable [deal] where you could have retired and cashed out," he added.

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Cramer also made his remarks a day after Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel said the Federal Reserve 's zero-rate policy has created an asset bubble that has led people to make "riskier investments" than they otherwise would and that a correction was inevitable.

-CNBC's Matt Hunter contributed to this report.




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