Finance

Cramer Calls Ondas a 'Meme Stock,' Flags Risk for Traders

On June 9's Mad Money lightning round, Jim Cramer labeled Ondas (ONDS) “a meme stock,” saying, “This is a meme stock...I can't get behind a meme stock.” His dismissal matters because such labels signal elevated volatility and liquidity risk that institutional traders must price into positions.

Cramer Calls Ondas a 'Meme Stock,' Flags Risk for Traders

Key Takeaways

  • Jim Cramer called Ondas (ONDS) a “meme stock” during the June 9 Mad Money lightning round.
  • Cramer's remark—“This is a meme stock...I can't get behind a meme stock”—highlights reputational and flow risks for ONDS.
  • The CNBC piece references Ondas’ year-to-date performance but does not provide numeric figures in the excerpt.
  • Meme-stock labeling signals potential for volatile swings driven by options activity, short interest, and social sentiment.
  • Institutions should prioritize position sizing, stop-loss protocols, and scenario analysis when sizing any exposure to ONDS.

People Involved

  • Jim CramerMad Money host
  • Alexa LoMonacoCNBC author

Entities Involved

  • Ondas Holdings Inc. (ONDS)Ticker flagged as a meme stock during the segment
  • CNBC / Mad MoneyBroadcast and article platform reporting Cramer's lightning round

MarketMoodz Analysis

Cramer's public dismissal of Ondas as a meme stock does more than offer television drama — it changes the risk calculus for traders. A high-profile host branding a name as meme-driven can amplify retail attention or deter institutional interest, increasing the likelihood of choppy trading, sudden liquidity gaps, and outsized option-driven moves. For portfolio managers and prop desks, that means narrower position limits, tighter stop-loss rules, and active monitoring of intraday liquidity and options open interest to avoid being caught on the wrong side of rapid squeezes.

The tag also revives 2021–22 playbook dynamics: heavy social-media chatter, concentrated options positioning, and elevated short interest can create feedback loops that send prices far from fundamentals. Regulators and broker-dealers remain alert to these patterns, so institutions should watch for spikes in retail order flow, abnormal options volume, and changes in short-interest reporting. The practical takeaway for investors is clear — treat ONDS exposures as event-driven and scenario-test for extreme outcomes rather than relying on baseline valuations.

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This article is for informational purposes only and is not investment, financial, tax, or legal advice. Ratings and research outputs can be wrong, incomplete, or stale. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Always do your own research and consider consulting a qualified professional.