Michael Shulman

Michael Shulman

Michael Shulman is an author, writer, newsletter advisor and expert on financial trends and developments.

Michael began his career doing in-depth company and market analysis for a variety of companies, building databases and simulation models to estimate the success of various technologies across a wide range of market segments. He moved “inside” the high-tech community as a manager at high-tech companies including AT&T. Michael was an early private investor in several Internet start-ups, notably XOOM.com, which went public in 1998 and was bought by NBC in 1999.

Michael entered the financial publishing business formally in 2001 as director of research for ChangeWave Research’s institutional research business and as the writer and editor of Hedge Fund Investing. His current newsletters include Options Income Blueprint, Short Side Trader, The New Normal Investor and Madness of Crowds. Click here for more information about these services.

Michael is also the author of Sell Short (John Wiley, 2009) and Made in America: Inside Stories of Success (Otterbourn Publishing, 2013), a book based on four factory visits and a brief overview of the  myths and realities about surrounding US manufacturing. He has been published in a variety of trade and general business publications, including CD-ROM Today, Worth Online, The Motley Fool, Bonjour Paris and the Los Angeles Times and is a frequent guest on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” and Fox Business.

Recent Articles

The 10 Scariest Things That Could Happen in 2010

Investors have plenty of cause for concern in the upcoming year. Check out my list and get prepared, because there's a good chance what I'm about to tell you could happen.

How to Profit From the 10 Biggest Wall Street Lies of 2009

Investors were repeatedly lied to, deceived and, as we can see from the unwarranted rally in 2009, duped. Here are the biggest lies on Wall Street and how they can lead you to profits in the new year.

Don’t Write Off a Second Financial Crisis Just Yet

While investors' fears over Dubai's financial crisis subsided a bit on Monday, I wouldn't be so quick to assume this isn't a harbinger of things to come. Find out why and learn how to prepare yourself.

Investors Shouldn’t Expect a Thanksgiving Miracle

The economy and the market have diverged, and the latter is treating everyone with great kindness and charity. But that kindness has limits.

Don’t Be a Turkey — Short This Stock

Find out where many Americans <u>won't</u> be doing their food shopping this Thanksgiving -- or any time before the economy truly recovers, for that matter.