Anthony John Agnello

Anthony John Agnello

Anthony John Agnello is a financial journalist, tech writer and critic. He joined InvestorPlace.com as a contributing writer in June 2010.

Anthony began covering the entertainment and technology industries in 2004, and has a keen eye for how artistic movements and consumer tastes can lead to dramatic industry shifts.

His byline has appeared in a wide range of publications and websites including MTV, Electronic Gaming Monthly, The Onion AV Club, The Escapist, 1UP.com, Game Pro and Nerve.com.

Recent Articles

May Video Game Sales Down for Activision, Electronic Arts and others

Activision Blizzard (ATVI) and Electronic Arts (ERTS) stock continued to see trouble in the May video game sales report from NPD. While video game sales were up +4% over the previous month this past month, May video game sales continued a disturbing year-on-year decline.

Apple Inc. Rumors and AAPL Stock News – 2M iPads in July, but Korea Upset Over Antenna

Here's the latest Apple Inc. rumors and news on AAPL stock as of Tuesday, July 6. It appears that Apple Inc. could be gearing up to manufacture 2 million iPads in July.

Apple Inc. Rumors and AAPL Stock News – Google Android Browser Losing to iPad

Here's the latest Apple Inc. rumors and news on AAPL stock as of Monday, July 5. After a long Independence Day weekend, it appears Apple is still causing some fireworks with its iPad as it fights Google Android for web browser dominance.

Apple Inc. Rumors and AAPL Stock News – An Even Higher Price Target of $390 for Apple

Here's the latest Apple Inc. rumors and news on AAPL stock as of Thursday, July 1. We'll cover everything from the Apple antenna woes to yet another record-setting price target for AAPL shares.

Activision Call of Duty, EA Games Show Video Game Stocks Eager for Comeback (ATVI, ERTS, NTDOY, SNE MSFT)

Activision (ATVI) Call of Duty and Electronic Arts (ERTS) EA Games titles show video game stocks have the ability to bounce back. Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 sold 8 million units in two months of 2009, proving video game sales can succeed. But other powerhouses like Sony (SNE) PlayStation, Nintendo (NTDOY) Wii and Microsoft (MSFT) Xbox have struggled.