Anthony Mirhaydari

Anthony Mirhaydari

Anthony Mirhaydari is founder of the Edge and Edge Pro investment advisory newsletters.

He is an independent investment columnist with work appearing at Investorplace, The Fiscal Times, CBS News MoneyWatch, MSN Money, Yahoo Finance, and Dow Jones MarketWatch. He started covering the markets and the economy in the media in 2008 in the midst of the greatest financial crisis in generations.

Previously, he was a senior research analyst with Markman Capital Insight, an advisory and money management firm, and a business consulting analyst with Moss Adams focusing on the financial-services industry.

Recent Articles

Why Housing Stocks Are a Buy

The housing market in general was hit right in the face this week with two abysmally weak reports on sales. New home sales dropped -12.4% in July while existing sales dropped a massive -27%. Just like with last summer's cash-for-clunkers auto rebate program, much of the slowdown is payback for the extra sales activity seen during the government's homebuyer tax credit.

Insiders Buying Stocks Despite Recent Declines

Stocks dropped hard on Thursday after investors learned from government reports that jobs are getting scarcer than straw hats in a wind tunnel, and it isn't always sunny in Philadelphia. Then the bad news continued this morning, with even more trouble on Wall Street.

Is This a Bond Bubble?

Some of the most exciting action of the past few days hasn't been in the stock market -- it's been in the bond market.

Foreign stocks Take the Lead

Stocks slipped every day last week, capped by a weak jobless claims report and a tepid revenue outlook from Dow component Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO). But while closing numbers suggest more weakness, the real story was just beneath the surface.

Stocks Selloff Looks Overdone

Stocks plunged on Wednesday as investors decided to dump shares of companies most closely related to cyclical economic growth. The funny thing is, they ramped up the very same shares a week ago because they were so excited about the prospects for improved growth. It's like deja vu all over again, but backwards and with a full twist.