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

Health Care Stocks Are on the Move

With stocks struggling this week after pushing into overbought territory -- and moving lower on Friday in reaction to the weak July employment report --…

Higher Prices Are Still Ahead For Stocks

Equities were hit hard in early trading on Friday after the July employment report came in well below expectations: The economy lost another 131,000 jobs, worse than the consensus estimate of a 70,000 loss. The bulls decided it was time to pull in their horns and shares plunged.

Stock Market is Stronger Than it Looks

According to the supply and demand measures maintained by Lowry Research, the price declines over the last few days have been the result of a decline in demand rather than a big increase in selling pressure. In other words, instead of a full frontal assault by the short sellers, stocks are falling because buyers decided to take a step back.

Stocks stall at decision point

Stocks are slipping lower again on Wednesday with the NYSE Composite meeting resistance at its 200-day moving average -- the same level that stymied the bulls back in June. So is the rally that took stocks up 11.6% from the July 1 low over?

Yen Strength Suggests Stock Rally Ahead

The Japanese Yen plays a unique role in the global financial markets: It's the funding currency of choice for hedge funds and other big time institutional traders. A combination of ultra-low interest rates and Japan's preference for a weak currency makes it the ideal currency in which to borrow.