Charles Sizemore

Charles Sizemore

Charles Lewis Sizemore is a market veteran of 20-plus years, dedicated to helping people achieve financial freedom through smart investing.

He holds a Master’s Degree in Finance and Accounting from the London School of Economics and a Bachelor of Business Administration in Finance with an International Emphasis from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas, where he graduated Magna Cum Laude and as a Phi Beta Kappa scholar.

As a keen market observer, economist, investment analyst, and prolific writer, Charles has been a repeat guest on Fox Business, has been quoted in Barron’s Magazine, and has been featured in numerous well-reputed publications and financial websites, including MarketWatch, TheStreet.com, MSN Money, Seeking Alpha, Stocks, Futures, and Options magazine, The Daily Reckoning, Benzinga, Minyanville, and Investment International.

While Charles enjoys playing basketball and his grandfather’s old saxophone his passion lies in finding investment opportunities that become safe havens for investors navigating this age of chaos.

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Recent Articles

Coach Earnings Disappoint, But COH Stock Is Still Solid

Coach stock has taken a beating due to its reliance on the aspirational consumer. But COH remains an underappreciated dividend-paying value stock.

Wall Street Gurus Agree – Oracle and Cabot Oil are Buys

Oracle and Cabot Oil and gas are two stocks that the smart money is buying. Gurus are more conflicted on stocks like Apple and Google.

Will Technology Make Us All Jobless?

Oxford estimates that 45% of current jobs will be automated in 20 years. But that doesn't necessarily we will see a technology-driven unemployment crisis.

Spanish Stocks: Your Cheapest Source of Safety Right Now

The case for Spanish stocks is the value one -- shares in the crisis-wracked country are actually less risky than U.S. stocks at current prices.

Is Bank of America Worth More Dead Than Alive?

Bank of America stock has been left for dead by Wall Street, even though BAC is clearly cleaning up its act and trades at dirt-cheap valuations.