Chris Tyler

Chris Tyler

Chris Tyler, a Wall Street veteran of more than 20 years, began his career in the financial markets working on the trading floor of the AMEX in New York as an equity option market maker at Interactive Brokers’ floor trading unit Timber Hill LLC.

After moving to San Francisco to make markets on the P-Coast exchange during the dot-com craze and spending nearly a decade working in names like Philip Morris, Seagate and Compaq, Chris hung up his smock and trading badge, but not his passion for options and the markets.

Since exiting the floor, and for the better part of the past dozen years, Chris has worked as an option and market strategist, writing analyses for Trading Markets, Charles Schwab subsidiary Optionetics and as a featured columnist at Investor’s Business Daily.

Aside from offering his trading insights at InvestorPlace.com, Chris is currently studying for his Accredited Portfolio Management Advisor (APMA) designation, manages investments for closely held accounts and offers his services as an investment strategist to GLJ Advisors, a CA based RIA.

Chris, his wife and blue heeler live in the Pacific NW. And if you can’t follow him around in your own VW Vanagon or Westfalia, feel free to follow him on Twitter via @Options_CAT.

Recent Articles

Buying Ethereum Is Too Risky Right Now, But So Is Selling

A proof-of-stake transition in Ethereum may not matter to its fortunes if bulls can't maintain key pattern support.

Why Roku Stock Bulls Should Be Worried

Roku isn't Netflix, but other threats off and on ROKU stock's price chart may cause a bearish sequel in shares following earnings.

3 of the Most-Shorted Stocks with Bearish Charts

A riskier market environment for bulls and actionable bearish price charts should pay off in these most-shorted stocks

Why Shopify Stock Is Making New Lows

Shopify investors are receiving a natural stock split in SHOP stock, and despite Wall Street's cheerleading, it's no bargain either.

DIS Stock Is a Blue-Chip, But It’s Not a Buy

Netflix fired a shot over Disney's bow, but DIS stock has other cracks in its hull as well that point at a larger bear market cycle.