David Moadel

David Moadel

Expertise: Stocks, Options, Precious metals, Bitcoin, Altcoins

Education: Master's degree in education from the American College of Education, Bachelor's degree in education from Florida Atlantic University, Associate's degree in liberal arts from Palm Beach Community College

About David:
David Moadel is a financial writer for InvestorPlace.com. He has a master’s degree in education and has authored financial content for multiple websites.

David is also active as a social media influencer, with tens of thousands of followers on YouTube, Twitter, StockTwits, and other popular sites. David writes on topics ranging from stocks to cryptocurrencies, options, precious metals, bonds, futures, and other areas of finance.

Focusing on data rather than emotions, David is always on the lookout for new pathways to financial freedom. Count on David for wealth-building strategies and resources for investors and traders of all financial backgrounds.

You can follow David on YouTube, Twitter, StockTwits and LinkedIn.

Recent Articles

Pinduoduo Stock Buyers Better Hope Temu Is Not Another Wish.com

Pinduoduo stock is down this year, and you may be tempted to buy it. Yet, consider Pinduoduo's challenges with Temu before risking your money.

MELI Stock: Move Over, Amazon. Meet Latin America’s E-Commerce Darling.

As MercadoLibre's popular e-commerce platform generates robust revenue, MercadoLibre stock looks unstoppable in 2024 and beyond.

Sorry, but No Deal! Wait for a Better Price With Palantir Stock.

There's no shortage of positive news for Palantir Technologies, but don't jump to the conclusion that Palantir stock is bargain-priced.

TM Stock Analysis: Why Toyota Is a Smart Play on the Hybrid-Vehicle Trend

Toyota Motor's management is skeptical of the EV revolution. If that's not a problem for you, then consider buying and holding Toyota stock.

Yikes! Don’t Get Trapped as Super Micro Computer Stock Rolls Over.

Super Micro Computer stock rode higher on AI-hardware hype, Super Micro Computer's large-scale share sale could be a sign of trouble.