Eddie Pan

Eddie Pan

Expertise: Institutional Investments, Insider Activity, Disruptive Innovations

Education: BBA, Finance, James Madison University

About Eddie:
Eddie Pan specializes in institutional investments and insider activity. He has been enamored with hedge funds since he began investing and regularly collaborates with industry executives to craft editorial pieces. Tracking the investments of institutional investors and insiders can provide a vast array of knowledge that is scarcely covered.

After receiving his BBA in Finance from James Madison University, Eddie began his career at Accenture as an analyst. Today, he writes for InvestorPlace’s Today’s Market team, which centers on the latest news involving popular stocks.

Eddie got his start in the financial media world by publishing articles on top-performing hedge funds and their investment strategies on Substack. He still publishes pieces on his Substack today.

Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits by Philip A. Fisher is Eddie’s favorite investment book. Fisher’s 15 Points have heavily influenced his investment strategy.

Recent Articles

NKE Stock Alert: 3 Key Reasons Nike Is Up 7% After Earnings

NKE stock opened in the green after the company reported revenue of $12.94 billion and an EPS of 94 cents, beating analyst estimates.

Rep. Ralph Norman Puts Pressure on Gary Gensler Regarding MMTLP Stock

MMTLP stock is once again in the news after Rep. Ralph Norman asked SEC Chair Gary Gensler a series of questions concerning the stock.

MULN Stock Alert: Mullen Begins Class 3 Deliveries

MULN stock is in the red, despite the company announcing that it had delivered its first ten Class 3 trucks, or Mullen THREEs.

Can Ryan Cohen Save GameStop (GME) Stock as CEO?

Shares of GME stock are in the spotlight after GameStop appointed Ryan Cohen as CEO, President, and Chairman, effective immediately.

Deutsche Bank Just Issued a Warning on Tesla (TSLA) Stock

TSLA stock is in focus after a Deutsche Bank analyst cut his Tesla third-quarter delivery forecast to 440,000 vehicles from 455,000 vehicles.