Eric Fry

Eric Fry

About Eric Fry

Eric J. Fry has been a specialist in international equities for nearly two decades. He was a professional portfolio manager for more than 10 years, specializing in international investment strategies and short-selling.

Following his success in professional money management, Eric joined the Wall Street-based publishing operations of James Grant, editor of the prestigious Grant’s Interest Rate Observer. Working alongside Grant, Eric produced Grant’s International and Apogee Research, research products geared for professional money managers.

In 2016, Eric won the Portfolios with Purpose competition — Wall Street’s most prestigious investment competition — beating 650 of the biggest names in finance with a 12-month return of 150%.

In professional circles, Eric is known for his extraordinary long-term track record, which includes numerous “10-bagger” calls, like buying Asian stocks during the depths of its late-90s currency crisis, buying Russian stocks during its debt-currency crisis, buying commodities in the early 2000s, right before their historic rally into 2007, and buying stocks in 2015 that would benefit from the Electric Vehicle boom, just at those stocks were gaining big momentum.

Eric’s record on the short side of the market is just as remarkable. He’s known for successfully shorting numerous technology stocks in 2000 and 2001, as those stocks sputtered toward bankruptcy…and for his predictions in 2005 and 2006 that the housing boom would go bust and drive government mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into bankruptcy.

Eric’s views and investment insights have appeared in numerous publications including Time, Barron’s, Wall Street Journal, International Herald Tribune, Business Week, USA Today, Los Angeles Times and Money. His book, International Investing With ADRs: Your Passport to Profits Worldwide, was the first comprehensive guide to investing in foreign companies using ADRs.

Premium Services

Fry’s Investment Report will prepare you to survive — and thrive — in any market. In it, Eric Fry looks for big-picture trends that drive huge, multiyear moves in entire sectors of the market. Then he shows his readers the right stocks... at the best prices.

  • Stocks, Global Macro Analysis

  • Conservative

  • 1-2 trades per month

Learn More

Already a member? Login here

The Speculator uses Eric Fry’s proprietary system to spot global megatrends, just as they begin to unfold.

  • Stocks

  • Aggressive

  • 2-4 Monthly Trades

Learn More

Already a member? Login here

Recent Articles

The Best Day of the Year to Buy (and Sell) Any Stock

To the naked eye, stocks seem to trade erratically, whipping upward one day only to plummet the next – even after good news. But there are stocks that trade so consistently... rising (or falling) sharply during specific windows of time, year after year... that you can map out an entire year of great trades – right now.

One Stock to Stuff Your Stocking With This Holiday Season

In the spirit of the holiday season, I’d like to share a small gift with you: a particular stock I’ve been closely watching. It is a battery metals company that I’ve held long-term and it recently hit a 52-week high… and I believe it could continue to outperform in the months ahead.

Are These AI Stocks Ready for a Comeback?

If you follow our research, you know that we have always seen the AI Boom playing out in two waves. But before we get into this new wave, let's try to understand the dynamics at play in the AI Boom…

The AGI Race Is on… and so Is the Race for the Best AGI Plays

Like the Manhattan Project, the AI race is a high-stakes competition to develop a powerful technology of weaponization. And like the Space Race, the AI race is also a competition to seize control of a limitless new frontier. And the stakes could not be higher.

Every Investor Should Own the “Stock of the Decade”… but They Shouldn’t Stop There

How has Louis Navellier been able to pick out these huge winners before they really pop? Well, it’s quite simple really… some of the biggest winners of my career all had one thing in common. They all had monopolistic characteristics.