Ivan Martchev

Ivan Martchev

Ivan Martchev is a research consultant with institutional money manager Navellier and Associates.  Previously, Ivan  served as editorial director at InvestorPlace Media. Ivan was editor of Louis Rukeyser’s Mutual Funds and associate editor of Personal Finance. As co-editor of Wall Street Winners, he has been ranked #1 in the U.S. by investment performance.

Ivan is also co-author of The Silk Road to Riches (Financial Times Press). The book provided analysis of geopolitical issues and investment strategy in natural resources and emerging markets with an emphasis on Asia. The book also correctly predicted the collapse in the US real estate market, the rise of precious metals, and the resulting increased investor interest in emerging markets. Ivan’s commentaries have been published by MSNBCDow JonesBloombergThe Motley Fool, InvestorPlace and others.

 

Recent Articles

6 All-American Stocks to Buy Now

The fact is that there are a handful of domestic U.S. stocks I consider good buys. Not liking the S&P 500 is not the same as not liking solid American stocks (lost inside this problematic index) that indeed work hard for their shareholders.

India Investments Near All-Time Highs

India investments are nearing all-time highs. Check out these India ADRs with strong potential.

Goldman and Morgan Stanley are Never Long-Term Options

For Goldman Sach and Morgan Stanley stocks, expect volatility with little to show for it in the long term.

India Small Caps Provide Big Potential

We have had large-cap Indian ETFs for a while -- the Powershares India Portfolio (NYSE: PIN) and the Wisdom Tree Indian Earnings Fund (NYSE: EPI) -- which should both do great over time. The rally in PIN and EPI has slowed some after the huge recovery in 2009, which is normal after such a big move.

PIIGS Still Filthy, but Czech Credit is Good

Last week, the Czech Republic sold its first euro-denominated bonds at better rates than those of higher-rated Italy. The credit rating means little in this case as it is well known that credit ratings agencies always lag the market.