James Brumley

James Brumley

James Brumley is a reformed stock broker and former Director of Research for an options-focused newsletter. He’s now primarily a freelance writer, tapping more than a decade’s worth of broad experience to help investors get more out of the market.

With a background in technical analysis as well as fundamental analysis, James writes with a multifaceted philosophy that combines the importance of company performance with the power of stock-trade timing. His commentary is as apt to focus on a chart as it is earnings, as he believes this dual approach is the only way an investor has a shot at consistently beating the market.

James’ work has appeared at several websites, including Street Authority, Motley Fool, Kapitall and Investopedia. When not writing as a journalist, James works on his book explaining his multipronged approach to investing.

Recent Articles

The Best Stock Advice: DON’T Sell in May and Go Away

Planning to sell in May and go away, as the old adage goes? The numbers say you may want to rethink those plans.

Why Stratasys (SSYS), Humana (HUM) and Alibaba (BABA) Are 3 of Today’s Worst Stocks

Wednesday was more than a little unkind to Alibaba Group Holding (BABA), Stratasys (SSYS) and Humana (HUM). Here's what happened.

Why Twitter Inc. (NYSE:TWTR), Coach Inc. (NYSE:COH), Corning Incorporated (NYSE:GLW) and Honda Motor (NYSE:HMC) Are 4 of Today’s Worst Stocks

The strength of the greenback made Corning (GLW), Honda Motor (HMC) and Coach (COH) its latest victims. Twitter (TWTR) just blew it all on its own.

Apple (AAPL) Stock: A WHOLE Lot More to Love After Earnings

Between better-than-expected numbers and a clear near-term growth track, Apple stock has stumped even the staunchest pessimists.

Why Werner Enterprises, Inc. (NASDAQ:WERN), Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ:SBUX) and the iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index ETF (NASDAQ:IBB) Are 3 of Today’s Worst Stocks

The iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology Index ETF (IBB), Werner Enterprises, Inc. (WERN) and Starbucks Corporation (SBUX) got smacked around on Monday. Here's why.