Mark R. Hake

Mark R. Hake

Mark R. Hake, CFA is a financial analyst and entrepreneur. He has been a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) for 31 years and has owned his own investment management and investment research firms that focused on value stocks, both in the U.S. and overseas.

Mark writes over 600 articles per year on stocks, cryptos, SPACs, convertibles, ETFs, and other financial securities. He has been ranked with 5 stars by TipRanks.com (under “Mark R. Hake”) with an average return of over 22% annually and #36 out of 8,116 writers. Presently he authors articles on Medium.com and other sites.

Mark also invests in public and private equities and has acted as a hedge fund manager and portfolio manager for various money management firms. He has also acted as CFO and Chief Strategy Officer for several fin-tech and software companies.

You can follow Mark on LinkedIn and on TipRanks.

Recent Articles

Bank of America Will Likely Continue Massive Stock Buybacks

BofA will likely continue massive buybacks of its stock due to excess capital and high profitability. Buy Bank of America stock on pullbacks like this summer when economic fears rose when the yield turned negative.

Shopify Stock Is Priced for Perfection, but Buyer Beware

Shopify stock is priced for perfection, but buyer beware. Shopify's valuation will deflate soon as revenue growth is slowing with and losses are continuing.

5 Cheap Dividend Stocks With High Yields And Annual Increases

5 cheap dividend stocks with high yields and annual increases. These dividend-paying stocks have high yields, low P/E ratios and consistently raise their dividends each year.

Don’t Buy Pinterest Stock As User Growth is Slowing and It’s Losing Money

Don't buy PINS stock. Pinterest has negative free cash flow, a decelerating U.S. growth base and is overvalued compared to its peers.

Expect More Dilution, Debt, Deficits, and a Deep Drop in ACB Stock

Expect more dilution, debt, deficits, and a deep drop in Aurora stock. Aurora Cannabis free cash flow losses will require more debt and dilution.