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

Pinterest Results Show That the Stock Is Cheap Given Its Huge Free Cash Flow

Pinterest results show that the stock is cheap given its huge free cash flow. PINS stock could rise between 34% and 67% from Pinterest's huge free cash flow generation, which might rise over 54% in the next 2 years.

Digital World Acquisition SPAC Merger Could Be Trump’s Biggest Deal Ever

Trump's TMTG and the DWAC SPAC merger could be his biggest deal ever. DWAC stock now has an $18.4 billion pro forma market capitalization before it merges with Trump's Truth Social Group TMTG.

Microsoft Goes From Strength to Strength, Based on Its Powerful Free Cash Flow

MSFT stock could move 40% higher to $420 based on its powerful free cash flow generation and even higher if its margins expand.

Virgin Galactic Can Easily Survive on Its Cash Pile Until Flights Begin

SPCE stock might be near a trough. Virgin Galactic has a huge $1.3 billion cash cushion to last until Q4 when space tourism services begin.

7 Stocks That Look Too Cheap Given Their High Cash Flow and Dividends

These seven dividend stocks have ample yields that are more than covered by their companies' cash flow and look cheap using value metrics.