Matthew Farley

Matthew Farley

Expertise: Fundamental Analysis, Technical Analysis

Education: Bachelor of Business Studies, Economics, Auckland University

Awards & Accomplishments: Financial Modeling & Valuation Analyst (FMVA)

Matthew Farley is a stock analyst and journalist who aims to bring a rational voice to the financial markets. He has written for publications such as the Motley Fool, Seeking Alpha, and New Scientist magazine, among others. Matthew has a particular interest in creating low-volatility portfolios and dividend investing.

Matthew spent most of his career in financial technology startups before he began writing about the markets in 2018. As such, he is long on cryptocurrencies and related Web 3.0 technologies, AI, large language models (LLM), and other disruptive platforms that are leading humanity forward.

Matthew’s investment philosophy is to build wealth slowly, preserve capital, and let compounding do the heavy lifting for you. As such, he owns shares in many blue-chip, established “boring” companies that have been around for decades with some adventurous incursions thrown into risky moonshots (as he’s still young).

Recent Articles

7 EV Stocks That Could Be Multibaggers in the Making: March Edition

Discover EV stocks poised for explosive growth, tapping into cutting-edge technology and market dominance.

3 Stocks That Could Be the Next Big Thing in Robotics

Unlock the potential of robotics stocks primed to revolutionize the industry and drive unprecedented growth.

3 Emerging Tech Trends That Will Mint New Millionaires 

Unlock the potential of emerging tech trends poised to reshape industries and mint new millionaires. Explore the opportunities.

7 Stocks That Will Make Your Friends Green With Envy

Discover stocks set to dazzle the market with innovative business models and disruptive technologies. Dive in for potential outperformance.

3 Cryptos That Risk-Tolerant Investors Can’t Get Enough Of 

Embrace the thrill of high-volatility cryptocurrencies with these three altcoins, promising both substantial risks and rewards.