Patrick Sanders

Patrick Sanders

Expertise: Tech stocks, Bank stocks, Buy-and-hold investing

Expertise:

Tech stocks
Bank stocks
Buy-and-hold investing

Education:

Graduate of Marshall University

About Patrick:

Patrick Sanders is a freelance writer, editor and stock market expert. He is founding editor of Invested, a daily stock market newsletter published by U.S. News & World Report, and he managed U.S. News’ investing advice section from 2015 to 2019.

He previously was deputy managing editor of InvestorPlace.com. He operated news websites in southeast Europe and Turkey, was the founding managing editor of the New York Times Editing Center and was Connecticut news editor for The Associated Press.

Patrick has made numerous media appearances as a stock market analyst and appeared on panels to discuss personal finance and investing. He served on the board of governors of the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing, and was co-chairman of the training committee to promote and develop training opportunities for business journalists throughout North America.

Patrick is a graduate of Marshall University and now resides in Maryland. Follow him on Twitter or connect on LinkedIn.

Recent Articles

If You’re Patient, You Can’t Go Wrong With the SPY ETF

One of the best ways to invest is to choose a low-cost index fund. And one of the best index funds on the market is the SPY ETF.

3 Bargain Stocks to Buy in the Streaming Services Space

Streaming services are taking an oversized beating so far this year, but that also means you can find some great bargain stocks to buy.

Shiba Inu Is a Joke Investment That Demands Your Respect

Shiba Inu is a meme cryptocurrency that exceeded any reasonable expectations in 2021, but can its outperformance continue?

It’s a Good Day to Be Holding Snap Stock

SNAP stock rose 58% on Friday after the company posted its first quarterly net profit. And notably, it further distanced itself from Facebook.

There’s a Consistent Story Unfolding for Alibaba

Alibaba isn't expected to overwhelm analysts when it reports earnings for its fiscal third quarter, but experts say to BABA stock anyway.