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

Nearly a Year Later, What’s Changed With GameStop Stock?

GameStock appears to be a better company after its crazy ride in 2021, but GME stock will be a risk as long as the company stays in the red.

Watch out Bitcoin! Ethereum’s Bold Rise Is Only Just Beginning.

Ethereum is setting all-time highs, but you can expect ETH-USD to at some point surpass even its bigger rival in Bitcoin.

Pinterest Is a Coronavirus Play Whose Time Has Passed

Pinterest had an amazing rise as Covid-19 fears shut the nation down in 2020. But now it appears that the run for PINS stock is over.

Now It’s Grind-It-Out Time for Lucid Group

LCID stock had a great month as the company is finally distributing its first model. But now the firm has to exceed expectations each quarter.

The Pros and Cons of Investing in Nio Stock

Nio may not be the Tesla of China, but its battery as a service (BaaS) program makes NIO stock compelling for long-term investors.