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

SoFi Technologies Stock Is Nearing Dangerous Territory

After losing another 20% over the last month, SOFI stock is only pennies away from becoming a penny stock. It's been a sad downward ride.

The Top 10 Stocks Helping Warren Buffett Beat the Market

These Warren Buffett stocks are helping the Oracle of Omaha be a winner even in a down market. All are generating solid returns in 2022.

EVGo Still Looks Solid Despite an Earnings Miss

EVGO stock missed on first quarter earnings today, but the federal infrastructure bill makes EV charging stocks pretty appealing.

The Worst Could Be Over for Meta Platforms

Like other growth names, FB stock is down big so far this year. But its losses over the last month are no worse than other FAANG stocks.

Disney’s CEO Is at a Crossroads as the Company Faces Earnings May 11

Disney CEO Bob Chapek needs to issue solid guidance and a convincing plan for the company, before investors jumping back into DIS stock.