Sarah Smith

Sarah Smith

Expertise: ESG Investing, Electric Vehicle Stocks, Short Squeeze Stocks

Education: BA, Government and Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies, The College of William & Mary

Awards & Accomplishments: Top 5% of stock pickers on TipRanks

About Sarah:
Sarah Smith is an experienced editor and writer who works to help retail investors make sense of what’s happening every day on Wall Street, and she’s particularly interested in ESG investing, EV stocks, and the rise of speculative trading activity like short squeezes. She has also written for Kiplinger.com, Smithsonian, and Washington City Paper. Sarah is currently working to become a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) and has already earned bachelor’s degrees in Government and Gender, Sexuality and Women’s Studies from the College of William and Mary. Her work for InvestorPlace.com focuses on helping investors understand the causes and impacts of daily stock and crypto market movements, and how a disruption in who invests – and how they invest – transforms the market. Sarah is recognized among the top 5% of stock pickers on TipRanks and has an average return of 50%. She lives in Arlington, Virginia.

Connect with Sarah on LinkedIn.

Recent Articles

EXAS Stock Earnings: Exact Sciences Beats EPS, Revenue Estimates

EXAS stock posted Q1 results that include a loss per share of 42 cents and revenue that was much better than analysts expected.

7 Stocks AI Predicts Will Gain in 30 Days

Leading artificial intelligence engine An-E has flagged seven stocks to watch over the next month that can gain 5% or more.

WeWork (WE) Stock Earnings: WeWork Meets EPS, Revenue Estimates

WE stock results for Q1 show WeWork meeting estimates for earnings per share and revenue.

DUK Stock Earnings: Duke Energy Misses EPS, Beats Revenue Estimates

DUK stock earnings for Q1 show the company missing earning per share estimates but beating revenue estimates by 10.9%.

NVAX Stock Earnings: Novavax Beats EPS, Misses Revenue Estimates

NVAX stock earnings show that Novavax reported a narrower loss than expected but missed revenue estimates for Q1.