Thomas Niel

Thomas Niel

Expertise: Micro-Cap Stocks, Shareholder Activist Stocks, Value Stocks

Education: Bachelors in Accounting, CFA Program Participant (Completed Level I in 2017)

About Thomas:
Thomas Niel is an investment writer at InvestorPlace. With a professional background in accounting and financial analysis, his understanding of both words and figures pays dividends when writing clear, concise stock analysis.

A value investor at heart, Thomas looks at the fundamentals. Peer analysis and earnings multiples rarely tell the whole story. But, Thomas believes valuation metrics are a great starting point to separate the wheat from the chaff.

His work has appeared at several websites, including Seeking Alpha and TipRanks. Outside of investment research, Thomas provides inbound marketing content to the investment management industry.

You can follow Thomas on Twitter and check out his track record on TipRanks.

Recent Articles

Expect a Bumpy Ride While GE Stock Turns Around

As investors are taking a "wait-and-see" approach before bidding General Electric higher, there's plenty of time to enter a position. But keep an eye on the macro picture before putting in a buy order.

With Shares Fairly Priced, Don’t Go Long (or Short) Nokia Stock

But all bets are off whether Nokia will rebound, or flounder in the near-term. Shares price in this uncertainty. Yet, the stock is not undervalued, but fairly priced. So what's the call? Stay on the sidelines. Nokia could be tempting at a lower price level. For now, not so much.

Canopy Growth Could Surprise in 2020, but Don’t Rush In

With strong capitalization, Canopy Growth is a "safer" pot stock play. But to tilt the odds in your favor, take your time before buying.

Wait for a Pullback Before Buying Danaher Stock

2019 has been a red-hot year for Danaher stock. But as the company swallows its latest acquisitions, wait for a dip to buy the shares.

Despite Frothy Valuation, Don’t Bet Against AMD Stock

As the trade war cools, AMD stock is trading higher. Valuation concerns remain, but it's hard to bet against this Wall Street darling.