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

There’s Plenty of Time to Ride the Streaming Wave with Disney Stock

Remember that streaming is replacing an income stream more than it's supplementing one. The jury's still out whether streaming can produce profit on par with television. With this in mind, today's price may not be the ideal entry point for Disney stock.

Nvidia Stock Seems Overvalued Heading Into Next Month’s Earnings Report

If you bought Nvidia stock at a lower price point, it may be prime time to cash in your chips. But for anyone taking a look today, the party may already be over.

Ad Platform Deal Could Be a Tremendous Positive for Roku Stock

The announced DataXu acquisition could bolster ROKU's advertising strategy. But with shares volatile, tread carefully with ROKU stock.

With Earnings on the Horizon, Alibaba Stock Is a Great Buy Now

But for a long-term investor, BABA may be worth the current price. As it stands now, you can buy BABA at a similar EBITDA multiple as Amazon. With the greater runway for BABA stock, this alone is a no-brainer.

Despite High Dividend Yield, IBM Stock Is Not a Buy

Long-term, the company may prove to be a solid investment. Perhaps IBM will divest its floundering legacy businesses. But until the company makes another big strategic move, better opportunities lie elsewhere.