Thomas Yeung

Thomas Yeung

Expertise: Fundamental Analysis, Quant-Based Investing, Tax Analysis

Education: BA, Economics, Princeton University

Awards & Accomplishments: CFA Charterholder, IRS Enrolled Agent

Thomas Yeung, CFA, is a Market Analyst at InvestorPlace.com, where he helps investors navigate the world of finance with one of the most powerful tools available: knowledge. Tom brings over a decade of experience in company, commodity and industry analysis.

He is the current editor of the Omnia Portfolios, the highest-tier subscription at InvestorPlace and the former editor of Tom Yeung’s Profit & Protection, a free e-letter about investing to profit in good times and protecting gains during the bad.

Tom started his investment career at Harding Loevner, a $40 billion asset management firm. Today, he works with InvestorPlace.com to help individuals and families identify great investments.

Tom holds a BA in Economics from Princeton University, where he graduated with high honors. He is a CFA® Charterholder and also a FINRA Registered Investment Adviser.

Recent Articles

Elon Musk Is a Genius Market Timer. That’s Bad News for Tesla (TSLA) Stock.

Elon Musk is great at timing the market. He's selling TSLA stock now, and savvy investors would be wise to follow suit.

Elon Musk Needs to Buy GameStop Next. Seriously.

GME stock is struggling. A takeover by Elon Musk could take the brick-and-mortar video game retailer to the next level.

Margin Calls? Fire Sales? Why Elon’s Twitter Blowup Could Crash TSLA Stock.

Elon Musk is making moves to shore up Twitter's fortunes. But as Twitter's troubles multiply, so does the risk of a TSLA stock crash.

The Profit and Protection Quantitative Stock-Picking System

Should you try growth investing or value investing? What about momentum strategies? Use this system as the ultimate guide to stock picking.

Wait! Why Smart Homebuyers Will Wait Until 2024 to Buy a House.

Home prices may be coming down, but wise homebuyers will wait until 2024 to buy. In the meantime, consider these penny stocks instead.