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

Take These Steps Before Tech Becomes Mentally Superior to Us

What happens when we’re faced with something no one has ever seen before – a disruptive force that has no clear historical precedent? Something like artificial general intelligence (AGI).

3 Stocks for the AI Age

Computing speeds are still doubling every 18 to 24 months. The latest GPT models will be obsolete by next year. And the next-generation models will be outdated soon after. Our writers at InvestorPlace.com have been examining AI stocks that they believe will put you on the right side of the divide in the Age of AI.

Humanoid Robots Are Coming

AI will likely turbocharge the robotics trend. Last week, OpenAI-backed robotics startup Figure AI released a two-minute video of its humanoid robots completing tasks at a BMW plant in Spartanburg, South Carolina.

5 Tech Stocks to Buy on the Rebound

Don't want to miss out on this year's breakout stocks? These five tech companies might be on the brink of something big.

Despite Bumps, the Road to AGI Remains Intact

If we look a little closer, this week’s selloff indeed seems reminiscent of the 1987 Black Monday crash, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average gave up 22% of previous gains in a single day. Shares of the hottest stocks had simply been bid up too far, too fast. All it took was slightly negative economic news to turn these high-priced moonshots into sinking ships.