Tyrik Torres

Tyrik Torres

Expertise: Technology Equities, Fundamental Analysis, Financial Modeling

Education: BA, Political Economy, Sarah Lawrence College

Awards & Accomplishments: Doug-Paul Scholarship at Credit Suisse

Tyrik Torres is a freelance contributor at InvestorPlace.com, sharing his thoughts and recommendations on how investors should best position themselves in the current equity market environment.

Tyrik serves as a research analyst at Prince Capital, a L/S hedge fund where he is responsible for conducting financial analysis, studying market research, and putting together investment memoranda on potential equity investments. Prior to his time at Prince Capital, Tyrik worked as an Investment Associate for Star Strong Capital where he was responsible for conducting financial analysis and due diligence on early and lower middle market direct lending opportunities. He joined Star Strong Capital from Credit Suisse’s Investment Banking Technology Group, where he served as an analyst assisting on a variety of debt capital markets, equity capital markets and M&A transactions, ranging from $100M to $2B in transaction value, across various technology industry verticals.

Tyrik holds a BA in Political Economy from Sarah Lawrence College.

Recent Articles

LCID Stock Sell Alert: 3 Reasons to Dump Your Lucid Shares and Never Look Back

LCID stock price has fallen 28.3% on a year-to-date basis, and the stock is headed for even worse performance.

Buy Nvidia Before It’s Too Late? Why This Chipmaker Is a Must-Own.

Chipmaker NVDA stock continues its meteoric rise with a solid earnings beat which saw demand for AI solutions balloon.

3 Tech Stocks Bracing for a Deeper Dive

While tech equities are rallying, investors would be better off to avoid these three stocks poised for deeper dives in share price.

Better Than the Magnificent 7? 3 Tech Disruptors to Own Now

Technology equities are in a rally now, but these three tech disruptors are likely to generate the most gains.

DTC Doom-and-Gloom? 3 Direct-to-Consumer Brands That May Not Survive.

These direct-to-consumer brands have been struggling ever since high interest rates and inflation dented consumer confidence.