Tom Bruni photo

STOCKS

Tom Bruni

Head of Market Research,

Stocktwits

About Tom

Tom Bruni is the head of market research at Stocktwits, where he publishes the brand’s flagship market recap newsletter, The Daily Rip, for one million subscribers and oversees the platform’s growing publishing efforts. Mr. Bruni has been at the intersection of finance and media for the last decade, regularly featured in the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Reuters, Barron’s, and more. He holds both CPA and CMT licenses and graduated with an accounting degree from Molloy University in 2016.


Tom's Articles

I’m going to quickly recap the biggest numbers and themes from Wednesday’s Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) report. Nvidia shares fell after it came out, though Stocktwits community sentiment remains in ‘bullish’ territory. We’ll have to wait and see how the stock reacts in the coming days, though for now, investors are a bit on edge, notes Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
With two-thirds of US GDP attributed to consumer spending, it makes sense that the market cares so much about households' financial health. Luckily for investors, July retail sales jumped 1% compared to the 0.3% estimate. We also heard good news from Walmart Inc. (WMT), highlights Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
“Stocks take the escalator up and the elevator down” is a common phrase you’ll be hearing more of as volatility picks up and stocks experience their second major decline of the year. But from a technical perspective, this pullback has been recently sharp, but otherwise pretty ordinary, writes Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is juggling inflation and the labor market like a pro. He claims the labor market is back in balance, but it’s not that simple. The nuances are what make this interesting. Let's dig in, writes Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.

Tom's Videos

So far, 2024 has looked much different than last year in terms of the economy, markets, and where money is flowing. We tap into our first-party data to recap what trends retail investors and traders have played so far and where they’re looking to make money in the second half. Hint: it isn’t the same places institutions are looking.