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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

The US stock market continued its tear earlier this week, led by the biggest and baddest names in the “Magnificent Seven.” Apple Inc. (AAPL) was the only one in the group to close down marginally, breaking its recent win streak, while Tesla Inc. (TSLA) was the belle of the ball, showcases Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
With mega-caps posting mixed performance and speculative behavior booming, the equity-market focus remains on small- and mid-cap stocks that are playing catchup into year-end, writes Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
What’s promised on the campaign trail and what comes to reality is often different. But that didn’t stop investors and traders from speculating on the most prevalent and profitable themes under a new administration. So, let’s summarize what moved and the current narrative around why, explains Tom Bruni, head of market research at The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
US stocks soared to new all-time highs in a broad-based global rally late last week. Investors and traders have seemingly adopted an optimistic view of the Fed kicking off its easing cycle with a 50-basis point bang. Meanwhile, PayPal Holdings Inc. (PYPL) announced a deal with Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) amid a turnaround push, 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.