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STOCKS

Tom Bruni

Editor-In-Chief and VP of Community,

Stocktwits

About Tom

Tom Bruni is editor-in-chief & VP of community at Stocktwits, the largest social network for investors and traders, where he leads the company’s newswire, newsletters, and other publishing efforts. For the last decade, Bruni has been at the intersection of finance and media, regularly featured in The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Reuters, Barron’s, and more. He holds both CPA and CMT licenses and is co-chair of the NYC Chapter of the CMT Association.


Tom's Articles

Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) came in with yet another earnings beat, including in heavily scrutinized data center sales and gross margin. The beat sent shockwaves through cold November markets, writes Tom Bruni, editor-in-chief of The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
Bitcoin just fell below $100K for the first time since the summer, while the Nasdaq 100 fell 2%. But Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR) led the market lower after bearish bets clouded its bull run, writes Tom Bruni, editor-in-chief of The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.
Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST) just reported earnings per share and revenue above estimates. But CarMax Inc. (KMX) shares just plunged the most in the S&P 500 Index (^SPX) after the in-person used car seller reported angsty consumers held back from buying cars in the past quarter, mentions Tom Bruni, editor-in-chief of The Daily Rip by Stocktwits.

Tom's Videos

This session dives into Stocktwits social sentiment data to identify where retail investor attention is currently, and their top picks for the rest of the year. Plus, a walkthrough of the Stocktwits platform so you can perform this analysis yourself.   

This session dives into Stocktwits social sentiment data to identify where retail investor attention is currently, and where they see risk and opportunities. Plus, how you can use Stocktwits to perform this analysis yourself. 

MoneyShow's editor-in-chief, Mike Larson, is joined by panellists Tom Bruni, Jeff Hirsch, and Sean Brodrick to discuss the markets and what stocks they think you should keep an eye on. 

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.