Steve Mauzy

Stephen Mauzy is a CFA charter holder, equity analyst, and financial and economics writer with over 20 years of investing experience. Steve is a research analyst at the High Yield Wealth newsletter published by Wyatt Investment Research.

Steve has provided commentary on CNBC, and his work has appeared in Wealth Manager, CFA Magazine, Institutional Investor News, Barron's, Institutional, Investor News, Registered Rep., and other publications.

Steve's curriculum vitae includes a stint a editor-in-chief for two financial trade magazines. He also served as editor for a Forbes-recognized financial Web site.

Steve's forte is income investing and value investing. Like many value investors, Steve is a practitioner of the quantitative principles espoused by the great value investor Ben Graham. But Steve has added his own twist based on the precept that business world is divided into two types of companies: ones that have trouble and ones that are going to have trouble. Steve favors the former (as long as they continue to pay dividends), because value is often found in uncertain and troublesome situations.

Recent Articles by Steve

Steve Mauzy

Searching for Yield in All the Wrong Places

High yields are hard to come by these days, so it's best for income investors not to reach for it.

[ More » ]
Steve Mauzy

Like Lazarus, These Energy Stocks Will Rise From the Dead

Coal stocks are trading at steep discounts right now. But are the stocks a value or a value trap?

[ More » ]
Steve Mauzy

A Novel Indicator Points to a Bubble No One Talks About

These asset classes have reached what I call a "Saturation Quota."

[ More » ]
Steve Mauzy

Is This Company Poised to Follow Apple?

If someone were to predict that a public company with a $382-billion market cap would see that market cap rise nearly 50% to $572 billion in less than three months, I would view that someone with rightful skepticism...

[ More » ]
Steve Mauzy

Buy This REIT and Sell These Three REITs

Rental residential real estate is a hot market. However, while rents are up 3% year-over-year nationwide, supply has dwindled.

[ More » ]
 

More posts from this author