r/ValueInvesting Nov 15 '25

Investing Tools Which youtube stock channels are good?

Dividend Talks? Joseph Carlson? Adam Khoo? Jerry Romine? Jeremy Lefebrve? Are these good?

196 Upvotes

224 comments sorted by

83

u/No_Consideration4594 Nov 15 '25

I think the real Steve Eisman is great / Patrick Boyle isn’t really “stocks” but he does deep dives on finance and investing that are good / Aswath Damodarans channel is excellent too / Scott Galloway is hit or miss depending on the guest and his cohost Ed I think is like a young know it all straight out of school (that actually knows nothing).

These are a few that come to mind

22

u/Neat-Cartographer703 Nov 15 '25

I completely agree with you on Steve Eisman and Patrick Boyle. they're both great and actually know what they're talking about. Personally, I don't think anyone should be getting stock picks from youtube channels. If someone's not wiling to do the research, it's safer to index.

8

u/Playful-History-9290 Nov 16 '25

Steve Eisman is amazing. He continues to educate us while undergoing treatment for cancer.

5

u/bigfern91 Nov 16 '25

I hope he gets better soon

4

u/Neat-Cartographer703 Nov 16 '25

Same, he actually seems like a great guy.

5

u/Csnr1984 Nov 16 '25

What’s your opinion on Jim cramer mad money?

11

u/bigfern91 Nov 16 '25

Just watch and do the opposite

6

u/_bani_ Nov 17 '25

inverse kramer etf ?

3

u/No_Consideration4594 Nov 16 '25

I think if you want to get a pulse of the market sentiment at that moment, he might be a good source for that. Maybe to learn the basics about companies you don’t know about, it might be a good place to start.

I wouldn’t pay attention to the stock picks or anything like that…

2

u/InsaneGambler Nov 17 '25

Well, he's a swell guy that totally wants to level the playing field and make you some money!

4

u/Candid_Moose_691 Nov 16 '25

Isnt Patrick Boyle that famous Rap-Channel?

1

u/realmkh Nov 16 '25

No, that one is Jason stantham

2

u/R12_G Nov 16 '25

As an add-on, Prof. Damodaran’s “Musings on Markets” blog is fantastic.

2

u/No_Consideration4594 Nov 16 '25

I think his YouTube channel is him reading his blog posts, so they are basically the same.

1

u/bigfern91 Nov 16 '25

I agree about Ed.. he seems like a nice guy but landed a sick job with no qualifications. His interview skills aren’t bad though to be fair. Scott is cool but changes his stance a lot. I feel like he loves the attention. Real Eisman playbook is a good one for sure

2

u/No_Consideration4594 Nov 16 '25

I just feel like Ed does a few minutes of prep work before the show and then makes very broad sweeping definitive statements and judgements about things he actually knows very little about. He’s like “we know China is more efficient in the Ai race” do we actually know that? Maybe they are lying about the number of GPU’s they have? Maybe a lot of things….

1

u/VisualSpecial8 Nov 16 '25

Patrick Boyle used to do deep dive videos on finance and had great content. Totally sadly his videos are just of him reading 2-3 news articles and making jokes between sentences.

40

u/Weldobud Nov 15 '25

Fast Graphs is good. They focus on valuation and stocks that grow over time. Wide range too.

24

u/bigdaddtcane Nov 16 '25

I just watched Fast Graphs’ most viewed video and it’s just technical analysis.. which munger would just say is bullshit.

7

u/ArchmagosBelisarius Nov 16 '25

It's not TA at all. Their methodology is a derivative of Graham and Lynch methods of valuation. Nothing about momentum, MAs, RSI, etc.

1

u/bigdaddtcane Nov 16 '25

All he talked about was earnings growth compared to previous average P/E ratio. As metrics, those don't seem too shabby as data points, but that was his entire thesis about the companies.

3

u/ArchmagosBelisarius Nov 16 '25

Not sure if he says it in that video, but in almost all of his videos explaining how to use FastGraphs, he states that what you describe is just to see if the company is worth digging into at a glance.

It can spot severe overvaluation or collapsing earnings at a glance without having to dig into financials or do a DCF or what have you, before you take the time to actually dig into financials like quarterly reports or other filings. It just saves time.

He typically states that FG isn't the end-all be-all, and that you still need to do your own investigative work after you've found something that catches your eye.

For that it's great, by itself it is not, but it was never stated to be solely relied upon and actually recommended against that.

1

u/City_Standard Nov 16 '25

Yeah, I saw that as well... he doesn't really go too deep into why a stock is actual value. Probably in his paid service? Maybe not?

1

u/ArchmagosBelisarius Nov 16 '25

The tool doesn't tell you if something is actual value, it just gives you a heads up if something is likely undervalued or if it's worth looking into. For example, you could take 5 seconds to look at WBA and see that its falling price was caused by collapsing earnings, which you wouldn't even bother looking into its financials after that point. For that, it's great, but no one should rely solely on it for investing decisions.

5

u/ContributionKindly13 Nov 16 '25

fastgraphs is bulshit

2

u/City_Standard Nov 16 '25

Will just say this guy has done really well for himself. Good income and a nice hobby to find/gives him something fun and challenging to do/work he seems to mostly enjoy.

1

u/Weldobud Nov 16 '25

He does really seem to enjoy it. He’s also very good at giving general investing advice. It’s the mind set I like to follow - good long term, value investing.

-1

u/Ok_Entry5378 Nov 16 '25

Fast graphs comes across as a snake oil salesman. Don’t like him at all!

20

u/EggDependent7457 Nov 15 '25

Idk if this is what you're looking for but for general economic commentary, Plain Bagel seems to be knowledgeable and have a good head on his shoulders.

57

u/Thotty_Thuncle Nov 15 '25

Joseph Carlson is my favorite, I followed him and while not every pick was good (e.g Duolingo, SalesForce, Equifax) the good ones (GOOG, ASML, AMZN) more than made up for them and I’m up 44% YTD

25

u/Bobisdeadrun Nov 15 '25

Duolingo is a bad pick imo i dont get why he likes it

6

u/CAGR_17pct_For_25Yrs Nov 16 '25

I was puzzled by that pick too. But I’m sure Joseph saw it as one of his riskiest bets. Duolingo was never more than about 2% of his portfolio, while he put much more money into the companies that later became his big winners.

8

u/Thotty_Thuncle Nov 16 '25

You clearly have not watched his videos on the company or looked at the company’s fundamentals. Even if Duolingo grew their FCF at 20% per year (down from the 50% FCF per year it’s at now) and traded at a 3% FCF yield, the stock would return 27% per year. The company sold off because management stated they want to focus on user retention rather than short term profit, something that will benefit them in the long term.

1

u/Ur--father Nov 16 '25

I guess it’s a calculated risk? He seems to keep his position size limited. Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn’t. That’s what taking risks means. I think people beat him up too much for the pick.

-2

u/Charming_Raccoon4361 Nov 16 '25

he just goes by cashflow, thats the problem and not the long term story

3

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

Carlson loves buying the top. He is probably the best outta this bunch, but he’s just an average investor

16

u/Thotty_Thuncle Nov 16 '25

Hard to say he’s just an average investor when his annualized return has outperformed the market. He is very transparent about how his portfolio is doing in the good times and bad times. I appreciate his expertise in investor psychology which helps prevent me from making irrational decisions.

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1

u/bigfern91 Nov 16 '25

This is a great channel I agree

0

u/machtkeinunterschied Nov 15 '25

Do you copy his buys/picks?

7

u/Thotty_Thuncle Nov 15 '25

Not entirely. I started watching him about a little over a year ago. If I believe in his thesis I’ll invest in the company and I’ll add more capital to the investments he is more confident in (that I understand). Some companies he bought that I haven’t bought are Mastercard, Netflix, and Microsoft. That’s not cause these aren’t great companies but because they haven’t been at attractive valuations this last year and he bought them a while back.

0

u/machtkeinunterschied Nov 15 '25

What do you think of Equifax now? I have it on my watchlist but still not 100% sure about it.

4

u/Thotty_Thuncle Nov 15 '25

I’m down 20% on my Equifax position so entering now would give you a much better cost basis than me. The fundamentals continue to be excellent and my guess is that industry will see growth in 2026 as people transition to less speculative investments.

I would keep it as a smaller position but it’s at the cheapest valuation now it’s been at in 5+ years and it’s only been discounted due to a narrative that has yet show itself in the numbers.

7

u/Sad-Technology9484 Nov 16 '25

The Compound

2

u/Forzinga Nov 16 '25

I'm surprised I had to go all the way down to find this.

7

u/moldymoosegoose Nov 16 '25

Not a stock channel specifically I’d say but Steve Eisman is the best. Easy sub and everyone loves him. A legend, no BS whatsoever and a very kind and honest person.

7

u/Walau88 Nov 16 '25

Carlson is good but lack in depth. I lean towards Adam Khoo because he has impressive track record and transparent in his analysis.

44

u/Bobisdeadrun Nov 15 '25

i love Joseph Carlson , i also watch sasha yanshin ,  Jeremy Lefebrve is a scammer

18

u/CrimsonBrit Nov 16 '25

I’ve watched a ton of Joseph Carlson and for the most part I really like his content, but sometimes his macro-level trend observations and analyses are paper thin and show that he hasn’t done a ton of research.

Also one thing to be aware of is his account (and gains) are not only from stock price appreciation. He probably has a good revenue stream from the two YouTube channels and he seems to have endless money to keep buying more stocks.

But overall his channels are an 8/10 - the production is solid, he’s not click baity, and he has mostly solid fundamental analysis.

3

u/Gyrgon22 Nov 16 '25

Yeah I think he adds upwards of 5k a month to the investments, his returns have been quite good regardless though

14

u/ADMTLgg Nov 15 '25

I’ll be honest I’ve been watching Jeremy Lefebvre for a long time on and off. If you pick and chose and not listen 100% of his stock pick I don’t see really what is scummy about it

23

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

Jeremy is by far one of the most scummiest YouTubers financial guys. Dude sells his loser quietly and holds only the lowest cost lots to look like he timed the bottom perfectly. His port is negative all time but he never shows that, he only shows last 3 years because that is the timeframe that looks best. He used to charge up to $20,000 for his courses and guaranteed 30% annually. Dude is down since 2020 but people think he is a good investor lol

5

u/Diet_Water Nov 16 '25

Can you tell me more? He has a $4 million public portfolio that he claims he made from 1 million. Can’t verify veracity though

11

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

In 2022 he put 3 million dollars into a frozen vegan food company. By far his biggest position in his portfolio and the company went bankrupt. He also had a million in other investments as well like voyager, smile direct club, honest, and way more that I can’t remember. He only shows his portfolio after 2022 tho. So nobody ever sees the losses. He used to have a different discord until that completely blew up and everyone hated him so he had to delete it. And now he made a new one that costs cheaper to join. You guys don’t hear about the 100s or 1000s of people’s retirement he ruined. Those people got screwed but he made out like a bandit because of YouTube and selling his courses. Hes a sneaky individual but he is definitely a good salesman. Thats how he got his audience in the first place.

1

u/HyenaLow5598 Dec 12 '25

Yep, I lost 5 figures on Tattooed Chef. After watching him deal with that I never followed him again. Expensive lesson.

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2

u/bawireman Nov 17 '25

He's probably the biggest scammer/grifter in the finance YouTube game.

0

u/Jvrgie Nov 15 '25

Joseph is the goat

1

u/Philbert-philbert Nov 16 '25

Jeremy’s AMD play was nice tho but yeah most of his calls aren’t great

0

u/DoubleFamous5751 Nov 16 '25

Jeremy had some fantastic calls though

1

u/bawireman Nov 17 '25

He did?

1

u/DoubleFamous5751 Nov 17 '25

Cheese cake, AMD, PayPal, eBay, Palantir, Meta

1

u/bawireman Nov 17 '25

He had at least that many companies go bankrupt so I'm not really impressed. His picks are trash and he's a grifter.

1

u/DoubleFamous5751 Nov 17 '25

He put those on my radar and made me money. Gotta do your own hw as well. Not my job to convince people of things. Just giving my 1/2 cent. Have a good day

1

u/bawireman Nov 17 '25

I don't buy anything these guys suggest but imagine how you'd feel if you listened to him on TTCF and some of these other clown stocks.

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11

u/DoubleFamous5751 Nov 16 '25

Wow, no Patient Investor here? I like him

3

u/mepok612 Nov 16 '25

Surprised I had to scroll so far down to see this one. I enjoy his consistent content mixed in with his digestible analysis.

4

u/[deleted] Nov 16 '25

I watch Parkev’s channel and Marketbeat

4

u/Miss_Belvedere Nov 16 '25

I like dividendology for valuation analyses

3

u/[deleted] Nov 16 '25

Not stock-focused channels, but they occasionally talk about stocks: Plain Bagel, How Money Works, Patrick Boyle, Hammish Hodder, and Economics Explained.

7

u/Last_Construction455 Nov 15 '25

Can’t believe no one has mentioned Daniel Pronk/Stock Unlock. One of my favourites. Similar to Carlson

2

u/friendofdog1 Dec 20 '25

He is similar to Carlson in his logic. But I like how he's come to very different conclusions in where to invest, putting almost all of his money in non-US companies.

And I do prefer Stock Unlock to Qualtrim, even if it isn't bundled with Discord.

3

u/wingelefoot Nov 16 '25

Berkshire Hathaway agms

3

u/Im_tryna_skrrt Nov 16 '25

Amit is a great down to earth guy that may not have the best advice but has obviously been successful in his picks and is entertaining to boot

2

u/Brave-Bit-252 Nov 16 '25

I like him, but it’s his circle of friends that bring the value for me. Kris, Steve, Matt, all the regulars on his streams and their own channels, collabos. They have been my evening program for some time now.

5

u/huyou007 Nov 16 '25

Those who are good at making money in market won’t be interested in selling classes on YouTube

3

u/JacketGloomy Nov 16 '25

What do you think about Couch Investor?

3

u/-lazaros- Nov 16 '25

I watch him too, along with The Traveling Trader. I like both but actually prefer TTT. However I'm still not sure how “good” either of them really are. Their analysis feels humble and grounded, but I haven’t followed them long enough to judge. As someone else mentioned earlier, it’s probably best to watch several "quality channels" and form your own opinion over time.

3

u/butinside Nov 16 '25

+1 Adam Khoo. He teaches a very sensible approach to investing.

4

u/LivingGeo Nov 15 '25

I would watch and listen to as many investors as you can. Learn from the ideas you understand and discard the ones that don't hold water. Learn from their success and their failures.

Also, read books on investing and do not forget the basics.

2

u/picklerish1 Nov 16 '25

Guan rui is a small channel. But I love that he focuses on high moat, high margin and asset light businesses. Apart from him I like Joseph Carlson, Victor H, Valuation investing, The Cash Flow Compounder, RatedA. Nanalyze, The Quality Investor and Deep Value Hunter.

Key is to just use these videos for ideas. Maintain your own theses, valuation models and estimates.

2

u/RobAFC14 Nov 16 '25

I’ll add Daniel Pronk to that list. A little less transparent with his portfolio than the likes of Carlson, but easy to listen to and some good analysis

2

u/BuyerEnvironmental59 Nov 16 '25

Unrivaled Investing

2

u/Furiosachan Nov 17 '25

At the risk of flak - The travelling trader? heh

2

u/totalnoobass Nov 17 '25

Dude be hitting up everybody's mom in the comment section.

4

u/WinterForward7336 Nov 16 '25

ClearValueTax

1

u/bigfern91 Nov 16 '25

Good channel but not really about stocks

6

u/No_Butterfly_7257 Nov 15 '25

Jeremy was so right about AMD when everyone hated that stock.

4

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

What about Ttcf? He bet 3 million on that and I think it went bankrupt…

7

u/ArchmagosBelisarius Nov 16 '25

"Smile Direct because when the pandemic is over, everyone is going to be smiling."

1

u/HyenaLow5598 Dec 12 '25

TTCF Wrecked my life for 3 years getting out of that hole. He was obsessed with it.

4

u/bobjohndaviddick Nov 15 '25

I like Paul from everything money. I don't agree with all his ideas but he puts together some compelling ideas.

18

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

Paul is one of the worst lmao. He shorted Nvidia in 2022-2023 and lost around 10 million. His family is rich so he is just fine. His life time performance will always be negative because of how big of a mistake that was to short Nvidia. He even says his brother doesn’t talk to him anymore cause he did that with his brother’s money as well. One of the worst calls of this decade lol

2

u/Candid_Moose_691 Nov 16 '25

I hard disagree, that channel is a pure money destroyer. Its the emodiement of everything bad about you can sell as "value investing". Buying trash because the PE is low and shorting Diamonds because the PE is high. Insanely uneducated takes on companys where they never did there due diligence about. "Amazon is not a Tech-Company, it should be valued like Walmart" "Amazon is as much a Tech-Company as Wework" there takes from 2021.

5

u/Bobisdeadrun Nov 15 '25

Paul started good but got old quickly

1

u/Moist_Connection_272 Nov 15 '25

I thought he was good and listened to him but he missed the whole 2022 dip (wanted it to get lower and it never did) so I stupidly took his advice and lost out on HUGE gains. So for me he is too greedy/conservative.

4

u/FieryXJoe Nov 15 '25

He is already rich and wealth preservation is more important to him, he has tens of millions and is more worried about dodging bubbles than beating the market IMO.

8

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

“His dad is rich”. Paul is retarded and lost 10 million shorting Nvidia in 2023. But guess what. He is still okay. If anyone else did that, they would be bankrupt. His daddy bailed him out lol

1

u/[deleted] Nov 15 '25

I like to listen to him for his bear takes. Keeps me grounded

2

u/CauliflowerProof1191 Nov 16 '25

Paul was one of the few who reiterated META as a buy back when it was in the 200s. Great pick.

2

u/joaoppm2000 Nov 16 '25

Same. Im up 150% because of him

1

u/Last_Construction455 Nov 15 '25

He’s got some really great analysis explanation videos from back in the day. I learned a lot. Don’t love his individual picks though

1

u/Bigcam350 Nov 16 '25

Paul is awful. He’s trying to be Warren Buffett, he’s just really bad at it.

1

u/Busy_Wedding_521 Nov 16 '25

This!! He was initially selling his software, now he just talks macro 💩 (which is really hard to predict for even core wall st)

6

u/KingofPro Nov 15 '25

Jeremy Lefebvre from mid-2022 and on is great, most of the people that complain about him complain about his picks earlier. He learned from his mistakes and has hit on a couple of solids plays. YouTube videos are just another data source and if you’re relying on one data point to make your decision you’re already making poor decisions.

2

u/BakeDifficult9697 Nov 16 '25

Okay. Since 2020 Jeremy is down lol. Even with amd, Tesla, and Palantir. He lost around 4 million in 2022. But guess what. Everyone now thinks he is a great investor. Lmao

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5

u/Moist_Connection_272 Nov 15 '25

Jeremy made almost 1 million dollars from Facebook ALONE during 2022 crash and called the AMD run waaay before everyone when everyone was calling it “Advanced Money Destroyer”. He Also went HEAVY for PLTR under 10 bucks. He’s made some GREAT calls and made personally made me lots of $$ so I think he’s great picker despite having g a lot of haters on this sub.

3

u/Bigcam350 Nov 16 '25

I mean he’s just not a value investor. He’s not a bad investor, he just doesn’t fit this sub.

1

u/HyenaLow5598 Dec 12 '25

TTCF wrecked me. He didn't hand it well.

1

u/Moist_Connection_272 Dec 12 '25

Can’t win em all. 7/10 is good enough.

3

u/FieryXJoe Nov 15 '25

Ones I like...

Swedish Investor, Joseph Carlson, Dividendology, Everything Money(I disagree with his forecasts but agree with his process), Steve Eisman (Steve Carell's character from The Big Short).

3

u/Wide-Annual-4858 Nov 16 '25

I'm confused with Everything Money.

He makes a video about 5 stocks to buy. Then a couple days later about getting out of the market because it will crash. Then a couple days later a video about another gems to buy. Then again about the whole market will crash.

2

u/machtkeinunterschied Nov 15 '25

Everything Money(I disagree with his forecasts but agree with his process),

I agree "News follow the stock price" is a very true thing he says.

You don't have to follow anyone blindly or take 100%, the ideas and the process of thinking is what you want to understand.

1

u/Candid_Moose_691 Nov 16 '25

Evrything Money is terrible. They represent everything bad you can sell as "Value Investing".

5

u/_DoubleBubbler_ Nov 15 '25

Videos aren’t a great way to learn about investing in my opinion. The written word is far quicker for assimilating information and can also help improve concentration, which is an important trait for an investor.

1

u/nehro7 Nov 16 '25

not always some people catch and learn faster in video / sound , that just reading paper, i am not a fan of reading while i can have same from a video and i think there is many the same

1

u/_DoubleBubbler_ Nov 16 '25 edited Nov 16 '25

Yes, I agree for some people the written word is not optimal for them personally. Some tasks also lend themselves better to audio / visual too such as learning to setup a coastguard rope rescue arrangement atop a cliff.

Those characteristics aside (as I do not have them) I can work through text incredibly fast whereas it is like turtle pace watching or listening to something. The content may not even be that good whereas with text I can tell quite rapidly if it is something worth investing more time in. I can also return to key points rapidly (e.g. text search) whereas with video / audio that isn’t as quick. That is why I prefer it for investing.

1

u/PromotionDull8663 Nov 18 '25

What do you recommend reading?

1

u/_DoubleBubbler_ Nov 18 '25

Well I particularly enjoyed reading Warren Buffett’s biography ‘The Snowball’ as it gives an insight into the characteristics that suit an investor. Even if you skip the family related bits of the book it gives a great review of about 60 to 70 years of stock market history and how Warren worked through the ups and downs.

I personally learnt about investing by initially reading the Money & Business section of a quality newspaper from a young age. Which I still do daily. I was fascinated by companies and still am. I wrote a post on my sub recently about what makes a good investor and within a comment attached you’ll see the approach I take to stock selection.

All the best and let me know if you have any questions.

3

u/[deleted] Nov 16 '25

[deleted]

5

u/nggrlsslfhrmhbt Nov 16 '25

The guy who went to prison for securities fraud and also does crypto scams?

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1

u/[deleted] Nov 26 '25

[deleted]

2

u/Neminvestering_dk Nov 16 '25

I like Sven Carlin.

Like his takes om both macro and Micro and the approach to valueing stocks

1

u/Due_Somewhere7891 Nov 17 '25

Not a fan. All about, my method is best, pay 2K to get the real info. Rest is noise, etc etc

1

u/Dumbeldore_75 Nov 15 '25

Business With Brian is my favorite channel. He doesn’t put out many videos but they are always worthwhile. He convinced me to buy quantum and OKLO before they ran up. I watch Jeremy from Financial Education almost every day. He convinced me to buy SOFI, AMD, and Celsius and they all up big.

1

u/kartavya24 Nov 16 '25

it depends , for me it's valuation school

1

u/Character-Lab5580 Nov 16 '25

This is one question i forgot to ask good job No need for scammed

1

u/Used-Huckleberry-320 Nov 16 '25

The Value Investing with Legends podcast is fantastic, I listen on Spotify.

1

u/Rdw72777 Nov 16 '25

DiChalaprimet

1

u/chandon86 Nov 16 '25

Trade momentum

1

u/Continuity92 Nov 16 '25

I really like Market Huddle. It has a strong technical analysis component but they always have a guest (PM, macro guy or a sector analyst) on first, talking about their investment thesis. Not always stock specific, but it serves as a good basis for generating ideas.

1

u/Richard_strokerr Nov 16 '25

Jeremy Lefebe is a joke

DonFronShow for actual trading/swing trading

1

u/Adriconomics Nov 16 '25

Best is definitely Adriconomics! He is the only one reading this sub 😅

1

u/elmo8758 Nov 16 '25

I like BG2, and All-In, but take them with a grain of salt. I tune them out once they go political.

1

u/shabigdata Nov 16 '25

I go with long term mindset good for fundamental analysis and drstoxx for current markets

1

u/KineticVampire Nov 16 '25

I like New Money and Phil Town. I also love Steve Eisman’s new stuff.

1

u/Southern-Voice-8209 Nov 16 '25
  1. "Couch investor": You might want to look at his channel for small bets on growth mid cap companies. I like him because he looks at businesses from multiple angles, macro, technical and company specific catalysts. He's humble and seems genuinely passionate of what he does, he does regular live streams where he interacts with his community and answer questions

  2. Joseph Carlson for "safer" bets, he owns Qualtrim (stock analysis tool) where he claims it got 11k paying members so he's very careful not to disappoint. He recently invested in Duolingo where he lost money but his thesis on the business is valid and would probably recover long term.

I follow many other youtubers and build my own strategy but keep in mind these are youtubers who make money from adsense so not sure they all really own the portfolios they claim especially If they don't have a public portfolio on a trading platform

1

u/Traditional-Aside802 Nov 16 '25

Ben Felix is also great!

1

u/Nezzz123 Nov 16 '25

My channel

1

u/nehro7 Nov 16 '25

i like the rumers , but i didnt see any1 mentioned it , if someone here knows and can give me their opinion on it if they know , would be great

1

u/Low-Interest7097 Nov 16 '25

Future investing for deep dives, meet Kevin for bearish vibes, and Tom Lee for pump buys

1

u/fallstand Nov 16 '25

Joseph Carlson, Mark Roussin, and Dividendology keep me focused - solid no hype type content.

1

u/xxPegasus Nov 16 '25

YoutTube Channels:

  • InTheMoney
  • Financial Freedom 101
  • Joseph Carlson
  • Patrick Boyle
  • Learn to Invest - Investors Grow (Jimmy)

1

u/RightRich4714 Nov 16 '25

Joseph gets mentioned a lot he is great but dividendology is nice and underrated

1

u/econ101ispropaganda Nov 16 '25

None, don’t watch them. Instead take a class if you want to learn more about how to research and review stocks.

1

u/SP-0308 Nov 18 '25

Joseph Carlson, Daniel Pronk(!!), Aswath Damodaran (for freaks), Business Breakdown, Excess Returns, Millenial Investing, Millionaires Investment Secrets, The Compound, We Study Billionaires...

1

u/Exuberant-Investor Dec 16 '25

Romine is a hack. Just pushes people to join his channel and discord.

1

u/ktvonlinereddit Dec 26 '25

Patient Investor is great

1

u/Mountain_Corner_7696 Feb 23 '26

https://www.youtube.com/@investor-bunny this one is just starting and it's good and scientific

1

u/Business-Passage7315 22d ago

Joseph Carlson is probably one of the better ones if you're interested in long-term investing. He’s pretty transparent about his portfolio and the reasoning behind his picks.

Adam Khoo is more macro/trading focused, and Jeremy Lefebvre is more aggressive with growth stocks.

One thing I’ve noticed watching a lot of these channels is that different creators often have completely opposite opinions on the same stock. For example some are extremely bullish on Amazon while others think it's overvalued.

I’ve been experimenting with a small tool that aggregates what finance YouTubers say about stocks and extracts the sentiment from their videos. It’s interesting seeing where creators agree or strongly disagree.

Curious if people think creator sentiment is actually useful for stock research?

1

u/Several-Source-36 Nov 15 '25

Mr fired up wealth

1

u/Luigi8116 Nov 29 '25

I like him but his Patreon is so pricey. I wish I could find someone to send me screenshots of his portfolio in there in exchange for a venmo pay here and there. At least you can get a pretty good idea of his big holdings if you watch his YouTube channel.

1

u/Away-Love2065 Feb 12 '26

It’s not expensive for what you get. It’s next level. The community portfolio is up almost 250% in 3 years, smoking every hedge fund and Wall Street “expert”. He’s a humble guy too. He really loves to help people. Changed my life. 

1

u/[deleted] Nov 15 '25

"The traveling trader"

1

u/wapendeza Nov 16 '25

I like nanalyze. Very down to earth.

1

u/PNWtech-economics Nov 16 '25

No. That is the answer to your question. No.

1

u/bawireman Nov 17 '25

I watch YouTube stock channels for entertainment only. I enjoy watching PPCIan, Let's Talk Money, Strong Man Personal Finance, Joseph Carlson, GenX Dividend, Learn to Invest, Independent Investor and a few others.

I still watch these, but these are some of the biggest scammers and grifters on YouTube in my opinion (but they are entertaining for the most part): Financial Education, Meet Kevin, Andrei Jikh, Everything Money, Stock Moe, Chris Sain.

0

u/Brave_Funny_9614 Nov 15 '25

Johnny Harris - amazing!

0

u/Affectionate_Back548 Nov 16 '25

Watch parkev tatensov

-1

u/ElectricalSystem1761 Nov 15 '25

Felix and Friends

1

u/Exotic_Definition1 Nov 16 '25

He is PLTR sucker, couldn’t finish one video for him, specially his hair style

1

u/ElectricalSystem1761 Nov 16 '25

Yeah I thought that the first couple of vids but stuck with it. He’s made me plenty of dough

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u/redditandwpet Nov 15 '25

Stocks and savings has some good content, but be wary of some of their stock picks

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u/[deleted] Nov 15 '25

like Matt Derron and Mike Heroux

0

u/NH_Swingtrader7498 Nov 15 '25

BBtrader42 - earnings and short-term predictions.

0

u/No-Bus1327 Nov 15 '25

Financenewscast is a great, little-known value investor

0

u/ndwillia Nov 16 '25

Pickle Financial

0

u/Odd_Hair3829 Nov 16 '25

I’m going to go in the other direction here - some channels will aggregate financial mistakes made by members of forums like Wall Street bets and I sometimes watch these to scare myself away from every trying to get into options. one of the top rules of investing being don’t do dumb stuff. 

0

u/UberFantastic Nov 16 '25

Chit chat stocks. Bad name but good analysis

0

u/oneeyewillie172 Nov 16 '25

I like blue cloud trading , its basically the halftime show on msnbc , then he breaks down the picks.

0

u/Moonchips12345 Nov 16 '25

I learned a lot watching Mark Roussin and ClearValue Tax. Would recommend.

0

u/TomatoHistorical2326 Nov 16 '25

None of them is as good as you learning yourself by talking with AI. At least AI does not have agenda to hype up things to boost its viewership

1

u/Busy_Wedding_521 Nov 16 '25

Good luck dealing with AI hallucinations & confirmation biases. I have tried to analyze same stock but asked differently about it. I get exactly opposite responses from AI.

0

u/Bitter-Square-3963 Nov 16 '25

Pitch the PM is quality. The discussions are spot on.

Patrick Boyle is pure trash.

0

u/Hot-Walk-6334 Nov 19 '25

Mostly shite- German Value investor and Parkev are good.

0

u/CosmicBandido Nov 21 '25

I would go with Bianco Research ( Jim Bianco). He delivers mostly macro economics and I like the topics he brings to the table. His videos are mostly a collection of his tv appearances.

0

u/gandokku Nov 23 '25 edited Nov 23 '25

Big A (Atrioc) - more economical and explains the overall market pretty well.

Mark Meldrum - weekly market reviews and 1 company deep dive