Anand Sinha
Anand Sinha tracks how large holders, institutional investors and core infrastructure shape the crypto market, using price moves, on-chain data and corporate actions to tell what money is doing. He writes about cryptocurrencies and listed crypto stocks for Yahoo Finance, often through stories originally reported for TheStreet’s crypto desk. He describes himself as a crypto content writer and reporter focused on Web3, DeFi, blockchain and fintech, which matches the subjects that dominate his recent coverage.
XRP and whale activity
Sinha’s clearest thread is his sustained focus on XRP and the outsized influence of large holders. One recent piece looks at whale wallets dumping XRP worth millions, framing the selling as a signal about confidence and positioning in the token rather than just a price blip. Another dissects how millionaires control 75% of XRP’s supply, highlighting the concentration of ownership and what that means for liquidity and retail investors. He follows that with coverage of a 5‑star investor issuing a harsh warning to XRP holders, pulling out points like the advice to buy Bitcoin instead of XRP and chart signals such as a looming death cross. Taken together, these stories show him returning to the same asset from different angles—whale flows, supply concentration, and high‑profile commentary—to build a composite picture of risk for everyday holders.
Coinbase and listed crypto stocks
Alongside tokens, Sinha covers the equity side of the crypto ecosystem, with Coinbase recurring as a reference point. He has reported that Coinbase’s stock sank about 25% within a year of joining the S&P 500, using that milestone to explore how traditional index inclusion does not guarantee sustained performance for a volatile crypto‑linked company. In another story he notes that an 81‑year‑old investment firm has boosted its price target for Coinbase, while related coverage mentions a 335‑year‑old bank setting a lower target, giving readers a sense of how long‑standing institutions are still divided on the stock’s upside. He extends this lens to other listed names in a piece on MicroStrategy, Robinhood and Circle stocks attempting a recovery, tracking their recent selling and buying activity and how each is responding to broader market pressure. Across these articles he treats crypto stocks as part of mainstream markets, but keeps the focus on how legacy firms and corporate strategy influence their trajectories.
On-chain data and extreme trading outcomes
Sinha often uses on‑chain data as a narrative device when writing about individual traders and speculative bets. One widely shared article follows a crypto trader who turned $6,200 into about $86 million in ETH, drawing on transaction records from Etherscan to show how early participation in an ICO, long‑term holding and price appreciation combined to create an outsized gain. He does not stop at the headline number, explaining how much ETH the wallet still holds and what that stake is worth at current prices. In another piece, he writes about a billionaire proposing a dramatic plan for Satoshi’s Bitcoin, using that idea to revisit long‑running questions about dormant coins and their potential impact if moved. These stories pair hard data with human decisions, and Sinha tends to emphasize the scale of outcomes and the mechanics behind them rather than personality or lifestyle detail.
Institutional moves, infrastructure stress and fintech experiments
Sinha’s beat also includes institutional moves in crypto infrastructure and the strain on businesses that serve the sector. He reports on a popular American Bitcoin ATM operator filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, describing how the firm’s troubles fit into a wider shake‑out among crypto‑adjacent companies. In another article he covers a major crypto stock surge following a BlackRock‑linked investment in Arc, Circle’s new institutional Layer 1 blockchain, spelling out the $222 million presale raise and the fully diluted network valuation to show why the market reacted. He connects these developments to the companies’ roles in providing plumbing for digital assets, rather than treating them as isolated price spikes.
His work occasionally steps into consumer‑facing fintech that touches the crypto world. A profile of Symphony’s savings app explains how it offers a fixed 5% APY while rewarding customers with credit‑card‑style points and miles, partnering with major airlines and hotel programs normally associated with premium cards. Sinha describes how the app lets interest be taken as points or cash and how Symphony aims to capture a large share of what it calls the “non‑credit‑card points world,” positioning it as a bridge between traditional savings, loyalty economics and newer digital finance. These pieces show he is interested in the everyday applications of financial innovation, not just speculative trading.
Crypto within broader market moves
Although crypto is his core subject, Sinha sometimes situates it inside wider market and macro moves. In a story on markets tumbling on Christmas Eve despite a strong GDP reading, he notes how Bitcoin’s price shifted over the week and places that against equity and economic data. By linking digital assets to broader risk‑on and risk‑off sentiment, he treats them as part of the same ecosystem that readers follow for stocks and growth indicators, reinforcing his finance‑first framing even when the asset class is unconventional.
Across these strands—XRP concentration and whale activity, crypto‑linked equities, extreme on‑chain outcomes, infrastructure stress and consumer fintech—Sinha keeps the emphasis on how money and power flow through the crypto economy. His stories are short, direct reads that pull out key numbers, dates and players, making complex moves in digital assets and related stocks legible to a general finance audience.
4 more finance journalists.
Aditya Rangroo
Aditya Rangroo stands out for data-rich business reporting that links market moves to everyday consumer experience. He is a business correspondent and Principal Correspondent in The Tribune’s Delhi bureau, with about 15 years of business journalism experience across multiple media brands. His beat covers market data, corporate developments, commodity prices, trade diplomacy, retail innovation, cross-border remittances, and diaspora and culture stories with an economic angle. His recent work has included corporate valuations, export figures, gold and silver prices, India-US trade talks, mystery shopping, a cyber breach at Tata Electronics, and Punjab’s industrial growth and agrarian stress. He writes short, tightly framed stories that foreground the numbers and explain what they mean for businesses, markets, and individual readers.
Anam Khan
Anam Khan is a BNN Bloomberg journalist whose reporting stands out for tying energy markets, critical minerals and business conditions directly to Canada’s economic outlook and financial policy. She covers business, energy, mining, financial markets and economic policy, and she explains what shifting data, commodity prices and Bank of Canada decisions mean for companies and households. Her work connects hard data, sector detail and policy implications, from oil prices and inflation to lithium, graphite, small-business closures and tariff pressure on manufacturing. She reports through interviews and analysis, using executives, economists, strategists and resource-sector leaders to walk readers through scenarios and trade-offs. Her past reporting includes coverage for a national public broadcaster, and she often builds explainers around expert reactions, market voices and what happens next.
Andrew Galbraith
Andrew Galbraith focuses on how real portfolios work, cutting through sales pitches and market noise for everyday investors. He is an investment reporter with The Globe and Mail’s personal finance team and writes the Investor Clinic column, applying a “first, do no harm” approach to reader portfolios. His work centres on individual investor decisions, from choosing ETFs, covered-call strategies and DIY brokerages to reacting to geopolitical headlines, global markets and debt risks. Drawing on qualitative investment research and prior global markets reporting, he tests fads and advice against data, diversification, costs, behaviour and long-term outcomes. He treats reader cases as disciplined investing lessons, explains complex topics in plain language, scrutinizes platforms as environments that shape habits and frames major events as context for careful capital allocation rather than cues for speculative trading.
Arjun Deiva
Arjun Deiva turns complex company fundamentals into clear, data-driven equity screens that surface concise lists of investable ideas. He is a monthly financial columnist for The Globe and Mail’s Number Cruncher section, with more than 50 stock-screening articles published since 2020. He focuses on companies with resilient cash flow, strong balance sheets and attractive valuations across Canadian and global markets, often during periods of volatility or uncertainty. His screens target fast-growing Canadian firms at reasonable valuations, beaten-down TSX names with solid growth, discounted U.S. tech and semiconductor leaders, AI-focused large caps, defensive dividend growers and precious metals producers. Each column applies transparent, repeatable rules grounded in balance-sheet and cash-flow metrics, long-term valuation ranges and clear themes, and his CFA and CAIA designations underpin the technical rigor of his list-based investment ideas.