Meagen Seatter
Meagen Seatter covers investing through the lens of emerging sectors and fast‑moving markets, focusing on how innovation and macro events translate into opportunities and risks for investors. She writes for Investing News Network as an investment market content specialist, with a portfolio that spans life science, cannabis, technology, psychedelics and finance. Her coverage stands out for connecting sector‑specific developments to practical investment considerations, especially in areas like cryptocurrency, artificial intelligence and biotech.
Sector investing and market content
At Investing News Network, Seatter works as an investment market content specialist, producing coverage across life science, cannabis, tech and psychedelics alongside broader financial markets. Her articles in these areas focus on the latest investment news, developments and trends, positioning the publication as a global source for sector‑driven market intelligence. In biotech and life sciences, she reports on outlook pieces that examine where capital is flowing and how companies are positioning for the next phase of growth. Across these sectors she keeps the emphasis on how market structure, regulation and innovation shape the case for investment, rather than on product or technology alone.
Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets
Seatter regularly covers cryptocurrency markets, tracking price moves, company results and structural changes in the digital asset ecosystem. In crypto market updates, she reports on events such as Coinbase’s US$394 million quarterly loss and associated AWS outage, linking those developments to Bitcoin’s price slide and unrealized losses on corporate crypto holdings. She also writes pieces that follow Bitcoin’s reaction to geopolitical events, such as a rally tied to a US‑Iran peace deal, framing these stories around the relationship between macro risk, sentiment and crypto pricing. Her work on decentralized finance includes interviews with figures like Bill Barhydt on how DeFi is transforming crypto wealth strategies, with an emphasis on how new platforms and protocols alter portfolio construction and risk management. Across this coverage, she combines company‑level detail, market metrics and regulatory context to show how digital assets behave as part of a broader investment landscape.
Technology, AI and thematic investing
Beyond crypto, Seatter writes on thematic technology investing, particularly artificial intelligence. In her analysis on whether it is a good time to invest in AI stocks, she breaks the space into approaches such as broad exposure through large‑cap tech names and more targeted bets on generative AI. She highlights companies in the so‑called Magnificent 7, including Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Apple, Tesla, Amazon and Alphabet, and explains how each offers differing levels of AI exposure. Her AI coverage examines how corporate commitments, like Microsoft’s multibillion‑dollar investment in OpenAI, filter through to public‑market opportunities, even when investors cannot buy stakes in the underlying private entities. This work is grounded in securities and editorial disclosures that make her standpoint transparent and keep the focus on investor decision‑making.
Life sciences and emerging growth stories
Seatter’s investing work extends into biotech and life sciences, where she reports on the annual outlook for the sector and gathers commentary from industry and investment leaders. In pieces that look at the 2026 biotech outlook, she incorporates views on micro‑biotech trends and precision technologies, tying them to expectations for funding, valuation and deal activity. She also covers health‑adjacent and therapeutics themes when they intersect with capital markets, maintaining the same investor‑oriented frame she uses in tech and crypto. Her style in these stories balances scientific and clinical detail with clear explanations of how these dynamics affect pipelines, revenue prospects and market sentiment.
Freelance and personal finance writing
Alongside her work at Investing News Network, Seatter writes as a freelancer, contributing to outlets that focus on personal finance and consumer‑side investing. In that capacity she covers topics such as how retail investors can navigate complex financial products and build portfolios that reflect their risk tolerance and goals. Her background in content writing and research supports this dual focus on institutional‑scale markets and individual investors, allowing her to bridge technical developments with accessible guidance. Across all of her work, she keeps the language direct and grounded in current data, favoring clear explanations of market mechanisms over commentary.
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.
Anand Sinha
Anand Sinha stands out for tracking how large holders, institutional investors, and core infrastructure shape the crypto market through price moves, on-chain data, and corporate actions. He writes about cryptocurrencies and listed crypto stocks for Yahoo Finance, often through stories originally reported for TheStreet’s crypto desk. His beat centers on XRP, whale activity, Coinbase, MicroStrategy, Robinhood, Circle, crypto ATMs, and fintech products tied to digital assets. He also covers Web3, DeFi, blockchain, and fintech. His reporting is short and direct, built around key numbers, dates, wallet records, and market reactions. He uses on-chain data to explain extreme trading outcomes and keeps the focus on how money and power flow through the crypto economy.
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.