ABOUT CLEM CHAMBERS
FOUNDER of ADVFN
Clem Chambers was the founder of ADVFN, Europe and South America’s leading financial website.
A broadcast and print media regular, Clem Chambers is a familiar face and frequent co-presenter on CNBC and CNBC Europe. He is a seasoned guest and market commentator on BBC News, Fox News, CNBC Arabia Newsnight, Al Jazeera, CNN, SKY News, TF1, Canada’s Business News Network and numerous US radio stations.
He is renowned for calling the markets and predicted the end of the bull market back in January 2007 and the following crash. He has appeared on ITV’s News at Ten and Evening News discussing failures in the banking system and featured prominently in the Money Programme’s Credit Crash Britain: HBOS — Breaking the Bank and on the BBC’s City Uncovered: When Markets Go Mad.
Clem has written investment columns for Wired Magazine, which described him as a ‘Market Maven’, The Daily Mail, The Daily Telegraph and The Daily Express and currently writes for The Scotsman, Forbes, RiskAFRICA, Traders and YTE.
He was The Alchemist – stock tipster – in The Business for over three years and has been published in titles including: CityAM, Investors Chronicle, Traders Magazine, Stocks and Commodities, the Channel 4 website, SFO and Accountancy Age and has been quoted in many more publications including all of the main UK national newspapers. He also wrote a monthly spread betting column in gambling magazine Inside Edge for over a year.
Clem has written several books for ADVFN Books, including 101 Ways To Pick Stock Market Winners and A Beginner’s Guide to Value Investing.
In the last few years he has become a financial thriller writer, authoring The Twain Maxim, The Armageddon Trade, Kusanagi and The First Horseman. He also writes several premium newsletters for subscribers, the Diary of a Contrarian Investor, Building an Income Portfolio and The Crypto Trader.
About A. Kustomer
Mr. Kustomer was last seen heading east on a steamboat for China. According to latest received cables he is suffering from pseudonymitis.