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Charles Sizemore

Charles Sizemore

Chief Investment Strategist, The Freeport Society

Starting at his grandfather’s knee when he was just 10 years old, Charles Sizemore has pursued a career dedicated to helping people achieve financial freedom through smart investing.

Charles has advised multiple hedge funds globally and managed over $120 million in assets.

He holds a Master’s Degree in Finance and Accounting from the London School of Economics and a Bachelor of Business Administration in Finance with an International Emphasis from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, where he graduated Magna Cum Laude and as a Phi Beta Kappa scholar.

As a keen market observer, economist, investment analyst, and prolific writer, Charles has been a repeat guest on Fox Business, quoted in Barron’s, and featured in numerous well-reputed publications and financial websites, including MarketWatch, TheStreet, InvestorPlace, MSN Money, Seeking Alpha, Stocks, Futures and Options Magazine, The Daily Reckoning, Benzinga, Minyanville, and Investment International.

While Charles enjoys playing basketball and his grandfather’s old saxophone (which he is also teaching his son), his passion lies in finding investment opportunities that become safe havens for investors navigating this Age of Chaos. He is intolerant of deception, misdirection, and the endless eroding of the ideals that once made America great. He is fiercely determined to help investors regain their lives, their liberty, and their wealth.

Charles’s publications and investment research services include:

Latest from Charles Sizemore

The Freeport Navigator

I Can’t Drive 55… Nor Can You

In 1974 the federal government mandated that 55 miles per hour was the maximum speed on all interstate highways. That was the wrong response. Capital markets knew and did better. Now, government is interfering again…

The Freeport Navigator

Thank You Very Much and Long Live Freedom, Damn It!

The state is not the solution. It’s the problem. The problems facing our country are not democrat problems or republican problems. They’re government problems. And the problems that aren’t specifically related to the government, such as the aging of our workforce, aren’t things the government can solve. The best thing it can do is simply get out of the way and let the private sector sort it out the best it can.