I'm building a tool that tries to close the gap between how institutions analyze stocks and what's available to regular investors.
The idea: you give it a company (or it surfaces one from a screen), and it does the full research cycle, reads the 10-K including the footnotes, reviews earnings call transcripts, evaluates management quality, competitive position, valuation and produces an actual research report with a buy/hold/pass recommendation. Not a signal. A report with reasoning you can read and disagree with.
If something changes (earnings miss, CEO leaves, competitor announcement), it flags you and re-evaluates the thesis.
Before I build more, I'm trying to understand if this solves a real problem. Three honest questions:
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What do you actually use today to research and pick individual stocks?
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What would it take for you to trust an AI's analysis enough to act on it?
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Would you pay for something like this? If yes, roughly how much per month would feel fair?
No landing page, nothing to sign up for. Just trying to learn before I build the wrong thing.
Building an AI that does institutional-grade equity research for retail investors would you actually use it?
byu/No_Game_No_Life4 ininvesting
Posted by No_Game_No_Life4
4 Comments
Build? You mean vibe code? Isn’t it super easy now to code what you are doing?
I’m learning AI and building this kind of tool sounds useful. I usually check basic data and news. I’d trust it if it shows clear reasons, not just results. Maybe I’d pay a small monthly fee if it really helps me understand stocks better.
No
Let me vibe code that for you.
“ The idea: you give it a company (or it surfaces one from a screen), and it does the full research cycle, reads the 10-K including the footnotes, reviews earnings call transcripts, evaluates management quality, competitive position, valuation and produces an actual research report with a buy/hold/pass recommendation. Not a signal. A report with reasoning you can read and disagree with.”