Two to six names from one market lane usually reads best.
Start the compare, then open the extra detail only if it changes what you plan to do next.
See a few names side by side before you decide what matters.
Use this page to compare names against each other, check what changed since the last saved run, and see how a portfolio lines up with the same set.
Attach a saved brief if you want to see what changed.
Signed-in portfolios can be checked against the same names.
Mixed means the list came from more than one saved source.
Put symbols or saved runs in one view
You can compare names directly, or attach a saved run to see what changed and how it lines up with your portfolio.
Start with names from the same market so the comparison is easier to read.
This page does not tell you to buy or sell. It helps you read the differences first.
The page gets more useful once you have a few saved briefs or a portfolio snapshot to compare with.
Analysis
What the differences are saying
Open this after the main compare so you can read the extra detail in order.
Open this after the main compare so you can read the extra detail in order.
What this compare should change now
A good compare should help you decide what to do next, not just show a table.
Compare mode becomes decision-grade only when the basket is small, clean, and sourced from one comparable lane.
Use this only after you have read the main comparison above.
Keep the basket inside one lane so source quality and factor spread stay comparable.
Read the differences before the summary
Compare mode is most useful when you bring two to six names from the same lane into one side-by-side review.
Compare mode is most useful when you bring two to six names from the same lane into one side-by-side review.