IndexAlpha's Stock Research tool analyzes any publicly traded stock and gives you a full picture in seconds — no sign-up, no paywall, no jargon.
stock research is the process of figuring out whether a company is a good investment before you buy its shares. It means looking at how profitable, stable, fairly priced, and well-managed the company is. On IndexAlpha, stock research shows up as four plain-English scores plus the key numbers that drove each score. The SEC's Investor.gov recommends beginners always research a company before buying its stock, and that's exactly what this tool is built to help with.
Type the company name or ticker symbol (like AAPL for Apple or MSFT for Microsoft) into the search bar. IndexAlpha looks up the stock across 8 major global exchanges and pulls the latest data in under 3 seconds.
The top of the report tells you — in one paragraph — whether the stock looks strong, average, or weak right now, and why. You don't have to parse numbers; the summary does that work for you.
Expand any of the four score cards (financial health, growth, valuation, dividends) to see the exact numbers. Each metric has a tooltip that explains what it means in plain English.
IndexAlpha looks at four independent areas — financial health, growth, valuation, and dividend quality — and combines them into one summary signal. Each area uses the numbers directly from the company's quarterly and annual filings with the SEC EDGAR system (for US-listed stocks) or the equivalent regulatory filings for international stocks.
Stock research works for 6,000+ stocks across US exchanges (NYSE, NASDAQ), UK (London Stock Exchange), Australia (ASX), Japan (Tokyo Stock Exchange), Hong Kong (HKEX), Singapore (SGX), and Canada (Toronto Stock Exchange). If a company is publicly traded on a major exchange, you can research it here.
Yes. Individual stock research is free forever — no credit card, no account required. A free account adds watchlists and saved portfolios.
Prices update during market hours. Company fundamentals update within 24 hours of each quarterly earnings release (4 times per year per stock). The combined scores recalculate daily before US market open.
No. IndexAlpha is a research tool, not personalized financial advice. Use it alongside your own judgment, and see the SEC's guide to risk tolerance if you're new to investing.
For retail investors, IndexAlpha covers the same research areas that professional analysts use — just in plain English. Bloomberg Terminal costs $24,000+ per year. Morningstar Premium is $249 per year. IndexAlpha's stock research is free, and the underlying data comes from the same regulatory filings — SEC EDGAR for US stocks and equivalents abroad. You're not getting a watered-down version; you're getting the same facts delivered in a format you can actually understand.
Beginners: If you're new to investing, start by running one or two stocks you already know (like a company whose product you use every day). The scores and summary will give you a fast read on whether it looks like a solid business. See Investor.gov's guide to stocks for background.
Intermediate investors: If you already have a portfolio, use Stock Research as a second opinion before adding a new holding. The combined score surfaces financial health and valuation red flags that are easy to miss when you're reading earnings calls on your own.