We created autonomous AI Agents that monitor the stock market for you while you go about your day.<p>How it works:
Tell our AI Assistant what you want to monitor, and it creates a project for our team of autonomous AI Agents. You'll get notifications (email + app) when significant events matching your criteria are detected. For short-term projects, you'll be notified when your analysis is ready.<p>Behind the scenes:
When you give the AI Assistant a request to monitor an entity (like a stock or group of stocks), an AI Project Manager plans the project and breaks the project down into manageable tasks. These tasks run asynchronously - some recurring (hourly/daily/weekly/monthly/quarterly/yearly), others one-time.<p>Example prompts you can try:
Long-term monitoring:
- "Monitor Apple stock and notify me of any important events and red flags"
- "Monitor Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Meta stock. Notify me if any of them start trending toward being undervalued"<p>Short-term analysis:
- "Create a project to analyze the last 30 earnings calls for Tesla, spot trends, and how the business has evolved over time"<p>You can track the progress of all tasks as the AI Agents work in the background.<p>Try it here: <a href="https://decodeinvesting.com/chat" rel="nofollow">https://decodeinvesting.com/chat</a><p>This is still an early version - we're actively improving it based on feedback. Would love to hear what you think and what features you'd want to see next!<p>Previously shared our AI-powered Stock Market Research Analyst: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41156478">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41156478</a>
> Monitor Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Meta stock. Notify me if any of them start trending toward being undervalued<p>If you actually had a system that could detect when a stock was "undervalued" you should just trade directly on that system instead of selling it to consumers. This is pretty clearly scammy/predatory towards retail investors.
Is this investment advice?<p>> "Investment adviser" means any person who, for compensation, engages in the business of advising others, either directly or through publications or writings, as to the value of securities or as to the advisability of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities, or who, for compensation and as part of a regular business, issues or promulgates analyses or reports concerning securities...<p><a href="https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/COMPS-1878/pdf/COMPS-1878.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/COMPS-1878/pdf/COMPS-187...</a>
What data do you collect about users, and are there any protections against taking trading ideas? Institutional traders would be wary of using the application, cautious of losing any edge by tipping their hands of what equities they are looking at to a third party.<p>If the application is meant for retail, how do you plan on funding the project? Answering this question would better illuminate the stakeholder's incentives and if they align with users' interests.
When you say, “monitor red flags” what is actually happening ?<p>How are you determining red flags ?<p>Will an LLM be running every x hours analyzing news, so I can give very specific things to look for ?
I haven't really used agentic AI yet and I am already completely sick of it.<p>40 questions to Saturday just sounds ridiculous.<p>I feel like on this trajectory my broker is soon going to be pretending my trailing stop is an AI agent monitoring when to get out of the trade "in the background".
Is there any custom models or logic to this; or is this just a cron job wrapped around an LLM?<p>Capturing data, feeding it to an LLM, and hoping it actually does comparisons properly?<p>Is the LLM writing code that is being executed for each query or job?<p>Otherwise, all I am seeing here (and based on your comments saying "LLM") it just appears this grabs data, gives it to an LLM, and "magic output"