Everyone online has a take. Almost no one shows the evidence.

Paste a headline, a post, or a confident price target. TRUE separates the part the data actually supports from the part that's hope — and names the risk the author conveniently left out.

For research and education. Not financial advice.

How it works

The claim, taken seriously — then checked.

Claim check doesn't sneer and it doesn't cheerlead. It takes the argument at its strongest, tests each part against the data, and reports honestly on what stands up. Sometimes the viral post is right. Usually it's half-right, which is the more dangerous case.

How TRUE checks a claim
“This stock is a guaranteed 10x — the market hasn't noticed yet.”SOURCED
What supports it
Revenue growth has genuinely accelerated for three consecutive quarters, and coverage is thin relative to peers.
What weakens it
“Guaranteed” is not a thing that exists in markets. There's no timeframe, no valuation anchor, and the float is small enough that the move could be liquidity, not insight.
What's uncertain: a thin-coverage growth story can re-rate — or quietly de-rate. The claim isn't absurd; the certainty attached to it is.

What claim check gives you

What holds up

The parts of the argument the data genuinely supports — stated fairly, even when the conclusion is one you'd rather dismiss.

What doesn't

Missing timeframes, cherry-picked windows, survivorship bias, and numbers that don't survive a second look.

What was left out

The risk the post didn't mention — usually the most useful part of the whole exercise.

Claim check is not a verdict. TRUE will never respond with "so buy it" or "so sell it". It shows you the quality of the evidence behind a claim so that you can judge it yourself. Be especially wary of anyone — human or AI — promising guaranteed returns; in markets, that promise is always false.

Frequently asked questions

Does claim check tell me if a call is right?

It tells you how well the evidence supports the claim, and what the claim ignores. It does not pronounce a verdict, predict the outcome, or tell you to act — that judgement is yours to make.

What can I paste in?

A headline, a social post, a price target, a thesis, a screenshot of a chart with a confident caption. Anything someone is asserting about a market.

Why is this useful?

Because the most expensive mistakes in markets come from acting on confident claims that nobody checked. Making the evidence visible is the cheapest risk control there is.

Don't trust the hype. Check it.

Paste any market claim and see what the data actually says.

For research and education. Not financial advice.