Not every question deserves the same amount of thinking.
"What's the price of gold?" should take a second. "Is the AI trade running out of road?" should take considerably longer. TRUE routes each question to the depth it actually needs.
For research and education. Not financial advice.
Three depths
Fast when it can be. Slow when it should be.
The failure mode of most AI tools is treating every question identically — either answering hard questions too quickly, or padding simple ones with waffle.
Instant
Direct lookups — a price, a market cap, a date on the calendar. No reasoning theatre, just the number and where it came from.
Considered
"Why did this move?" — pulls live data, recent news and context, and returns a short sourced brief.
Deep
"Is this business actually good?" — reads filings, transcripts, competitors and the macro backdrop before it says anything.
The principle
Depth you can see.
When TRUE takes longer, you can see what it's doing — which sources it's reading and what it's checking. Reasoning you can't inspect is just a slower black box, and we don't think that's good enough when money is involved.
Read the methodologyWhy this matters
A tool that answers a hard question instantly is not being clever — it's skipping the work. Making the depth visible is how you can tell the difference between an answer that was researched and one that was merely generated.
Frequently asked questions
Does the engine make trading decisions?
No. It decides how much research a question needs and gathers the evidence to answer it. It does not decide anything about your money — the research tools place no orders and make recommendations.
Why do some answers take longer?
Because they should. A question that requires reading filings and comparing competitors genuinely takes more work than looking up a price. TRUE shows you what it's doing while it does it.
Ask something hard.
See what happens when a tool actually does the reading.
For research and education. Not financial advice.