Learn to research markets properly.
Not "how to get rich" — nobody honest can teach you that. These are the actual skills: reading evidence, testing a claim, arguing against yourself, and knowing what you don't know.
For research and education. Not financial advice.
Start here
The fundamentals of thinking clearly
How to read a market brief
A good brief has four parts: the short read, the evidence, the uncertainty, and the sources. Learn to read the uncertainty first — it's the part that tells you how much weight the conclusion can bear.
How to build the bear case against your own idea
The most valuable habit in investing. If you cannot argue the other side convincingly, you don't understand your position — you're just fond of it.
Why 'good news, falling price' happens
Because prices already contain expectations. Assets move on surprise, not on news. Once this clicks, a great deal of confusing market behaviour becomes legible.
How to spot a claim that won't survive checking
No timeframe. No mechanism. A cherry-picked start date. A precise number with no source. Certainty where none is possible. Learn the tells and you'll ignore most of the internet.
Using AI for research without being misled
Fluency is not accuracy. Never take a figure from a model that isn't grounded in live data, always ask for the counter-case, and check anything precise. Full guide.
What diversification actually means
Not "owning many things" — owning things that don't all fall together. See how correlation hides in a portfolio.
Go deeper
The bigger questions.
How to research a stock
The full framework: the business, the numbers, the narrative, the bear case, and what would change your mind.
Read the guide →Why we won't give you picks
The easiest product in finance to sell, and the hardest to defend. Why we decline.
Our position →AI and stock trading
What AI genuinely helps with in markets, what it cannot do, and where TRUE stops.
The honest guide →What you won't find here. No strategies, no systems, no "how to make money in markets". Anyone promising that is either mistaken or lying, and the difference rarely matters to your balance. These guides teach you to evaluate evidence — the rest is your own judgement, ideally with a professional you trust.
Learn by doing.
Ask TRUE a question and watch how a sourced answer is built.
For research and education. Not financial advice.