About investlyk
investlyk pairs two views of every public company: what the company says about itself, and what Wall Street says about it. We put both side by side, and we point out where they agree or diverge.
The question we answer
The way most retail investors search Google is: "How do professionals look at [my stock]?"
That single question pulls in two completely different sources of information that almost never live on the same page. SEC filings — the 10-K in particular — describe what the company is doing in its own words. Analyst price targets and ratings describe what Wall Street expects the company to be worth. The interesting story is usually in the gap between them.
Most stock research sites cover one or the other. We cover both, on a single page per ticker, with the same template every time.
Where our data comes from
We don't generate market data ourselves. We work with two specialist sources:
Fundamental analysis: restnvest — restnvest reads every 10-K filing published with the SEC and structures it into a six-stage analysis: business thesis, financial scorecard, valuation, timing, strategy, and management. All data flows from the EDGAR public filing system. Every figure we publish for a ticker's fundamentals can be traced back to a specific 10-K filed on a specific date.
Analyst data: Anachart — Anachart tracks analyst price targets, ratings, and historical hit rates across 5,600+ public stocks and 4,000+ professional analysts. Each target is dated. Each analyst has a measured track record on past calls.
When you read a number on this site, it came from one of these two sources. We cite the date on every data point.
How we put pages together
Each ticker post follows the same structure:
- The gap between analyst expectations and fundamental reality, stated up front.
- The case for owning the company, drawn from the 10-K — Investment Thesis, Financial Scorecard, Changes Over Time.
- The case for caution, drawn from valuation, timing, and the analyst spread.
- The reconciliation — where the two views land, and what a long-term investor weighs.
The analysis is structured. The editorial reconciliation is written. We publish at investlyk.com but link out to restnvest and Anachart for the full underlying analysis. Every page is dated and references its source dates.
What we don't do
investlyk publishes educational content, not investment advice.
We never make price predictions, recommendations, or buy/sell calls. We don't tell you what to do with your money. We describe what the data shows — both sides — and we leave the decision to you.
If you're acting on investment decisions, you should work with a licensed financial professional. Anything published here is for research and learning only.
Who built this
investlyk is a joint editorial project between restnvest and Anachart. Neither platform pays for placement on this site. Pages are written and curated by the founders of both platforms, working together on a shared editorial standard.
Feedback or corrections: hello@investlyk.com