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I found SLP through ST's 2018 bargain shares portfolio as well. I subscribe to IC & Alpha and also Stockopedia which is the bible for stocks IMHO. The small cap value report is OK but Paul is an accountant and has a retail bias. I like the investment club as well. ST has also written a couple of interesting books and in his most recent one 'Successful Stock Picking Strategies' he explains the formula he uses to research for his annual bargain shares. I then use his idea to add to the screens in Stockopedia which often flag up the companies that he has selected, which like Velo I find very useful. There are also some interesting books to read like Phil Oakley 'how to pick quality shares', Stephen Clapham 'the Smart Money Method' and my current favourite Max Gunther 'the Zurich Axioms' which I think Velo recommended on here a few weeks back and is probably one of the best I have read.
Good luck with your plans.
Thank you for all your responses and considered opinions... it looks like I need to take a look at Stockopedia and see how I find it.
Like Velo I found SLP through Stockopedia's screens. For me its a really useful site, well worth the money although maybe worth waiting for the sales to subscribe if your unsure about it.
Also subscribe to IC but don't have the alpha package.
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. . . Or select Sharepad/Stockopedia then you can verify the veracity of their recommendations through either of those two platforms for veracity. And why give up your first love? You could add the IC Aplha tip sheet as well. (if deep pockets)
The best of both world's, although there is a daily one as pointed out in the Small Cap report on Stockopedia. I'm always surprised at 'some' of the poor selections some analysts recommend - after I run them through a proven investors platform.
Sharepad is for a particular taste. It's good, but I found it unappealing.
Stocko I took to instantly. Both are okay. You have to run a free test trial with each and see which you find more comfortable. No one can tell you that one is a clear winner over the other; only which they personally prefer.
If they were cars, both would do the job and both would take you to Scotland and back without breaking down.
However Stocko changed the layout somewhat recently. I remain on the old Stocko platform as I dislike their new offering. They are maintaining the old platform so that keeps me happy.
There are free trials with both of them - so you don't have to decide beforehand.
Finally, IMO, an investor without an investor platform to do the number crunching for you, is like a doctor who has never kept up to date with a single copy of the Lancet - behind the times, and at a disadvantage.
If you're serious about investing you have to have something that cuts the workload down. I don't think someone telling you what to think in a "tip sheet" is the answer. It means you'd need a constant babysitter for the rest of your life, because without them - you're stuck.
Be warned though - there is no escape - without an investor platform I'd be stuck too (........ . . . :) not really I have my trend following charts, but the platforms preselect good fundamentals for me to trend follow :)
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Likewise Fishysaurus, another Stockopedia subscriber here - but wouldn't recommend Stockopedia just for the Small Cap report alone. I barely ever look at it!
But if I could only recommend Stocko for one reason only, it would have to be for the Piotroski F Score - it's indispensible - it's a single number but behind that single digit is a full accountancy package devised by a professor of finance back in the 1960's and updated through the years and is probably the single most indispensible aide you could use for global success if god decreed you could pick only one metric to use in investing!
For the previous poster, it's Paul Scott's Small Cap report. For me it's the F Score. So, Horses/courses :)
However, you first have to decide what is you're seeking. Is it another tip sheet like IC? Then by all means choose Stockopedia for Paul Scott's daily Small Cap report - but you already get that (gifted and talented investor/analyst/journalists) in the IC!
Had a look at the link you provided and the IC Alpha appears to be another method to extract money for even more personal opinions from gifted and talented investor journalists providing further tip sheets. One mentioned a screener and then tells the reader the top result without revealing the filter parameters set in the screener. You have to take his word for it. (By his word construction I feel he was using Stockopedia. Cast around but couldn't actually see a screener in the Alpha link. Maybe because I'm not a subscriber?)
But look what happens when you do your own. The screener provided by Stockopedia is breathtaking - literally; it's the most comprehensive I've ever come across. On first acquaintance, a newbie might throw their hands up in horror and sarcastically scream: What's this? I'm not a programmer!
But fear not, until ready (or never at all even) to DIY in the screener, you can go direct to the readymade screens based on the world's best ever millionaire/billionaire investors. And they all offer v decent results. I'm here in SLP because of one of those screens, not because of some bloke's opinion in a mag. In fact 10 guru screens all select SLP as a worthy candidate. (I've seen it much higher; when cream is good - it's often good everywhere :)
(Yes I know; a guru screen is still another guy's opinion, but tested to destruction over the years)
If you're tired of reading gifted investor/analysts in various media outlets, then choose either Sharepad or Stocko (it's a personal choice one is not better than the other) and thus complete DYOR and literally 'become' them - the guy's at the IC :)
Or by selecting Sharepad/Stockopedia then you can verify the veracity of t
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Hi Fishysaurus, I would highly recommend stockopedia. The daily small cap value report is worth the subscription alone.
Just for background I am a longterm (ish) holder of SLP being a holder for a couple of years, as I put a good sum in I am currently sat on very nice paper profits. My original 'flag' on this as ST 2018 Bargain shares when he picked SLP.
At some point I will need to offload some of these (not yet) and might want to invest in an additional research tool. hence my thought / question.
My discussion question for what I think are some very knowledgeable posters in here, what do they find is a good source from which to start the process of investing.
I am thinking of:
IC Alpha
Sharepad
Stockopedia
What are peoples view on those three sources or indeed anything else as a 'idea seed' generator ?