About
Most valuation pages show answers. TickerVal shows the assumptions.
TickerVal exists for the moment when a single headline number is not enough. It is a workspace for checking what the market price implies, where the financial facts came from, and which models deserve less weight.
Why it exists
The useful part of valuation is usually hidden in the assumptions
Two models can point to very different outputs while using the same public company. The difference usually lives in base free cash flow, discount rate, terminal growth, margins, balance-sheet treatment, or whether a model fits the business at all.
TickerVal puts those moving parts near the top of the page so a reader can inspect the path instead of accepting a polished endpoint.
Product principles
Start with the question
What does the current price already require from revenue, margin, cash conversion, and reinvestment?
Keep the source close
A model is easier to trust when the filing period, tag, unit, and data-quality note are nearby.
Show the rough edges
Missing fields, weak model fit, and large model disagreement are part of the research signal.
What it is not
TickerVal is not trying to be a market oracle
It does not hide uncertainty behind a single confident sentence. It does not treat every model as equally useful. It does not pretend that static filing data can answer every live market question.
Its job is narrower and, I think, more useful: make the assumptions visible enough that a serious reader can decide what deserves another look.
Early supporter list
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Contact
For product notes or data questions, contact [email protected].