
uncoveredalpha
98 posts

uncoveredalpha
@uncovered_alpha
Ex-sell side/buy side. Spent years writing research nobody read on stocks everybody owned. Now writing research people actually want on stocks nobody covers.


In Cowork, Claude can now build live artifacts: dashboards and trackers connected to your apps and files. Open one any time and it refreshes with current data.





I think its a better time than ever to be a junior investor, given you have the insatiable curiosity, energy, and epistemic humility, meta-rationality (cc: @alixpasquet) required to use these tools well. Now more than ever before, junior investment professionals can ramp/reach the frontiers of knowledge on an industry without nearly as much handholding from an experienced mentor. The amount of detail with which you can interrogate technologies, business models, strategic dynamics, industry history, analogous situations, market structure questions, etc. with Claude is amazing. You can create, simulate and read the equivalent of the "WME mailroom" (see Ovitz, Barry Diller, etc.) on every single investment situation, business, industry, if you have the discipline to do so. Previously, as you were reading through primary source material (particularly on an unfamiliar name/business model/industry), you had all of these conceptual questions and confusions arise. Maybe you went to sell side primers or other industry research to clarify your confusion, maybe you called IR, maybe you asked your mentor (who got annoyed because they are busy). Worst case you broadcasted your confusion during a management meeting when you could have been using that time to elicit scarce, alpha-generating context. In some cases, you never clarified your confusions at all and they manifested as permanent holes in your mosaic. Now you can simply mine Claude to give you clarity around those questions and concepts until you have some semblance of a high-fidelity understanding. You can have it point you to related source material that would give you an even more synoptic understanding of the topic at hand. By doing this rigorously, you 10x your ability to visualize an investment situation and have a prepared mind going into the parts of the investment process that are alpha generating. Of course, this "clear understanding" is simply a hypothesis that can be falsified and updated by new information. But having a clear understanding that's falsifiable is better than having a muddled understanding or no understanding at all. Of course this can become a red queens race where everyone else also does this and this level of understanding becomes table stakes. But I really don't think most people understand their coverage to the depth at which they claim to. Actually doing the work with these tools should confer an advantage.


In the 1995-2010 era, it took a lot of bodies to run a scaled Tiger-Cub strategy. 100+ headcount was common across research, back office & trading (starting in '08, I was one of a large research team) Largely due to technology, that headcount requirement declined dramatically: what once had to be built in-house was increasingly offered in a more effective and cost efficient matter on an outsourced basis with technology. Traders, in particularly, deeply understand the impact of technology from 1995-2015 on their role. You no longer needed a full time person sourcing short borrow or a full time person doing forensic accounting. This happened both on front office & back office roles: the idea that you need seven investors on a consumer team to cover that space seems anachronistic even before LLMs (I was one of seven). You see similar approaches now operated with ~15 people across front & back office. This efficiency benefit fed back into alpha compression...as headcount barriers to entry dissipated, traditional alpha in Tiger style investment approaches compressed as it was easier to practice that particular approach to investing. Today, the multi-strategy approach to long/short investing is ascendant. And it has been a very headcount intensive approach, with the large firms employing 3,000-5,000+ bodies. Is the technology impact to Tiger style investing a relevant prior for the next 5 years? With AI, can the multi-manager firm of the future operate with 500 bodies instead of 5,000? And what does that mean for alpha pools & the "peak pod" debate, talent demand and the future of fundamental investing?








@uncovered_alpha Give us some sample prompts you are working with






A few anecdotes from covering consumer that mirror this: Picking up a new name used to mean 10-12 weeks of S-1 archaeology, sell-side primers, and sheepish IR calls before I felt comfortable in a management meeting. Now, I can see a scenario where onboarding to say a restaurant franchisor I’d never modeled — using Perplexity computer to stress-test my understanding of franchisee unit economics, royalty waterfalls, and the ad fund mechanics against the 10-K. By week 2-3 you could be asking the CFO about G&A reinvestment cadence rather than burning the call on definitions. I’ve recently started running adversarial dialogues — have Perplexity computer role-play a skeptical PM, a franchisee, a former ops exec — and it surfaces the second-order questions (cannibalization from remodels, DMA-level media efficiency, co-op politics) that used to only emerge after years of pattern recognition. It’s not a substitute for the real operator call, but it means the real call is spent extracting alpha, not building scaffolding. Agree on the red queen dynamic, but your point stands: most coverage is a mile wide and an inch deep. The people who use these tools with genuine epistemic discipline (not just to generate content, but to find their own confusion and resolve it) will compound faster than anyone did in the pre-LLM era. Best time ever to be junior and hungry. @lefttailguy





Waller is willing to "look through" energy price inflation provided that trade flows through Hormuz resume.



I tend to agree with @jonathanmaze here on the impact of @McDonalds getting heavier into the beverage space. This is a category (cold beverages in particular) that has shown tremendous resilience and indeed is outperforming all restaurants and foodservice in terms of growth. 1/







I'm actually impressed with the ChatGPT plug-in so far. The below are the results to "make me a DCF valuation based on this model". AI is going to be a real problem for junior finance jobs.

