About

The machine under the hood.

AI Signal Brief monitors financial news, government policy, and market discussion to surface patterns affecting stocks and sectors. This page explains what the system does and how it works.

What AISB is

Modern markets move faster than any single person can track. Policy announcements, earnings beats, regulatory shifts, sector rotations — the signal exists, but it's scattered across hundreds of sources and dozens of formats.

AISB is an automated pipeline that collects that signal, extracts the companies and themes getting attention, and publishes structured summaries each day. The goal is narrow: make patterns visible faster.

How the system works

  1. Collect Financial news, policy releases, economic events, and market discussions are pulled on a daily schedule.
  2. Extract Company tickers, sector names, and key narratives are identified across all source material.
  3. Cluster Repeating themes are grouped. Signals that appear across multiple independent sources are weighted higher.
  4. Summarize AI models generate structured summaries of what's being discussed, what's driving it, and which assets are named.
  5. Publish Reports, ticker pages, and sector pages are updated. The pipeline runs without manual intervention.

Human oversight

The pipeline runs automated — that's the point. But automated systems develop blind spots, and financial content has real consequences if it drifts toward noise or unsubstantiated claims.

The system's outputs, clustering logic, and signal weighting are periodically reviewed by a human with experience in markets and quantitative analysis. The goal is straightforward: confirm that high-impact narratives match real market behavior, ensure summaries remain neutral and grounded, and adjust the system if patterns are being miscategorized or missed.

The automated layer handles scale. The human layer handles judgment.

Data sources

All inputs are publicly available information. No proprietary data feeds or paid market data.

Financial news outlets
Government policy releases
Executive orders
Regulatory announcements
Market data & tickers
Retail trading discussion
Earnings calendars
Macro event data

What AISB does not do

AISB surfaces patterns in publicly available information. What you do with that information is your decision entirely.

Common questions

Is this financial advice?

No. AISB identifies patterns and narratives in public information. It does not provide investment recommendations, price targets, or trading signals in the traditional sense. Treat it as a research starting point, not a conclusion.

Where does the data come from?

AISB pulls from financial news outlets, government policy sources, market data, and retail trading discussions. All sources are publicly available. No proprietary feeds.

How often is the site updated?

Reports and signal pages update on a daily automated schedule. Some topic pages refresh more frequently when underlying source activity spikes.

How are stocks and sectors selected?

Tickers and sectors surface based on mention frequency and narrative clustering across source data — not manual curation. High-signal patterns rise through volume and repetition across independent sources.

Can AI analysis replace human research?

No, and it's not trying to. AISB compresses the volume problem — too many sources, too fast — into something scannable. The analysis and judgment still belong to the reader.