The memo is the verdict.
Every claim earned.
Not a dashboard. Not a score card. A proper research memo — structured like a forensic brief, citable like a filing.
Company overview
Sector, market cap, listing date, auditor, promoter holding, pledge percentage as of last disclosure.
Composite score (0–100)
Weighted across 14 forensic dimensions. Reproducible: run the same agents on the same filing and get the same number.
Verdict
BUY · HOLD · AVOID · WATCHLIST. One word. With a confidence percentage and a one-paragraph rationale.
Dimension scores
Governance, Management, Disclosures, Earnings Quality, Pledge Risk — each scored independently with cited evidence.
Key findings
The 3–5 most significant signals, each with the exact paragraph from the source filing.
Risk register
Every red flag surfaced, its severity, and the DEVILS_ADVOCATE rebuttal — if any survived the challenge.
Evidence trail
Footnoted references to every BSE/NSE filing, date, and paragraph that contributed to the verdict.
AUDITOR_WATCH finding · FY24 · Anupam Rasayan India
“Statutory auditor (M/s Chaturvedi & Associates) changed for the third time in five years. Previous auditor (Deloitte Haskins & Sells) resigned citing ‘professional reasons’ — a formulation that has historically preceded qualification disclosures. Source: Annual Report FY24, §7 — Board’s Report, pg. 47.” [1]
[1] Annual Report FY24 · Anupam Rasayan India Limited · BSE Submission 14-Jul-2024 · §7.2
Export any memo as PDF or structured JSON.
Share a read-only link. Annotate with your own notes. The evidence stays attached — you never lose the chain of custody from finding to source paragraph.
Read the first dossier.
Free to start. Every number has a paragraph. Every paragraph has a source.