Key Takeaways
- Community bullishness measures discussion, not ownership.
- A stock needs Chris-specific evidence to enter the allocation model.
- Signal counts and sentiment are useful discovery tools.
- Discussion spikes should be checked for catalyst timing.
What The Community Ranking Means
The community table ranks stocks that receive broad bullish discussion. It can show what the Discord is excited about even when Chris has not directly endorsed the stock.
Why It Is Separate
Merging community enthusiasm into estimated holdings would be misleading. Separating the sections lets readers discover ideas without overstating the evidence.
How To Read Sentiment
Sentiment should be treated as a starting point. Look for the thesis, opposing views, and whether the stock already moved before treating a signal as actionable research.
FAQ
Does community bullishness mean Chris is bullish?
No. It means the wider community is discussing the stock with bullish language.
Can a community stock become an allocation?
Yes, but only if later evidence supports Chris-specific exposure.