Track 01
Foundation
Build the mental models behind durable investing: frameworks, ownership thinking, and market behavior.
Explore FoundationEditorial investing education
algo2alpha — The Learning Investor is a guided learning hub for readers who want judgment, evidence, and a disciplined way to study businesses, market behavior, and risk.
Three-track curriculum
The archive is organized as a curriculum: foundations first, evidence second, and technical workflow third.
Track 01
Build the mental models behind durable investing: frameworks, ownership thinking, and market behavior.
Explore FoundationTrack 02
Learn how to evaluate dividend quality, sector-specific evidence, and real company filings instead of relying on narratives.
Explore Fundamental AnalysisTrack 03
Use charts as decision tools: trend, momentum, volatility, and regime-aware workflow, without indicator clutter.
Explore Technical AnalysisHow to learn here
The site is designed to help you learn in sequence, then go deeper with the original Medium post and notebook when available.
Use each on-site issue page to understand the main argument, the vocabulary, and the core decision rule before opening the full article.
Go deeper with the complete essay, examples, and charts on Medium once you know what to look for.
When a Google Colab link is available, use it to test the idea directly and connect theory to actual market data.
Start reading
Each issue page summarizes the lesson, key takeaways, and the concepts worth retaining before you open the full article on Medium.
A strong investment process does not begin with stock tips. It begins with a framework that can survive changing markets, changing goals, and changing information.
Stocks are not digital game pieces. They are ownership stakes in real businesses with assets, profits, governance rights, and different market structures.
Facts matter, but price moves through narrative, perception, and timing. Investors need to understand both business reality and market psychology.
High dividend yield is not proof of quality. It can signal stress, weak coverage, and a business model under pressure.
Strong investing claims need evidence. Sector-specific metrics and earnings quality tests separate persuasive stories from real operating strength.
Big spending is not automatically reckless. In capital-intensive sectors, capex must be understood in the context of scale, strategy, and expected return.
Editorial promise
“The complete investor is not a fundamentals person or a technicals person. They start with the right question, gather the right evidence, and size risk with restraint.”
algo2alpha turns newsletters into a structured professional learning habit.