v0.3.388
Small consistency polish to the "nothing here yet" messages so they look and read the same across the site. No major visible change.
Every release of TickerPosts, in reverse chronological order.
RSSSmall consistency polish to the "nothing here yet" messages so they look and read the same across the site. No major visible change.
The short "About" paragraph on a ticker page now always names the stock symbol, even for companies where the listing exchange is not on record.
A ticker page now shows the start of its discussion the moment the page loads, instead of after a brief pause. This also makes the discussion easier for search engines to read.
Longer guides now open with a short "Key takeaways" list, so you can get the main points at a glance before reading the full post.
Clearer, calmer wording on the homepage so first-time visitors can tell at a glance what the site is for.
Further hardened how your light or dark theme is remembered, so it reliably stays set when you refresh or return in the same browser.
Your light or dark theme choice now stays put. It is remembered reliably when you return to the site in the same browser, instead of occasionally resetting on its own.
The blog is now available as a JSON feed in addition to the existing feed, so more reader apps and tools can follow new posts.
Small under-the-hood polish so search engines can connect the site, its author, and the guides he writes. No visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish on the About page so search engines understand what TickerPosts is. No visible change for visitors.
New guide: Common Stock Market Myths, Fact-Checked. A plain-English fact-check of four myths beginners hear most, including the lines promoters use to push a bad trade.
On long ticker discussions, a small "Post a comment" button now floats in the corner once you scroll past the comment box, so you can jump back to it without scrolling all the way up.
Ticker discussions now have two calm filter chips: "Sourced only" to show just the posts that cite a source, and "Hide hype" to tuck away unsourced posts that use hype language.
You can now add several tickers to your watchlist at once: paste a list of symbols, or upload a CSV exported from your watchlist, in the new "Add multiple tickers" panel.
The watchlist now has a Compact / Comfortable toggle to tighten or loosen the row spacing. Your choice is remembered on your device.
Watchlist notes now include a "remind me to review by" date. When that date arrives, the ticker shows a calm "Review due" badge on your watchlist.
You can now add a private note, a target price, and a personal risk level to any ticker on your watchlist. Open a row with the Add note button to fill them in.
New pages: Stocks at 52-Week High and Stocks at 52-Week Low, listing the names sitting at the top or bottom of their past-year price range.
The homepage now points to the new ways to browse stocks — by movers, price, size, and sector — just under the search box.
New "stocks similar to" pages for widely followed tickers, listing same-sector peers and alternatives, each linking to its full discussion.
More side-by-side stock comparisons added, including INTC vs AMD, NFLX vs DIS, TSLA vs RIVN, XOM vs CVX, HD vs LOW, and others.
New Sectors pages: browse stocks by sector (technology, financials, health care, energy, and more). Each sector page explains what the sector includes and lists its most active names.
Two new long-form guides: a complete guide to using stock discussion forums safely, and a complete guide to fundamental stock research for beginners. Each ties its topic together and links to the focused guides.
New side-by-side stock comparison pages (for example NVDA vs AMD, AAPL vs MSFT) showing price, daily change, size, and sector, with a link to each ticker.
Small under-the-hood change so future timely market posts can be classified more precisely for search. No visible change for visitors.
New Stocks page gathers all the market lists in one place: movers, most active, most discussed, and lists by price or company size. Linked from the footer.
New pages by company size: Large-Cap, Mid-Cap, Small-Cap, and Micro-Cap Stocks. Each explains the market-cap band, its typical risk profile, and lists the names in it.
Two more price-band pages: Stocks Under $10 and Stocks Under $20, each listing the band by trading volume with the same calm, non-recommendation framing.
New page: Stocks Under $5 Today, listing low-priced US stocks by trading volume with a calm note on the risks regulators associate with penny stocks.
The sign-in, sign-up, and password-reset headings now match the heading size used across the rest of the site, for a more consistent look.
New market-list page: Top Losing Stocks Today, ranking the session’s biggest percentage decliners with neutral, calm copy and a link to each ticker.
The "Welcome to TickerPosts" post now links "ticker symbol" to its plain-English glossary definition on first mention, matching the rest of the guides.
Small under-the-hood change so future timely market posts can be classified correctly for search. No visible change for visitors.
New long-form guide: The Complete Guide to Spotting Stock Fraud and Pump Schemes. A single overview that ties together how the schemes work and every warning sign, linking to the focused guides on each piece.
New market-list pages: Most Active Stocks, Most Discussed Stocks, and Top Gaining Stocks Today. Each ranks the relevant tickers and links to their pages.
Small under-the-hood change that helps search engines pick up new and updated pages faster. No visible change for visitors.
New page: US Stock Market Holidays 2026 and 2027. A clear list of the days the NYSE and Nasdaq are closed, plus the early-close (1:00 PM ET) days.
Blog tags are now clickable. Selecting a tag opens a page listing every guide and article with that tag, so you can browse a topic in one place.
The newer guides are now cross-linked from the related guides that mention the same topics, so it is easier to move between connected reads.
The "Cite this page" option (copy a ready-made citation or a plain link) is now on the Data Sources and Stock Market Hours pages too, not just the glossary.
The editorial policy now spells out how our guides are written: answer first, plain language, steps as steps, sources shown, and no hype.
Longer blog guides now remember where you stopped reading. Come back later and a calm note offers to continue from where you left off, or start over.
Blog posts load a touch faster: the author photo at the end of each post now connects ahead of time so it appears more smoothly as you scroll.
Small under-the-hood improvement that adds clear authorship and licensing details to the share images on blog posts. No visible change for visitors.
Behind-the-scenes change to how the site lists its pages for search engines, organised by content type. No visible change for visitors.
TickerPosts can now be added to your phone’s home screen like an app, with a proper name, icon, and color.
The glossary now has a "Cite this page" option that copies a ready-made citation or a plain link, handy for students and writers referencing a definition.
Small under-the-hood improvement that lets search engines read each glossary entry as a "What is …?" question and answer. No visible change for visitors.
The "How to Research a Stock Before You Buy" guide is now marked up as a step-by-step how-to, which can help it appear as a how-to result in search.
Blog guides that rely on official sources now end with a clear "Sources" list linking the regulator and SEC pages behind the post, so you can check the originals.
Every educational guide on the blog now opens with a short "In short" summary that answers the post’s question in two or three sentences, so you can get the gist before reading the full guide.
The Data Sources page now explains exactly how the homepage Top Gainers, Top Losers, Highest Volume, Most Discussed, and Trending lists are ranked, and what happens when data is delayed or missing.
The editorial policy now documents how page addresses are chosen: evergreen guides keep a stable, year-free address, while date-specific pages include the year.
Small under-the-hood improvement that helps search engines understand the site’s main navigation. No visible change for visitors.
Small wording fix in the FAQ answer about why a comment may be removed. No change to what is or is not allowed.
More ticker pages now open with a short plain-English "About" paragraph describing what the company does.
New guide: What Does Unusual Volume Mean? A plain-English look at how to read a spike in trading volume without overreading it.
New page: How TickerPosts Works. A short explainer covering search, watchlists, joining the discussion, how sources and labels work, and staying safe.
The Learn page now opens with an "Avoiding stock scams" panel that gathers the fraud-awareness guides in one place, with links to the SEC and FINRA resources.
The community guidelines now include a clear "Your Posts Are Public" section explaining that comments and usernames are visible to anyone and can be indexed by search engines.
The post composer now shows a short, calm reminder that posts are personal opinions and not financial advice, with a link to the full disclaimer.
Comments that link to a government or regulator page now show a small "official source" tag next to the link, so a post backed by a primary source is easy to recognise.
New guide: How to Use Stock Forums Without Getting Burned. Practical habits for getting the upside of a discussion community without the hype and herd behaviour.
New guide: How to Spot Stock Spam. A short field guide to the patterns that separate manufactured hype from genuine discussion.
New guide: Why Social Media Stock Tips Can Be Risky. A plain-English look at why a tip in a feed deserves a second look before you act on it.
The glossary now defines "CPI (Consumer Price Index)" in plain English, including when the report is released, the headline-vs-core split, how a hotter or cooler print tends to move stock and bond prices on release day, and the nuance that the Federal Reserve's official inflation target is set against PCE rather than CPI.
The Southwest Airlines ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "Is there a minimum age to use TickerPosts?" directly so the COPPA-aligned minimum age and the not-designed-for-children context are written down on the trust page.
The price-chart status line now reads more cleanly to screen readers; the middle-dot separator between the updated date and the point count is no longer announced.
The glossary now defines "Federal Reserve" in plain English with the dual mandate, FOMC schedule and dot plot, and the calibrated read on how Fed decisions ripple through markets.
The United Airlines ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "Is it riskier to trade during premarket and after-hours?" directly with the three concrete reasons (thin spread, news concentration, broker order-type limits).
The glossary now defines "Yield Curve" in plain English with the normal / flat / inverted shape framing and the calibrated read on what inversion historically does and does not signal.
The Delta Air Lines ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "Why was my comment removed?" directly so the short version of the removal-reasons list and the moderation-appeal path are written down on the trust page.
Light tightening of the "How do I report harassment?" FAQ answer so it fits the calm short-form rhythm of the other entries on the page.
The glossary now defines "Quiet Period" in plain English — the pre-IPO regulation and the separate pre-earnings policy that both go by the same name.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "What are limit-up / limit-down bands?" directly, distinguishing them from the market-wide circuit breakers covered in the previous entry.
The Booking Holdings ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "What languages does TickerPosts support?" directly, naming the English-only scope today and the moderation caveat for non-English comments.
The glossary now defines "Return on Assets" in plain English as the sister metric to Return on Equity, with the leverage-tell read on the gap between the two.
The Alibaba ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "What are market-wide circuit breakers?" directly, naming the Level 1 / 2 / 3 thresholds and the post-Flash-Crash reform that put the current rules in place.
Small under-the-hood polish that trims a little background work on the comment composer for visitors who are not signed in; no visible change.
The glossary now defines "Working Capital" in plain English with the business-model context for why positive and negative working capital can each be a sign of strength.
The Comcast ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "Can I send private messages to other users?" directly so the deliberate choice to keep all conversation on the public thread is written down on the trust page.
Footer reads more cleanly to screen-reader users now; the middle-dot separators between the About / Learn / Glossary / and other links are no longer announced between each link name.
The glossary now defines "Debt-to-Equity Ratio" in plain English with the industry-structural read on what D/E does and does not say on its own.
The Bristol Myers Squibb ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "When does a stock trade actually settle?" directly, naming the T+1 schedule and the May 28, 2024 shortening from T+2.
The glossary now defines "Net Income" in plain English — the bottom line of the income statement and the denominator behind both EPS and net margin.
The GE Aerospace ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "How do I report harassment from another user?" directly so the report path for that specific case is written down on the trust page.
The American Express ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
Small under-the-hood polish that shares one rendering helper across the three calm notices that can appear under the comment composer; no visible change.
The glossary now defines "Revenue" in plain English — the top line of the income statement that every margin figure on the recent glossary additions is expressed as a percentage of.
The Morgan Stanley ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "Why is the stock market closed on weekends?" directly, naming the clearing and settlement systems that run on weekday-only schedules and contrasting with crypto and futures markets.
Small under-the-hood polish that trims a little background work on the watchlist page for visitors who are not signed in; no visible change.
The glossary now defines "EBITDA" in plain English so a reader hitting the term in earnings coverage or a 10-Q discussion can deep-link to a one-screen explanation without leaving the site.
The Deere (John Deere) ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "Can I delete my account?" directly, so the short version of the account-deletion path (via the report tool, with optional past-comments cleanup) is written down on the trust page.
Small under-the-hood polish on the signup form; no visible change for visitors creating an account in the normal way.
The glossary now defines "Capital Expenditures (CapEx)" in plain English, right after Free Cash Flow, so a reader on the free-cash-flow entry can deep-link into the underlying capex figure the calculation subtracts.
The site FAQ now answers "Is there a mobile app?" directly, so visitors looking for an iOS or Android app can confirm the site is the same URL on a phone and on a laptop.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases.
The Caterpillar ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The calm in-line note in the comment composer now opens with "Heads up:" and closes with "You can still post as-is." so the advisory framing reads the same in print and to screen readers, matching the existing tone of the other composer notices.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "Are all stocks available to trade outside regular hours?" directly, noting that most NYSE and NASDAQ names trade in extended hours but with much thinner volume than the regular session.
The glossary now defines "Operating Cash Flow" in plain English, right before Free Cash Flow, so a reader on the free-cash-flow entry can deep-link into the underlying cash-side figure the calculation starts from.
The Honeywell ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "What does TickerPosts do with my email address?" directly, so the short version of the privacy policy on that specific question is visible on the trust page.
Signup now asks new members to use a permanent email address rather than a throwaway one, so the community keeps its trust profile and password-recovery actually works for people who later forget their password.
The glossary now defines "Net Margin" in plain English, slotted right after Operating Margin, so the Gross Margin then Operating Margin then Net Margin profitability ladder reads in order with each step defined.
The Citigroup ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "What is the opening auction?" directly, explaining the matching event at 9:30 AM Eastern Time and the matching closing auction at 4:00 PM ET that set the official open and close prices.
The Lockheed Martin ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The glossary now defines "Gross Margin" in plain English, slotted right before Operating Margin, so readers can walk the Gross Margin then Operating Margin then Net Margin profitability ladder in order.
The site FAQ now answers "How do I find the discussion for a specific stock?" directly, so first-time visitors looking for a ticker can see the search bar and keyboard-shortcut options spelled out on one page.
Small under-the-hood polish that prevents the same comment from being posted twice in quick succession, so accidental double-submits and copy-paste runs do not clutter a discussion.
The comment composer now shows a calm in-line note when a draft has a few rough edges (lots of links, lots of emojis, all-caps shouting, that sort of thing) so the poster can soften it before sending. The note is advisory; you can still post as-is.
Small under-the-hood polish that makes the discussion area more resilient to spam and rapid-fire posting; visitors writing ordinary comments and replies will not see a change.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases, so the in-product nudge stays in step with the kind of language regulators routinely flag in investor-protection guidance.
The Target ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "What happens when a holiday falls on a weekend?" directly, so visitors looking up that question can confirm the observed-day rule without having to read the official exchange calendar.
The glossary now defines "Book Value" in plain English, slotted right after Price-to-Book Ratio, so a reader on the P/B entry can deep-link into the underlying definition the ratio is built on instead of having to leave the site.
The Pfizer ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "Can I quote TickerPosts in my own writing?" directly, so the rules around quoting blog posts, glossary entries, About paragraphs, and community comments are written down on the trust page.
The stock market hours page FAQ now answers "Are NYSE and NASDAQ open at the same time?" directly, so visitors looking up the question can confirm both exchanges run the same regular session without having to compare two pages.
The General Motors ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The glossary now defines "Operating Margin" in plain English, slotted right after EPS, so a reader on a ticker or earnings page can deep-link from any operating-margin mention into a one-screen definition.
The site FAQ now answers "Does TickerPosts give investment advice?" directly, so the answer is written down on the trust page right next to the related "Is TickerPosts a broker?" entry rather than only in the disclaimer.
The calm reminder that appears in the comment composer when a draft sounds like stock promotion now also notices a few more long-documented hype phrases, so the in-product nudge stays in step with the kind of language regulators routinely flag in investor-protection guidance.
Small under-the-hood polish that consolidates the share-a-link plumbing so the blog post, glossary, and FAQ "copy link" actions all build URLs the same way; no visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish that trims a little background work on the 404 page; no visible change for visitors.
The stock market hours FAQ now answers "What time zone is the stock market in?" and lists the regular session in Pacific, Central, Mountain, and London local time so visitors do not have to convert from Eastern Time themselves.
The site FAQ now answers "Can a company control its TickerPosts page?" directly, so the rules around company-owned pages and the report path for issuer concerns are written down on the trust page.
The Rivian ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The Arm Holdings ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The Spotify ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The glossary now defines "Earnings Guidance", with a note that guidance often moves a stock more than the just-reported quarter.
The glossary now defines "Forward P/E", the next-year-expected-earnings counterpart to the trailing price-to-earnings ratio.
Small under-the-hood polish that consolidates the three "copy link" icons on blog post headings, glossary terms, and FAQ questions so future changes to that pattern stay consistent across all three; no visible change for visitors.
Two more research guides now carry a fresh "Last reviewed" date in their bylines, completing the editorial-stamp pass on every educational guide.
The stock market hours FAQ now also explains the early-close day schedule, including the 1:00 PM ET regular close and the shortened after-hours window.
The composer notice that warns about promotional language now also catches three more common authority and urgency patterns, so authors get a quiet nudge to reword them before posting.
The site FAQ now answers "How do I report a security issue?" so security researchers can find the disclosure path from the trust page rather than only by knowing the standard file location.
The IBM ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The Roblox ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The MicroStrategy ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph that also notes the corporate Bitcoin treasury strategy the stock has become known for.
The glossary now defines "Price-to-Book Ratio" (P/B), with a note that it works well for asset-heavy businesses but less well for asset-light ones.
The glossary now defines "Return on Equity" (ROE), the headline measure of how efficiently a company turns book-value capital into profit.
Small under-the-hood polish so screen readers announce the version number in the footer as a changelog link rather than as a bare string; no visible change for visitors.
The Snowflake ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The site FAQ now answers "Can I post without using my real name?" directly, so the pseudonym rules and the impersonation guardrail are written down on the trust page.
The composer notice that warns about promotional language now also catches three more common patterns, including chains of rocket emojis, so authors get a quiet nudge to reword them before posting.
Two more research and safety guides now carry a fresh "Last reviewed" date in their bylines.
The DraftKings ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The CrowdStrike ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The Cloudflare ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph.
The glossary now defines "PEG Ratio", which puts the P/E of a stock in the context of how fast its earnings are actually growing.
The glossary now defines "All-Time High" (often shortened to ATH) as its own entry, with a note that the chart language "price discovery" is descriptive, not predictive.
Small under-the-hood polish so screen readers announce the top of the page as a named landmark, matching the labeled footer landmark shipped earlier today; no visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish so screen readers can jump straight to the footer link list as a labeled navigation landmark; no visible change for visitors.
Two more research guides now carry a fresh "Last reviewed" date in their bylines, so readers can see at a glance when each post was last checked against current SEC and FINRA guidance.
The composer notice that warns about promotional language now also catches three more common urgency taglines, so authors get a quiet nudge to reword them before posting.
The stock market hours FAQ now also explains why a broker can show a different price after the regular close, so the after-hours price drift is not a surprise.
The site FAQ now answers "Can I edit or delete a comment I posted?" so the rules around your own comments are written down on the trust page rather than hidden behind the comment controls themselves.
The BlackRock ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph, including a note that iShares is BlackRock's ETF brand.
The Goldman Sachs ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph alongside JPMorgan, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo.
The SoFi ticker page now has its own plain-English About intro paragraph alongside the other consumer-finance ticker pages.
The glossary now defines "Dividend Yield" as its own entry, with a note that a very high yield can be a warning rather than an opportunity.
The glossary now defines "Consensus Estimate", the analyst benchmark a quarterly earnings report is judged against and the term beat-and-miss headlines lean on.
Every question on the site FAQ now has the same quiet link icon next to it that blog posts and glossary terms received, so you can copy a link to a specific Q&A without scrolling back to the address bar.
The AT&T ticker page now has its own plain-English 'About' intro paragraph alongside Verizon and T-Mobile, completing the major US wireless carrier triplet.
The calm "check domain" notice in the comments now also catches hostnames that piggyback on the names of major brokerages, crypto exchanges, and banks, so a "<brand>-<word>" or "<word>-<brand>" lookalike host gets an at-a-glance warning before a click.
Every glossary term heading now has the same quiet link icon next to it that blog post sections received, so you can copy a link to a specific term definition without scrolling back to the address bar.
The site FAQ now answers "Are the prices on TickerPosts real-time?" directly, so first-time visitors do not have to read the data sources page to learn that prices are end-of-day snapshots rather than streamed quotes.
The calm "check domain" notice in the comments now also looks for typo-squat imitations of major brokerages, crypto exchanges, and banks, so links that try to impersonate those high-trust sites get an at-a-glance warning before a click.
The calm "shortened link" notice in the comments now also catches ten more well-known link-shortening services, so readers see more of the cases where a destination is being hidden behind a redirect host.
The stock market hours page now lists the specific 2026 calendar dates for every full closure and the two early-close days, so visitors can see at a glance whether the market is open on a given date instead of mapping the holiday name to a date themselves.
The glossary now defines "Earnings Beat and Miss" so the term commonly seen during earnings season has a plain-English reference page on the site.
The composer notice that warns about promotional language now also catches three more common stock-promotion taglines, so authors get a quiet nudge to reword them before posting.
Every section heading inside a blog post now has a quiet link icon next to it, so you can share a direct link to a specific section without scrolling back to the address bar.
Every comment on a ticker discussion now has a "Copy link" action, so you can share a direct link to a specific comment with one click.
Comment links from a ticker discussion feed now scroll directly to the linked comment and give it a calm highlight so it is easy to spot on the page.
Every ticker discussion page now publishes its own feed, so you can follow a single ticker in your feed reader instead of refreshing the page.
The plain-English pump-and-dump guide now carries a fresh "Last reviewed" date in its byline, so readers can see at a glance when the post was last checked against current investor-protection guidance.
The sun and moon icon in the header now swaps to the new shape in the same instant the page colors flip, instead of trailing a moment behind.
The light and dark mode toggle in the header now always switches on the very first click, even in the edge cases where it previously needed a second tap.
Keyboard users now see the small ticker preview card when they tab to a $TICKER link in a comment, the same way mouse users see it on hover.
Glossary now defines diversification between ETF and OTC markets.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
Ticker discussion pages now show a small "Trending today" tag when comments are running well above the recent daily pace.
You can now post a comment with Ctrl+Enter (or Cmd+Enter on Mac) without reaching for the mouse.
Glossary entries can now show when they were last reviewed by the editor, so readers can see at a glance that a definition is still current.
The main navigation now tells screen readers which page you are currently on.
Blog guides can now show when they were last reviewed by the editor, so readers can see at a glance that a guide is still current.
The calm composer reminder for stock-promotion taglines now catches a few more well-known marketing phrases.
Every glossary entry now opens with a one-sentence plain-English definition before the longer explanation.
New Stock Market Hours page answers when the US stock market opens, closes, and runs premarket and after-hours.
The glossary now defines liquidity, a term the risk notes on penny-stock, low-volume, and microcap pages have always used.
Ticker pages now answer one more common question: roughly how big the company is by market value.
A small "back to top" button now appears in the lower corner of long ticker discussions and long blog posts.
Ticker pages now answer one more common question: where the company is headquartered.
The Frequently Asked Questions page now answers two more trust questions: which markets TickerPosts covers, and why a ticker might be missing.
Pressing the question mark key from anywhere on TickerPosts now opens a small panel listing the keyboard shortcuts the site supports.
Plain-English company intros now appear on ten more ticker pages, including AbbVie, PepsiCo, Chevron, Merck, Wells Fargo, Verizon, T-Mobile, Qualcomm, ServiceNow, and Shopify.
When a ticker has no comments yet, the discussion section now offers a calmer welcome explaining what makes a useful first post and pointing to the community guidelines.
Ticker pages now make it clear when the latest available price snapshot is from an earlier day, so visitors can tell at a glance whether the data they see reflects today's trading.
The glossary now defines dilution, the situation where a company issues new shares and each existing shareholder ends up owning a smaller slice of the same company.
Your watchlist page now shows a calm "Recently viewed" section listing tickers you have opened on this device, so you can add one to your watchlist in a single click.
Ticker pages with low recent trading volume now carry a calm note explaining why thinly traded names tend to move more easily and what to read before acting on a tip.
Common ticker misspellings now land on the right page instead of a not-found screen.
The About page now identifies TickerPosts to search engines as a free finance web app, which helps the site show up correctly in brand search results.
The "check domain" caution chip on comment links now also appears when a link borrows a well-known brand name in its address but is not the real brand site, so readers can second-guess the destination before clicking.
Links in comments whose destination is a bare IP address rather than a regular domain name now get a small calm "raw IP" chip so readers can verify where the link goes before clicking.
The light/dark mode toggle in the header now switches on the first click and reliably remembers your choice across page refreshes.
The Recent Activity feed on the homepage now shows real comments the moment the page opens, instead of a brief loading placeholder.
Screen-reader users browsing a ticker page now hear a short spoken update when the market opens, closes, or moves between premarket and after-hours trading, so the session change is not lost when the visible chip quietly updates.
Brand-name web addresses like tickerposts.com/apple-stock or tickerposts.com/tesla-stock now open the matching ticker page, so a search for a company name lands directly on the discussion.
Ten more well-known company ticker pages (Eli Lilly, Taiwan Semiconductor, Bank of America, Costco, Exxon Mobil, Uber, Cisco, Starbucks, Nike, and Airbnb) now open with a short plain-English paragraph explaining what the business actually does.
The About, Community Guidelines, and Editorial Policy pages now each link to the new Frequently Asked Questions page for shorter trust-question answers.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
New Frequently Asked Questions page with plain-English answers about what TickerPosts is, where the numbers come from, how moderation works, and how to report a bad post.
Stock pages now show a small visual marker for where the current price sits inside the 52-week range, alongside the existing low and high numbers.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish; no visible change for visitors.
Ten more well-known company ticker pages (UnitedHealth, Home Depot, McDonald's, Procter & Gamble, Salesforce, Adobe, Oracle, Robinhood, PayPal, and Berkshire Hathaway Class B) now open with a short plain-English paragraph explaining what the business actually does.
When you start writing a comment on a ticker with low recent trading volume, the comment box now shows a calm heads-up explaining why a source matters more on thinly traded names.
Every blog post now has a Save as PDF link in the byline so readers can save a clean offline copy of any guide in one click.
Small under-the-hood polish so search engines recognise the blog guides and the Learn hub as educational content for self-study rather than market commentary. No visible change for visitors.
Every blog post now ends with a short bio of the author so readers always know who wrote the piece.
Small under-the-hood polish so search engines can better recognize ten more well-known companies on their ticker pages. No visible change for visitors.
The gentle "this sounds promotional" notice in the comment box now catches a few more common hype phrases.
You can now reach the team directly at [email protected] from the About, Privacy, and Data Sources pages.
Quiet accessibility polish to the comment box and the discussion sort menu so screen readers announce each control clearly.
Small under-the-hood polish to make our position on automated readers explicit. No visible change for visitors.
Published a small acknowledgments file at /humans.txt for the people who like to peek under the hood.
The comment box now warns you before you accidentally close the tab or refresh while you have unsaved text.
Small under-the-hood polish so search engines have a clear preview image to show alongside each blog post.
Published a standard responsible-disclosure file so researchers know how to reach us.
The Trending list on the homepage now appears immediately, without the brief loading flash.
The ticker search bar now tells screen readers how many matches it found after each search.
Small copy polish on the editorial policy and the founder page so the writing matches the rest of the site.
New plain-English guide on how to read stock volume, added to the blog and to the learning center.
Stock pages now answer the 52-week price range as a quick question alongside the existing sector, exchange, and IPO entries.
Privacy page now lists a direct email address for privacy questions, data requests, and misuse reports.
Stock pages now share clearer company context with search engines, so results that link to TickerPosts can show a more accurate summary of the company behind each ticker.
Added a plain-English Privacy page covering what TickerPosts stores about you, why, and what choices you have.
Stock pages now show at most one risk-context note at a time, so the page stays calm even when several would apply.
Your watchlist can now be sorted by which tickers are getting the most discussion today.
Stock page links now lead to the same address no matter how they are typed.
Every stock page now ends with a short "Frequently Asked Questions" block answering the basics about the ticker in plain English.
The TickerPosts mark now shows in browser tabs across the site, so the page is easier to spot when you have several tabs open.
Small under-the-hood polish so search engines can better connect the dots between the homepage, blog, author profile, ticker pages, learn hub, and glossary as one site. No visible change for visitors.
Small under-the-hood polish on the homepage so search engines can better understand the four highlight lists (top gainers, top losers, most discussed, and highest volume). No visible change for visitors.
Feed readers can now subscribe to the TickerPosts blog directly from the homepage or from any individual post, not only from the blog index.
The safety guide "How to Spot Red Flags Before You Follow a Stock Tip" now links directly to the SEC and FINRA so readers can verify the regulator claims in one click.
Tightened the short summary line shown for each ticker page in Google search results so it no longer gets cut off mid-sentence for companies with long names.
TickerPosts pages now print cleanly so you can save a guide or glossary entry as a paper reference without the site navigation, buttons, and dark-mode background coming along.
Each glossary entry now ends with a short list of related terms so you can hop between connected definitions without scrolling back to the index.
Small under-the-hood polish so search engines recognize the TickerPosts brand on every page, not just the homepage.
Added a proper TickerPosts home-screen icon so saving the site to your phone shows the brand mark instead of a tab screenshot.
Searching for tickers on a phone is smoother: the keyboard shows a Search key and stops trying to autocorrect symbols like NVDA or AAPL.
Tightened the tone of older changelog entries so the whole page reads in calm plain English, the same way newer entries already do.
Added five plain-English glossary entries for the community shorthand you will see on the boards: DD, HODL, FUD, FOMO, and bagholder.
Marked decorative icons as hidden from screen readers so assistive tech reads the surrounding labels cleanly.
Blog post bylines now show the author's short credential line so readers can see who wrote the piece without clicking through to the author page.
TickerPosts product updates are now available as an RSS feed at /changelog/feed.xml, so you can follow new releases from any feed reader.
Every ticker page now opens with a short "About" paragraph, not just the two dozen biggest names that already had a hand-written one.
Ticker page titles in Google search results and social previews now stay short enough that the " | TickerPosts" brand suffix is no longer cut off.
Links in comments that look like a well-known site but with a swapped digit or letter now get a small calm "check domain" chip so readers can spot typo-squatted destinations before clicking.
Mobile browsers now paint their address-bar chrome to match the active light or dark theme, so the page no longer looks like it ends mid-color at the top.
Refreshed the page header style across the site and trimmed the Steven Levine author page down to a focused two-paragraph bio with a Recent Posts list.
The Steven Levine author page now leads with a headshot and rewrites the bio around his 15-plus years as an active investor.
Every blog post is now signed by Steven Levine, the founder of TickerPosts, with a new author profile page at /authors/steven-levine.
Hovering a ticker mention like $AAPL in a comment now shows the latest price and percent change inside the preview card, so you can see where a ticker is trading without leaving the page.
Comments that link to a URL shortener now show a small "shortened" tag next to the link, so you know the destination is hidden until you click it.
Ticker pages for small companies (market cap under $300 million) now show a calm informational note about the kinds of risk the SEC and FINRA associate with smaller stocks.
You can now download your watchlist as a CSV file. The new Export CSV button on the watchlist page saves the current view to a file you can open in any spreadsheet.
New blog guide: How to Read an Earnings Report. A plain-English walk-through of what shows up on earnings day and which numbers actually move the stock.
The four market-highlight cards at the top of the homepage now show real data on first paint instead of pulsing while the browser fetches it.
Modal dialogs (the homepage Top Gainers, Top Losers, Most Discussed, and Top Volume cards, plus the comment Report flow) are now properly accessible to keyboard and screen-reader users.
Comments that link to an outside source now carry a small "Sourced" badge next to the username, making it easy to spot posts that back claims with a citation.
The two oldest evergreen blog posts now deep-link the terms they introduce into the glossary, matching the cross-linking pattern the newer guides already use.
Tickers with a flat 0.00% change in the homepage Most Discussed and Top Volume modals now render in neutral gray instead of being misread as a downward move.
Every blog post now shows an estimated read time next to the byline, and the blog index lists it alongside the publish date.
The glossary now has plain-English entries for five more terms readers run into often: short selling, free cash flow, share buybacks, stop loss orders, and pump and dump.
Each row in the homepage Trending sidebar now shows the percent change next to the company name, so you can see why a ticker is on the list at a glance.
The Trending sidebar on the homepage now says what trending means: most discussed in the last 24 hours.
Ctrl+K (or Cmd+K on a Mac) now jumps to the ticker search from anywhere on the site, matching the modern command-palette shortcut.
The disclaimer and community guidelines pages now link to the in-house pump-and-dump and SEC-filing explainers where those topics come up.
The Market Cap, Volume, and IPO Year labels on every ticker page, plus the 52-week range caption under the chart, now link to plain-English glossary definitions.
Your watchlist now shows how many comments each ticker has had in the last 24 hours, so you can see which of your stocks are actually being talked about today.
Blog posts now have older and newer post links at the bottom, so you can read through the blog in order without bouncing back to the index.
You can now use the arrow keys and Enter to pick a recent ticker from the search bar, instead of having to click one with the mouse.
Search engines now read the blog index as a single blog publication, with each post listed by title, date, and link.
The author byline on every blog post now links to our editorial policy, so anyone wondering how a post was researched and reviewed is one click away from the standards we hold our own writing to.
The "Skip to main content" link, which keyboard and screen-reader users can press to jump past the header on every page, now moves keyboard focus straight into the page content as intended.
Ticker pages now load faster, especially on slower networks.
The watchlist page now shows a calm "Watching X of 25" counter, so you can see at a glance how much of your watchlist you have used.
Source links and other URLs inside comments are now clickable, with the destination shown by hostname so you can tell where a link will take you before you click it.
Reporting a comment is now a quick category pick instead of a free-text essay, so reports are faster to file and easier for moderators to triage.
Made the homepage Recent Activity feed more reliable when a comment contains a ticker mention.
Cleaner heading outline on the homepage and ticker discussion for screen-reader users.
New guide: How to Read SEC Filings Without Getting Lost.
The research guide now links the SEC filing names it cites straight to their glossary definitions.
The glossary now covers the four most common SEC filings beginners hit when researching a stock.
Chart controls on every ticker page are now fully keyboard-friendly and screen-reader-friendly.
Hover over a comment timestamp to see the exact date and time it was posted.
Longer blog posts now show a quiet "On this page" jump list and every section heading has a direct link.
Ticker pages now show a calm context note when a company has only recently gone public.
When a ticker search comes up empty, the dropdown now suggests popular tickers and reminds you that you can search by company name or sector.
You can now sort your watchlist by symbol or by today’s percent change.
Comments from brand-new accounts now show a small calm "New" badge so readers can keep context when they read strong claims.
Ticker pages no longer shift down when the chart finishes loading.
Blog posts now show the same Home / Blog / Title breadcrumb the rest of the site uses.
The sign-up form now spells out which parts of your account are public and which stay private.
Every ticker page now shows the 52-week price range below the chart.
The low-priced stock notice on penny ticker pages now links to the pump-and-dump explainer alongside the existing red-flags and community-guidelines links.
The glossary now covers five more beginner terms: Beta, Earnings Call, Moving Average, After-Hours and Premarket Trading, and Limit Order and Market Order.
Tightened the tone of three older blog posts so they match the calm, plain-language style used in the newer guides.
Every ticker page now links to the "How to Research a Stock Before You Buy" guide in its Helpful Guides section, so visitors have a clear next step when they want to learn how to size up a company before placing a trade.
Top retail ticker pages now show a short plain-English paragraph about the company under the chart so newer visitors have context before reading the price and discussion.
Ticker pages now show a small discussion activity line under the discussion heading so you can see at a glance whether chatter is up or down.
Press the "/" key on any page with the ticker search to jump straight to it, without reaching for the mouse.
Added a Learn page that groups the existing beginner guides by topic, so new visitors have one calm starting point for understanding stocks and TickerPosts.
Ticker pages now show an instant skeleton while loading, instead of leaving the previous page frozen during navigation.
New blog guide: How to Research a Stock Before You Buy.
Added an Editorial Policy page that explains how TickerPosts produces its own content and how it stays separate from community discussion.
Search engines now see a more complete description of every ticker page, so it can be recognised as a discussion thread.
TickerPosts now respects your "Reduce motion" setting and stops pulsing, spinning, and sliding animations when you ask for less motion.
Small safety polish to how every page sends its description to search engines.
The "Report Comment" dialog now closes on Escape or a click outside, and reads correctly to screen readers.
The comment composer now politely asks for a source URL when your post makes a major claim about earnings, lawsuits, FDA news, short interest, or a buyout.
The ticker search bar now remembers the last five tickers you visited and offers them as one-tap suggestions when you focus the empty box.
Your watchlist now shows the current price and percent change next to every ticker, so you can scan it at a glance instead of clicking through.
Every ticker page now shows whether the US stock market is currently open, in premarket, in after-hours, or closed.
The blog has a proper RSS feed so you can follow new posts in your favorite feed reader.
Pages now use a little less data on each visit.
Sign-in, sign-up, and forgot-password pages are now consistently kept out of Google search results, where they offer no useful content for searchers.
Search engines now see clearer site and brand information for TickerPosts, which helps results show the correct site name and short description.
Mobile pinch-to-zoom is now allowed everywhere on TickerPosts, so the site is easier to read for anyone who needs to zoom in on charts, price data, or comments.
Blog posts now generate their own social share image, so links shared on X, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Slack show the post title instead of the generic site card.
Expanded the Stock Market Glossary with eight new beginner terms covering price reference, trading mechanics, and corporate actions.
New blog post explains what a pump-and-dump scheme is and how to recognize one from the outside.
Ticker pages for stocks trading under $5 now show a calm note about the elevated risk profile that the SEC and FINRA associate with low-priced stocks.
Every ticker page now shows other companies in the same sector, so it is easier to jump from one stock to a few of its closest peers.
Added a Data Sources page that lists, in plain English, where TickerPosts gets its ticker listings, prices, charts, and community content.
Small under-the-hood polish so the browser handles each page more conservatively by default.
Added a starter glossary at /glossary with plain-English definitions of the stock terms beginners hit first.
The 404 page is now genuinely helpful: it offers ticker search, popular ticker shortcuts, and a few useful links instead of just a "Go Home" button.
The post composer now gives a calm heads-up when you type hype language like "guaranteed" or "risk-free," with a link to the community guidelines.
New visitors who land on the homepage now see a few example tickers under the search bar, so it is clearer what they can search for.
Every ticker page now ends with a short list of guides, so you can spot red flags, understand market movers, and get more out of your watchlist.
Search engines can now show breadcrumb navigation for the blog and changelog pages, and both pages show a matching breadcrumb at the top.
New visitors can now start a watchlist in one click instead of staring at a blank page.
Keyboard users now see a clear focus ring on homepage cards, ticker rows, comment actions, and the modal close button.
Blog posts now link to related guides and trust pages at the end of each article.
New /about page explaining what TickerPosts is, why it exists, and how moderation keeps it useful.
New blog post on how to spot red flags before following a stock tip.
Links to the blog and changelog now show a clean preview when shared on social platforms.
Ticker page search-engine descriptions now explain what each page offers (discussion, chart, market data) instead of just listing price and market cap.
Stock price changes now show a small up or down arrow alongside the colour, so direction is clear without relying on red and green alone.
Each ticker page now has a unique, descriptive headline that includes the company name, not just the symbol.
Published Community Guidelines so the rules against pump posts, fake screenshots, and guaranteed-return claims are visible to everyone.
Kept the personal watchlist page out of Google so only useful public pages show up in search results.
Told search engines to skip pages that are not useful in search results, so only the public content shows up in Google.
Rewrote ticker page titles to be clearer for search engines and people scanning Google results.
Added a dedicated disclaimer page so the brief footer notice now links to fuller context.
Added blog posts and the changelog to the sitemap so search engines can find them.
Made sure visitors always see the latest version of every page.
Adjusted how pages are cached so visitors always see the latest version of the site.
Small visual polish to the footer link.
Added a public changelog page and made the footer version clickable.