Research + portfolio tracking + reporting—built for investors who want fewer spreadsheets and better visibility.
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Screeners & Research
FAQ (fast answers)
Is Stock Rover useful for dividend capture?
Yes—especially for tracking performance, generating reports, projecting dividend income, and keeping your “what changed?” story straight across positions and time.
What’s the best Stock Rover use-case for Yield Raiders?
Portfolio visibility: track holdings, benchmark performance, flag changes, and generate reports so you can see if your rules are actually working.
Do I need it if I already use spreadsheets?
Not strictly. But if spreadsheets turn into a monster (and they do), Stock Rover can become your “single source of truth” for portfolio analytics and reporting.
What Stock Rover does well
- Portfolio tracking & analytics: performance, benchmarking, risk stats, and “portfolio health” views.
- Dividend income projection: useful for income planning and “is my cash-flow actually growing?” checks.
- Reports: automated reporting can save you a ton of manual work.
- Alerts: helpful for “tell me when something important happens.”
The Yield Raider way to use Stock Rover
- Track performance by strategy: if possible, tag or separate “capture” trades vs long holds.
- Watch income trends: are you actually increasing monthly income or just spinning trades?
- Use reports: weekly or monthly “Captain’s snapshot” so you don’t drift.
Watch-outs
- Feature depth: it’s powerful—set aside one setup session so you don’t bounce off it.
- Don’t pay for tools you won’t use: if you’re not going to log in weekly, start lighter.
Best alternatives
- Sharesight / other trackers: simpler tracking workflows.
- Google Sheets / Excel: ultimate control, but you become the IT department.
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