For journalists & forensic researchers

The story is in the record.
Citable, to the paragraph.

Companies tell on themselves in their own filings — in footnotes, auditor language, comment-letter exchanges, insider forms. AnalystBook structures that record, flags what a forensic reader would flag, and gives you the verbatim passage with a link you can cite.

14-day free trial — no credit card required. Cancel anytime.

Three workflows it changes.

01

See what a forensic accountant would see.

Beneish M-Score manipulation signals and earnings-quality scoring on every filing, sector-calibrated distress, auditor changes and going-concern language, SEC comment letters (the regulator's own skepticism), and clusters of insiders heading for the exit.

02

Quote the source, not a summary.

Every number links to the filing paragraph it came from; the reader gives you the verbatim section with the original one click away; Ana answers questions with citations to form and period. What goes in your piece traces to the document.

03

Follow the company you're investigating.

Follow it once and every new filing, exec departure, auditor event, activist stake and insider cluster lands in your feed the day it's filed — with what-changed diffs against the prior period, and your notes pinned to the passages that matter.

FAQ

Common questions.

Can I cite AnalystBook in published work?

Cite the filing — that's the point. Every figure and flag links to the official SEC document and paragraph it derives from, so your citation is the primary source itself, verifiable by any reader or editor. AnalystBook is the tool that found it, not the authority you lean on.

Do the red flags mean a company is committing fraud?

No. They're research flags — statistical signals and disclosure events that say 'look here', calibrated by sector and always shown with their basis. Treating a flag as a finding is exactly what the tool is designed to prevent; it shows you where to dig and hands you the primary text.

I cover one company for months. Does the tool fit that?

That's its native shape. The record accumulates, your notes pin to specific passages, quarterly reviews capture how the story evolves, and the feed keeps watch between your deep dives. Built for one-company-at-a-time depth, not headline skimming.

Is there academic or newsroom pricing?

Core at $49/month self-serve is where most individual journalists and academics start, with a 14-day free trial to test it on a real investigation. For newsroom or research-group seats, contact sales@analystbook.com.

The product

Five pieces, one workspace.

Start with one company.
Research it from the source.

14 days free, no credit card required. Cancel any time before the trial ends.