Every serious investor has a Behaviour & Execution Gap — the returns lost to selling early and exiting late. Stockport is the system that closes it.
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Each has a name and a psychological driver. Knowing isn't enough — a system has to act on your behalf.
You grab a small certain gain and hand the bigger run to someone else.
You wait to "get back to even" while the capital quietly keeps bleeding.
A red week feels like news, so you sell a thesis that never changed.
You keep the evidence that flatters you and explain away the rest.
A falling stock feels "due," so you double down on the original mistake.
You jump back in faster than you exited — with no fresh reason to own it.
Across millions of investors worldwide, the same pattern holds: people earn less than their own investments. A measured, universal tax on returns — and most never see theirs.
Upload your tradebook. See what your selection earned vs what your decisions actually delivered.
Four habits separate them from the crowd. Each one is built into Stockport.
Most investors spend hours researching and seconds defining what they're actually betting on.
The market hands you a thousand opinions a day. Your thesis only needs a few numbers to stay intact.
Eighteen months in, most investors have forgotten why they bought. Then every price move feels like information.
The edge isn't catching one mistake. It's seeing the one you keep repeating.
"I didn't lose money to bad picks. I lost it to not having a system."
Hi, I'm Vikas. I invest because I like studying businesses — I've been at it for over six years. For most of that time I had no real system. I entered on a loose mix of valuation and a story I liked, exited on instinct, and had no guardrails to protect me from my own reactions in a drawdown. I consumed endless research and still wasn't systematic about any of it.
About a year ago it bothered me enough to fix. I read the investors I respect, and the lesson was no secret: investing rewards thinking with enough clarity to back a thesis with real conviction, the self-awareness to not become your own worst enemy, and the discipline to decide on evidence — partial as it usually is — instead of gut.
So I wrote my process down and followed it. My thinking got sharper, and every quarter I started reading concalls like a detective hunting the few signals that actually mattered.
The process outgrew my sheets — they couldn't enforce the discipline or show me how my reasoning for a business had evolved. That's why I built Stockport.
Enter one stock and write its thesis. It takes about five minutes — and it has a way of surfacing the gaps in how well you understand the business you've bet the most on.