One developer hunting the next 1000×, in public.
DeepValue Radar is an institutional-grade research engine for finding sub-$10 companies the market has mispriced. One developer built it, for himself first, then opened it up to everyone, because the tools to invest with conviction shouldn't be locked behind a terminal.
DeepValue Radar began with a frustration most investors know. Finding genuinely undervalued stocks is hard, and the good tools are built for professionals, heavy on spreadsheets, jargon and subscriptions. For someone hunting asymmetric, life-changing returns in the small-cap corners of the market, making confident decisions felt almost impossible.
I'm an engineer. I've spent ten years shipping software solo. Twenty Chrome extensions serving 50,000+ users, with open-source contributions merged upstream into Google Chrome itself. So I did what engineers do, and started building the tool I wished existed.
What began as a private pipeline to screen sub-$10 equities grew into something worth sharing. It validates every number against SEC filings, scores each name on conviction, then pits a bull thesis against a dedicated short-seller. If it helps me find a 1000× before the market does, it can help you too.
Turn the chaos of thousands of obscure small-caps into a short list of validated, deeply-researched deep-value ideas, and give every long-term investor the same clarity an institution would, for free. See the methodology →
Started shipping software. Chrome extensions, infra, automation. Ten years of building tools that take the friction out of everyday work.
When The Great Suspender got pulled for malware, 2M users lost their tab manager overnight. I shipped a privacy-first replacement within weeks.
Solo-built a portfolio of 20 Chrome extensions, 50,000+ users combined. The flagship, BeLikeNative.com, grew to 13,200+ users at a 4.63 rating.
Turned the same engineering rigor on my own investing. What if a pipeline could find genuinely mispriced sub-$10 companies, then prove it with primary data?
An autonomous research engine that screens, scores and adversarially stress-tests deep-value equities. Built for myself. Shared with everyone.
CTO-turned-solo-dev. I ship Chrome extensions and AI tools at scale. Tab Suspender Pro, BeLikeNative (13,200+ users, rated 4.63), Focus Mode Pro, Session Manager Pro and more, all built solo under the Zovo brand. I'm an active open-source contributor, with 140+ pull requests merged upstream into Google Chrome, axios and NiceHash. DeepValue Radar applies that same less-is-more, do-it-yourself philosophy to investing research.
Good research comes from caring about the details. Every number traced to a filing, every thesis stress-tested before it goes out.
The best ideas start with understanding why a company is cheap. Ask why, dig into the fundamentals, find what actually moves the story.
Models reason. They don't get to invent figures. Every published number is checked against primary market data.
Hidden in the noise of 450+ screened names is a handful of genuinely mispriced ones. It isn't easy, and you have to get your hands dirty.
Every bull thesis meets a dedicated short-seller before it earns a place. Most candidates fail, and the failures get published too.
No paywalled black box. The screen, the scores, the misses, all open, so you can judge the work on its merits.
Everything on the public site is free. For specific stock requests, the deeper data behind each thesis, and priority access to new picks, I share it with $99 lifetime members. One payment, lifetime access, via Zovo, where I also run my Chrome-extension studio and the Zovo Scanner safety tool.
Get lifetime access at zovo.one →DeepValue Radar is built in the open. Come find me, audit the code, or just chat about deep-value ideas. The whole engine is on GitHub.
Independent research, not advice. DeepValue Radar is one developer's research, shared for educational purposes. It is not investment advice and not a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Sub-$10 equities are high-risk. Always do your own research. Full disclaimer →