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Stock MBTI

Stock MBTI

Search any stock and find out its MBTI. Using real data, we sort stocks into 16 personality types and show each as a dog that looks just like it — plus the TOP 3 investor types it matches best.

Read a stock's personality from its financials

Search a stock and it tells you that stock's MBTI. Instead of a person's personality, it judges the style from the company's real financial data — revenue growth, operating margin, earnings volatility, and market attention — combining these four axes into 16 types.

Each type comes with a dog character of a similar personality, so you can remember dry numbers with a single character.

What do the four axes mean?

Revenue growth shows how fast a company is growing, and operating margin shows how much it actually keeps out of what it sells. Earnings volatility shows whether profits are erratic or steady, and attention shows how much people are watching this company right now.

These four are the basic metrics real investors keep an eye on when looking at a company. If financial statements felt hard, get a feel for them with this content.

You can check your compatibility too

Know your own style first with the 'Investor MBTI Test,' and you can check how well you and the stock you searched match. It's fun to compare how each company's personality differs.

That said, these types simply present financial data in an easy way; they don't recommend buying or selling. Make investment decisions yourself after researching thoroughly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What data decides the MBTI type?

It's based on public financial data (revenue growth, operating margin, earnings volatility, attention). It's number-based, not a subjective personality test.

Can I invest based on this result?

It's not investment advice. It's content to help you easily understand a company's financial traits, so make actual decisions yourself after checking more information.

What does the compatibility score mean?

It's a fun score showing how well your investing style suits that stock's personality. High doesn't necessarily mean a good investment, nor low a bad one.