Research Notes

Research notes shelf

I use this shelf for weekly market updates, framework notes, and explainer labs that keep my research process visible.

This is the writing layer behind my dashboards and casefiles. It does the job my old personal blog tried to do, but in a more useful format: recurring market observations, standing frameworks, and note labs I can reuse later.

Writing system

Recurring output

I publish weekly market updates and recurring financial notes tied to real review loops, not one-off hot takes.

Why it matters

I use writing to preserve context, clarify the current call, and keep decisions auditable after the market moves on.

What shows up here

I keep market memos, cycle frameworks, technical explainers, and direct bridges into the live interactive notes here.

Current writing streams

Weekly memo

Market report, week 05 of 2026

Recent public memo combining charts, market context, and the signals that mattered that week.

Weekly memo

Market report, week 04 of 2026

Another example of the recurring note format used to keep market-state language consistent.

Framework

Market cycle playbook

Standing crypto framework for timing, sizing, invalidation, and altcoin selection.

Technical archive

Tech docs index

Supporting notes on momentum research, AI setup, option references, and implementation detail.

Research surfaces

Research stack

Observe I use weekly notes and dashboards to preserve market-state changes as they happen.
Frame I turn recurring questions into reusable decision logic through framework notes.
Explain I use technical notes and dedicated interactive explainers to make concepts concrete enough to teach.
Reuse I feed those outputs back into casefiles, watchlists, and future market reviews.

Notes policy

  • I keep published research close to actual market questions, frameworks, or tools I actively use.
  • Weekly updates matter to me because they show the operating record, not just the final conclusion.
  • I link interactive notes straight to their live routes so the garden stays editorial while the simulations stay product-like.

See also