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Stuck Picking Stocks? Composite Ranking + 6 Quick Sort Presets

⚠️ Before we start: nothing in this post is a stock recommendation. StockDigging ranks every stock by each metric and sorts them by the lowest sum of those ranks. A sorted list is not a recommendation. It is a data processing result, and it doesn't include any qualitative or external factors.


1. "How do I find stocks that fit this idea?"

A common question for any stock investor:

  • "A high-quality company that's also undervalued and growing"
  • "A reliable dividend payer that's not at risk of going bust"
  • "A value stock with low P/B and strong equity"

Each of these requires looking at multiple metrics at once.

StockDigging makes that one-click via Composite Ranking.


2. How does Composite Ranking work?

The mechanism is simple:

  1. You pick 2–5 metrics (e.g., ROE, P/E, Revenue Growth)
  2. Every stock in the market is ranked by each metric individually
  3. Each stock's rank scores are summed up
  4. Stocks are sorted by the lowest sum first

Example:

  • Stock A ranks ROE 5th + P/E 12th + Revenue Growth 30th = sum of 47.
  • Stock B ranks ROE 3rd + P/E 50th + Revenue Growth 8th = sum of 61.
  • → A appears above B.

💡 Important: this sort is purely a math operation. It does not mean A is a "better stock" than B — only that A's combined rank-sum across the chosen metrics is lower. If you weigh one metric more heavily, just sort by that single metric.


3. Quick Sort — when you don't know which metrics to combine

The strength of Composite Ranking is freedom of metric choice. But that's also its weakness:

"Out of 31 metrics, which combination is actually meaningful?"

That's why we added Quick Sort: 6 preset investment lenses, each auto-selecting 5 metrics with one click.

Quick Sort — clicking a preset auto-selects 5 metric chips and instantly displays the composite ranking result (example: Quality Growth)

Important: these 6 are not "answers" — they're starting points. Begin with a preset and customize from there by adding or removing metrics.


3-1. Quality Growth

Lens: sustainable alpha through high entry barriers and operational efficiency

Metric What it captures
Revenue Growth Scalability of the business model
Op Margin Cost-structure efficiency + pricing power
ROE Profit generation per unit of equity
FCF Yield Real cash conversion of accounting earnings
Market Cap Industry dominance + institutional liquidity stability

Looks for stocks satisfying revenue growth + margin + capital efficiency simultaneously.


3-2. GARP (Growth at a Reasonable Price)

Lens: balance between growth and value metrics

Metric What it captures
PEG Price relative to growth (under 1.0 = undervalued)
P/E Price relative to earnings
Op Margin Margin retention from core business
Debt Ratio Financial leverage discipline
Net Income Absolute scale of bottom-line earnings

Find growth stocks without overpaying. Peter Lynch's PEG concept is the centerpiece.


3-3. Cash-Cow

Lens: sustainable shareholder return based on robust cash generation

Metric What it captures
Dividend Yield Direct measure of cash inflow vs. principal
FCF Yield Self-sustaining dividend payment capacity
ROE Underlying basis for dividend capacity
Net Debt/EBITDA Debt servicing ability
Trading Value Market liquidity (ease of entry/exit)

Targets sustainable dividends, not just high-yield outliers.


3-4. Blue-Chip

Lens: market dominance + financial soundness

Metric What it captures
Market Cap Firm size
Net Income Absolute earnings scale
Op Margin Competitive edge (margin level)
Debt Ratio Capital structure stability
ROE Capital efficiency retained at maturity

For investors who prefer large-cap stability over high-volatility plays.


3-5. Deep Value

Lens: extreme undervaluation vs. liquidation/intrinsic value

Metric What it captures
P/B Price relative to book net assets
Total Equity Base capital scale
Current Ratio Short-term debt coverage
Net Debt/EBITDA Insolvency risk filter
ROE Minimum profitability to dodge value traps

Benjamin Graham-style value investing. The point is filtering out value traps via Current Ratio + ROE.


3-6. Earnings Momentum

Lens: synchronized earnings improvement and price trends

Metric What it captures
From 52W High Trend strength (proximity to highs)
30D Return Short-term capital inflow velocity
Revenue Growth Business expansion supporting price action
Net Income Qualitative earnings growth
ROE Capital efficiency acceleration

Not pure chart momentum — looks for stocks where fundamentals and price are moving together.


4. Customize — from preset to your own style

The 6 Quick Sort presets are just starting points.

  • Drop Market Cap if size doesn't matter to you, swap in another metric
  • Replace Debt Ratio with Net Debt/EBITDA
  • Add Dividend Yield to build a "growth + dividend" hybrid

Metric chips toggle on a single click. Adjust freely on the same screen.

Customizing — adding and removing metric chips on top of a preset

Composite Ranking also pairs with range filters. Example: narrow down candidates with "P/E between 5 and 15 + ROE ≥ 10%", then sort that subset by your composite ranking.


5. Once more — sorting is not recommending

  • StockDigging does not provide price targets
  • StockDigging does not give buy/sell calls
  • The 6 Quick Sort strategies are not "the right answer"
  • Composite Ranking results are not a recommendation list

The tool does exactly one thing: processes market data and presents it through your chosen lens.


6. Try it yourself

Open the StockDigging home page and click the "Quick Sort" button above the sort chips. Pick one of the 6 presets, see the result, then adjust to your own taste.

👉 stockdigging.com/en

Got feedback or a preset you'd like to see? Let me know.


Tags: #webdev #investing #finance #productivity

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