Up until now I've mainly used Barron's and Morningstar. Barron's routinely publishes "buy" recommendations and some reasonable analysis. Their semi-annual roundtables are flush with ideas. Morningstar provides an estimated "fair value" for stocks and often some in-depth analysis. Google is useful for pulling up price history charts. I also consult Zack's for the minimal advice they provide free of charge.
Under consideration as a paid subscription:
Zack's
The Motley Fool
Seeking Alpha
Others?
Comments
CNBC for relevant daly news. YBB's Weekly Business Digest for weekly summary.
Occasional free SA articles. Barron's is probably the only other one that I'd consider as a paid subscription.
Dividend informer covers about 200 stocks for the Investment Clubs organization. They have a more general equity service as well and both provide easy methods of understanding financial data.
M* is Ok but I would love to see an audited report on the accuracy of their "Fair Value" over time.
Valueline is great for numbers and ideas, but I cannot get it free at the library any more. they have model portfolios that do not change much. They sent me a report a year or so ago about the performance of all four of their portfolios and do not remember being awed
I have given up on AAII. Still reporting on models developed in the 1960s. Their best portfolios have outstanding results but with a huge amount of volatility
But --- thanks? lol
I can access these newsletters via Morningstar Investing Center—my local library subscribes to this service.
I don't invest in individual stocks (except for one stock) so I'm not very familiar with these newsletters.
There was much positive feedback regarding DividendInvestor during Josh Peters' tenure years ago.
SeekingAlpha (mainly the comments, not articles)
Various searches in Perplexity
LSEG/CFRA reports in Schwab for the 'quant' perspective
My own magic eight-ball