A curated list of resources, tools, websites, and books for stock trading and investing research.
Awesome Stock Trading is a curated, open-source list of resources for stock trading and investing. It aggregates tools, websites, APIs, books, and educational materials to help traders and investors conduct research, analyze markets, and develop their skills. The project solves the problem of information fragmentation by providing a single, community-maintained repository of valuable financial resources.
Individual investors, retail traders, students of finance, and anyone seeking to learn about or improve their stock market research and trading strategies. It's particularly useful for those building their own analysis workflows or looking for reliable data sources.
Developers and traders choose this resource because it offers a comprehensive, vetted, and organized collection of tools and knowledge—all in one place and maintained by the community. It saves time compared to scattered web searches and provides exposure to both mainstream and niche resources across the entire trading ecosystem.
Curated list of resources for traders, such as tools, websites, and books related to trading stocks.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Organizes over 50 tools across categories like stock screeners, APIs, and news sources, plus 60+ books by investment philosophy, as detailed in the README sections.
Covers major international exchanges from ASX to Euronext and global data providers, offering a worldwide perspective for traders.
Open-source on GitHub with contribution guidelines, allowing the list to evolve with new tools and trends through community input.
Includes both free resources like Alpha Vantage API and premium platforms such as Seeking Alpha, catering to varying budgets.
No built-in search or filtering features; users must manually browse through categories, which can be time-consuming for specific needs.
As a curated list of external links, it lacks automatic monitoring for broken or outdated URLs, potentially reducing reliability over time.
Provides resources but lacks step-by-step tutorials or learning paths, requiring users to self-navigate and piece together information.