A daily stock report workflow for your own watchlist, not a signal feed
A repeatable daily stock report workflow for reviewing your watchlist: liquidity first, catalysts next, technical context, then a 7-day risk matrix.
Why a daily stock report workflow beats a feed
Most subscribers to a daily stock report end up overwhelmed by news, not under-informed. The fix is not more headlines — it is a fixed workflow that puts the same questions in the same order every day, so the brief becomes a checklist rather than a content stream.
A useful workflow has four blocks: liquidity and price structure, scheduled catalysts, technical context, and explicit risks. Anything that does not fit those four blocks is noise for the purposes of the daily review.
Block 1: liquidity and price structure
Before reading any news on a name like AAPL or NVDA, record yesterday's price, volume relative to its 20-day average, and where the close sits relative to nearby support and resistance. A move on weak volume is a different signal than a move on broad participation.
This step is boring on purpose. It anchors the rest of the brief in observable data, not in narrative.
Block 2: scheduled catalysts on a timeline
Earnings dates, SEC filings, ex-dividend dates, regulatory updates, and known sector events should be on a simple time-ordered list. Fresh information is treated differently from a recycled headline, and a workflow that puts dates next to claims prevents stale news from feeling new.
Anything dated more than 30 days ago should be summarized, not re-reported. The point is to know what changed.
Block 3: technical context as a filter
RSI, MACD, moving averages, ATR, and volume help describe market behavior. They do not prove a stock is attractive. A good daily stock report uses them to ask follow-up questions — is momentum confirming the price, is volatility expanding, is volume confirming the move — rather than to assert conclusions.
If your daily report ever says 'RSI > 70, sell' as a standalone claim, that is a sign the tool is over-fitting indicators into trade language. Treat that as a red flag.
Block 4: an explicit 7-day risk matrix
The most useful section of a daily stock report is the short list of conditions that would change the interpretation in the next seven days: a missing catalyst, a liquidity drop, a support break, a guidance change, or a sector divergence.
If that list is missing, the report is harder to act on responsibly because there is no recorded threshold for revising the view. StockKit's brief is informational research only — not a broker, not investment advice, and not a signal service — and the risk matrix is what keeps it that way.
Connect the workflow to a free daily brief
If you want this workflow run for you, set up a free daily AI stock report from the StockKit homepage on 1-3 tickers, or go straight to the daily AI stock report landing page. Use the 10-minute daily watchlist routine as the lightweight version, and read how to read an AI stock report for the interpretation rules.
The point is not to automate decisions — it is to make the daily review reproducible enough that you can come back to it on a quiet day or a chaotic one.
Run the daily stock report workflow on your tickers
Pick 1-3 stocks and let StockKit prepare the daily brief by email, free.
Get free briefStockKit provides informational market research only. It is not a broker, investment adviser, or signal service.