Disclosure / Keyword Search

Run plain-language searches across recent SEC filings or the broader SEC full-text index. Use it for emerging risks, customer concentration, tariffs, AI exposure, restructuring language, liquidity warnings, or any other term that matters to your analysis. Search the EDGAR index for broad source discovery with company focus, filing-form filters, and result-count controls, review source-window and filer-concentration signals, or scan a manual company set, curated sector universe, or bounded cross-sector Market Map when you need paragraph-level excerpts.

Disclosure Keyword Search

Search recent SEC filings for any literal word or phrase. Enter up to 5 public-company tickers, scan a curated sector universe, use Market Map, or search the SEC full-text index with company focus plus date, form, and result-count filters; every match links back to the original filing on SEC.gov.

Match modeFilings matching any entered term are counted.
Analyst playbooks
EDGAR index prompts
Company scan prompts

SEC source

Filing text is fetched from SEC archives, then each result links back to the exact source document.

Literal search

Terms are treated as literal words or phrases, not model guesses. You choose the language to test.

Research workflow

Start with EDGAR Index to find source filings across the broader SEC corpus, then compare up to 5 hand-picked companies, scan a sector universe, or run a cross-sector market map for paragraph-level context.

Methodology: EDGAR Index mode uses the SEC full-text index to find matching source filings across the broader SEC corpus with optional company/ticker focus, date-range, form-type, and result-count filters, then summarizes source-window, filer-concentration, filing-mix, and latest-source signals from the returned SEC records. Company, Universe, and Market Map modes fetch recent 10-K, 10-Q, 8-K, S-1, proxy, 20-F, 40-F, and N-CSR filings, convert them to text, and return paragraph-level excerpts. Results are cached for 24 hours by ticker and query where applicable. Keyword matching is exact but flexible for whitespace and hyphenation, so always read the linked SEC source before drawing conclusions.