R Score Methodology
The R Score on the test stock page is a route-level composite. It is not a brokerage recommendation, and it does not replace official analyst coverage. It simply compresses the current route signals into one readable number.
Inputs
Inputs currently used
The first version of the score only uses data already connected on the page.
Momentum
The route reads retained price performance, especially the one-year move against the benchmark.
Quality
ROE and ROCE are used as the first quality anchors where the fundamentals lane is connected.
Ownership
Promoter ownership and combined FII plus DII ownership help the score reflect confidence from long-term holders.
Coverage confidence
The score also rewards pages where fundamentals, shareholding, and retained history are actually connected.
Interpretation
How to read it
The score is meant to orient the user quickly, not to make the decision for them.
75 and above
Stronger route posture. Momentum, coverage, and quality signals are mostly supportive.
60 to 74
Constructive posture. Enough strength exists to justify deeper research, but not without checking the details.
45 to 59
Watchlist posture. Mixed signals mean the stock deserves context before conviction.
Below 45
Cautious posture. The route is surfacing weak quality, weak momentum, or limited data confidence.
Limits
Important limitations
This methodology is intentionally narrow because the prototype should stay honest about what it knows.
The score is not analyst consensus and should not be shown as one.
Missing data should reduce confidence rather than get replaced with invented values.
As more official coverage is connected, the formula can expand without changing the page structure.