What 'no recommendations' means in practice
Every briefing gives you fundamentals, analyst consensus, momentum, and news context — and stops there. You will never see 'buy', 'sell', 'hold', a price target, or a rating from Lucex. The AI is instructed to describe and explain, not to direct. The decision, and its consequences, stay entirely with you.
How AI can analyse without advising
The distinction is between information and a personalised recommendation. Lucex reports what public data shows about a company — its P/E, EPS, free cash flow, 52-week range, and the current analyst consensus — and translates it into plain language. Reporting that analysts are, on average, positive is information; telling you to act on it would be advice. Lucex only ever does the former.
What you get in a briefing
You add a ticker and your average cost. The AI returns a structured briefing: what the company does, how its fundamentals look, where the price sits in its 52-week range, what analysts collectively expect, and the recent news that moved it — each framed around your specific position. Every briefing ends with a mandatory disclaimer.
Why we built it this way
An AI that hands out buy and sell calls is, in the EU, edging into regulated investment advice — and into the same conflict-of-interest territory as a paid stock tip. Lucex is structured as an informational tool under the Italian TUF (D.Lgs. 58/1998) and MiFID II. The absence of recommendations is not a missing feature; it is the design.