Community spotlight: strategies worth a look right now
A tour of standout strategies you can follow on Soar today — from public-record trackers to industry theses — each with a realized track record in view.
There is a real difference between a firehose of signals and a shelf of strategies you actually chose. Soar leans hard toward the second. Instead of one anonymous stream, you get a menu of named, transparent strategies — each one a lens on the market with its own logic and its own realized track record. This is a walk through a handful worth a look right now, framed as exactly that: a menu, not a recommendation.
Following a strategy is your call. What Soar tries to do is make that call an informed one — by telling you plainly what each strategy watches, and by showing what it has actually done, not what it promises to do.

Public-record trackers: following the paper trail
Some of the most interesting strategies on Soar aren't opinions at all — they're structured reads of documents that are already public. Filings, disclosures, and records that anyone can access, surfaced and organized so you don't have to comb through them yourself. These are commentary on a public thesis: the idea that what gets disclosed is worth watching.
**Congress Trades** — a tracker built on publicly disclosed trading activity by members of Congress. It exists because those disclosures are a matter of record, and a lot of people find them worth watching. Not affiliated with any member or office.
**13F Whales** — a lens on the positions large institutional managers report in their quarterly 13F filings. It's the classic "what are the big funds holding?" question, organized. Not affiliated with any firm.
**Insider Buys** — a view of publicly reported insider purchase activity at companies. The premise is simple and old: insider buying is a disclosed signal people like to keep an eye on. Not affiliated with any company or individual.
**Pelosi Tracker** — a focused feed of publicly disclosed trades tied to one widely-followed name. It's a subset of the broader Congress lens, isolated because so many people ask about it specifically. Not affiliated.
**Senate Trades** — the Senate counterpart to the Congress tracker, drawn from the same class of public disclosures.
The common thread: none of these invent anything. They take records that already exist and put them in front of you in a usable form. Whether that's a lens you want to follow is entirely up to you.
Industry lenses: following a thesis
The other flavor on the menu is thematic. Instead of tracking who filed what, an industry lens organizes around an idea — a corner of the market you might have a view on. Two worth a look:
**Semiconductors** — a focused read on the chip sector, for anyone who wants their attention concentrated on that theme rather than spread across everything.
**Quantum Computing** — a lens on a younger, more speculative corner of the market, for people who want to follow that specific frontier.
An industry lens is a way of saying "this is the part of the market I care about — show me that." It narrows the field to a thesis you've decided is worth your attention, which is a very different experience from staring at the whole market at once.
The point of a menu is that you pick. Soar's job is to make every option legible — what it watches, and what it has actually done.
Every strategy shows its record

Here's the part that matters most, and the reason "track record in view" keeps coming up: every strategy on Soar carries a realized track record you can look at before you follow it. Not a marketing highlight reel — the actual history of what happened, kept honest and visible.
That's a deliberate choice. It's easy to describe a strategy in flattering language; it's harder, and more useful, to show its record and let you judge. A track record is a description of the past, and the past is exactly that — the past. It doesn't tell you what comes next. What it does do is let you evaluate a strategy on evidence instead of vibes before you decide whether it belongs on your shelf.
How following works — and what stays yours
Following a strategy on Soar is a choice you make and can unmake. You browse the menu, look at each strategy's record, and add the ones you want to watch. Nothing is pushed on you.
If you ever connect a broker to act on a strategy, one thing stays constant: access is always trade-only. Soar can never withdraw or move your funds — that capability simply isn't part of the picture. If you self-host, your broker API keys live only on your own infrastructure and never touch Soar's servers. If you choose Soar-managed hosting, your keys are stored encrypted and scoped to trade-only, with your consent. Either way, your money stays your money.
Start with the menu
The strategies above are a sampling, not a shortlist — a way to show the range, from public-record trackers to industry theses. The best way to get a feel for any of them is to open its page, read what it watches, and look at its record. Then decide, on your own terms, whether it earns a spot in what you follow.
Explore the full menu inside the Soar app, keep up with what's moving in the daily brief, and dig into more strategy commentary on the blog. If you want the mechanics of following and connecting, the help center walks through it.
Informational and educational content only. Not investment advice. Trading involves risk, including loss of capital.




