AIG vs ARES — Multi-factor Comparison

Bottom line
AIG and ARES diverge most on accruals (ARES 77 vs 50) and short interest (AIG 54 vs 30). They are most aligned on insider flow (within 0 points). Research signal — not investment advice.

Compare tickers

Side-by-side multi-factor analysis across 2-4 tickers. Every factor score the Framler engine computes, plus regime state, confluence pattern override, and 90% prediction interval — ranked colour-wise across the selected cohort on each row.

AIGARES
Metric
AIG
Financial Services
ARES
Financial Services
Framler score
44
[590]
42
[588]
Verdictmixedbearish
RegimeTXTX
PatternNO EDGE
Price change+0.64%+0.83%
Factor scores (0-100)
QualityNEUTRALWEAK
ValueNEUTRALWEAK
MomentumWEAKWEAK
PEADGOODNEUTRAL
InsiderNEUTRALNEUTRAL
NLP tonePOORPOOR
Short int.NEUTRALSTRONG
Options flowWEAKWEAK
SpilloverWEAKPOOR
AccrualsNEUTRALSTRONG
Sector mom.WEAKWEAK
Q × V × MNEUTRALNEUTRAL

How to read this. Colour scale runs bright-green at 65+ to bright-red below 35 across every row. A ticker with mostly green cells and a bullish pattern is a coherent long thesis; mostly red with a bearish pattern is a coherent short. Mixed colour rows suggest factor disagreement — cross-check against the pattern library to see which setup the composite resolved to. Short interest is colour-inverted (high score = low actual SI, shown green because absence of crowded shorts is bullish).