What Is the WealthyTec Rank? Our 0–10 Growth-Consistency Score Explained
How the WealthyTec Rank scores a company from 0 to 10 on the long-term consistency of its revenue, earnings and EPS growth — what it captures, and what it deliberately ignores.
Last reviewed June 13, 2026 · 6 min read
Every company on WealthyTec carries a WealthyTec Rank — a single number from 0 to 10 shown on the screener and every company page. It exists to answer one question quickly: has this business grown its fundamentals consistently, over years, not just one good quarter?
What the rank measures
The rank is built from the long-term growth consistency of three fundamentals:
- Revenue — is the top line compounding?
- Net income (earnings) — is that growth reaching the bottom line?
- Earnings per share (EPS) — is it growing on a per-share basis, after dilution?
For each metric we look at the multi-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) and map it to a multiplier — sustained ~30%+ growth earns close to the full multiplier; flat growth earns a middling one; negative growth is penalised hard. The three multipliers are combined, with a small adjustment for the listing venue. The result is rescaled to 0–10.
Why all three must grow
Because the metrics multiply together, a company only scores highly when all three have grown consistently. A company can grow revenue fast while losing money, or grow earnings while diluting shareholders into oblivion — those patterns get caught. A 10/10 means revenue, profit and per-share profit have all compounded steadily for years.
What the rank deliberately ignores
Just as important is what the rank is not:
- It's not a price forecast. It says nothing about whether the stock is cheap or expensive today — pair it with valuation (P/E, the PEG used by the robo-advisor).
- It's not a buy signal. A high rank reflects past consistency, which can break. A low rank can describe a turnaround.
- It doesn't price in policy or delisting risk. See ADR delisting risk for the macro overlay every China investor needs.
How to use it
Treat the rank as a fast first filter for quality, then do the real work. In the screener you can sort the whole universe by rank, then narrow by region, sector and valuation. On a company page, read the rank alongside the revenue, net-income and EPS charts that produced it — for example PDD or Alibaba — so the number always connects back to the underlying trend.
Data and limits
Ranks are computed from multi-year financial statements. Coverage and recency vary by company — US-listed names draw on current regulatory filings, while some others rely on the most recent data we hold. The rank is a model, not a verdict; it's a starting point for your own analysis, not a substitute for it.