Soar

How can people build conviction, context and committment to investing in assets beyond their native market? Soar shows investors a consolidated view of their entire portfolio, organized by strategy, and unified in their own currency.
You read that TSMC is benefiting from the AI boom, and you want in. Or the Paytm IPO drops, and suddenly there’s a window into early exposure in India.
But quickly, the excitement turns into uncertainty. What does this actually mean for you and your investing goals? Is this a signal, or just noise?
And even when you decide it is worth acting on, things get messy fast. You’re switching between apps, checking different markets, opening spreadsheets to sanity-check your own decision. And making a couple dozen calls to family across time zones to understand what’s happening locally. You move money, watch out
for exchange rates, and hope nothing gets lost in translation.

This is not just friction in execution, but
fragmentation in perspective. Each decision
ends up being made from whatever piece of the
system is in front of you at that moment. Over
time, this creates a structural split: two financial
trajectories that are meant to represent one life,
but exist in separate contexts. Often leading one
portfolio to quietly become secondary.
That made me start asking a different question.
If access to global markets is no longer the
constraint, what new mental model is needed
to support conviction, context, and long-term
relationships with assets across borders?
Soar is my attempt to design that.
It uses the India–U.S. context to explore what
it means to invest across markets as a single
system. It brings everything into one unified
view, where portfolios are translated into a single
currency so you’re not constantly doing mental
conversions just to understand where you stand.
It lets you compare and gain context of what
certain stocks across markets mean.
But more importantly, it changes what you’re
actually looking at. Instead of thinking in terms
of individual tickers, Soar shifts the focus toward
strategies you’re trying to build over time.
In the end, Soar is less about giving you access
to more markets, and more about changing how
those markets are held in your mind, so investing
across borders feels like one continuous system,
not a set of disconnected decisions.


