Fey was the proof that market software didn’t have to look like a spreadsheet from 2009. Dark, quiet, obsessively typeset — a stock page you could put on a wall. In mid-December 2025 the team announced it had joined Wealthsimple, and sign-ups closed. Their farewell note said a small independent team “could raise the bar in a category that had settled for less” — and they did.

That leaves a real gap. Fey’s users didn’t stop wanting what it offered; the product just left the market. If you’re holding a dead login, the honest answer is that no single product replaces Fey — because Fey quietly did several jobs at once. Pick your replacement by the job you actually hired it for.

If you hired Fey for research depth

Koyfin is the closest living thing to a research terminal for individuals: deep fundamentals, global coverage, flexible dashboards. Individual plans run $39–79/month as of July 2026. It won’t win design awards next to Fey, but the data depth is real.

If you hired Fey for beautiful charts inside your broker

Robinhood Legend is the most design-forward screen a brokerage currently ships, and it’s free with the account. The catch is the obvious one: it’s a broker’s surface, built to keep you trading on their rails.

If you hired Fey for the calm daily market read

This is our lane, so read it knowing that. MAC Terminal is a trading workflow dashboard: one place that reads the market regime and breadth, surfaces the running themes with the names carrying them, scans for setups on a schedule, sizes positions inside a risk plan, and journals the result. It shares Fey’s design values — dark, quiet, numbers first, one accent color, nothing fighting for attention — applied to a different job: the daily loop of an active stock trader.

And in the honest spirit of this post, here’s what MAC does not do that Fey did: global fundamental data, portfolio analytics across your holdings, and live earnings-call summaries. If those were your core Fey jobs, Koyfin fits better. If your Fey ritual was the morning read — what kind of tape is this, what’s working, what deserves attention today — that ritual has a home here, with backtested win rates shown honestly for every scanner, even when a strategy is having a bad quarter.

The bigger lesson from Fey

Design in market software isn’t decoration — it’s respect for your attention. Every gridline that doesn’t need to exist, every third accent color, every panel that answers no question is a tax on the decision you’re trying to make. Fey proved traders would pay for software that respects that. Whoever serves its orphaned users next has to keep proving it.

Educational market analysis only — not personalized investment advice. Competitor pricing as of July 2026; always verify on their sites.