Copy-paste AI prompts for finance pros & traders — organized by task, searchable, 1-click copy. 3 free · 16 in the full Pro library. Updated July 3, 2026.
Stop hand-assembling comps. Give the model the peer set and the metrics you judge on.
A 10-K is 200 pages engineered to be exhaustive, not useful. Extract the decision, not the document.
You are a senior investment analyst writing an investment-committee (IC) memo. I will paste a company's latest 10-K (or its EDGAR URL). Produce a structured first-draft IC memo with EXACTLY these sections: 1. BUSINESS MODEL — how the company actually makes money, in 3 sentences. 2. SEGMENT ECONOMICS — revenue mix, growth, and margin by segment (table). 3. CAPITAL ALLOCATION — capex / buybacks / M&A / debt and the trend. 4. RISK FACTORS — the 5 risks that actually matter (ignore boilerplate). 5. RED FLAGS — language, accounting, or disclosure items worth a second look. 6. THESIS — the bull case in 3 bullets. 7. VARIANT VIEW — where consensus could be wrong (your non-obvious take). 8. VALUATION FRAMING — the 2-3 metrics this name should be judged on and why. 9. DECISION — PASS / DILIGENCE / BUY-AT-PRICE + the one question that would change your mind. Rules: cite figures with the page/section. If a number isn't in the document, write "not disclosed" — never estimate.FREE
The alpha in CPI/FOMC/jobs isn't the number — it's what CHANGED in the language. Diff it.
Here are two consecutive {FOMC statements / CPI reports / releases}: PRIOR and NEW. Do a change-diff:
1. List every phrase that was ADDED, REMOVED, or REWORDED.
2. Classify each change hawkish / dovish / neutral and say why in one clause.
3. Give me the 5-bullet 'what actually changed' read a PM could act on within 60 seconds of the print.
4. One line: what the market is likely mispricing about this change.
Quote both versions for any change you flag. Do not summarize the whole document — only the deltas.FREEThe Fed moved. What does that actually mean for the 6 stocks you own?
The reason AI decks look 'off' is you never showed it YOUR house style. Point it at an existing deck first.
Point the model at the target's own materials and it will mirror their voice — instant client-ready output.
You don't need an API integration to put AI on your terminal data — you need a clean export and the right framing.
A screen gives you 40 names. The model turns them into 5 you can actually pitch.
Free data + the right prompt gets you 80% of what a screener does.
60 minutes of transcript, 5 minutes of signal. Separate the guide from the noise.
Don't read the whole firehose. Read only what moves YOUR positions, ranked.
The tells are in the footnotes and the language. Point the model there.
The cheapest edge in retail: argue the other side before you buy.
Your P&L is a scoreboard. Your journal is where the edge actually compounds.
You don't have a research team — you have a transcript and 20 minutes. Make them count.
I'm a retail trader. Here's {COMPANY}'s earnings call/release. In plain English:
1. Did they beat, miss, or meet — on revenue, EPS, AND guidance? (guidance matters most.)
2. What are the 3 things that could move the stock this week?
3. If I were considering a trade, what's the BULL case, the BEAR case, and the level/catalyst that would prove me wrong?
4. What am I likely to get wrong here as a retail trader?
Be blunt. This is not advice — help me think, don't tell me what to do.FREEBefore you trade options, have the model explain the trade back to you.