🚨 BREAKING: AI can now analyze stocks like top hedge fund managers (100% free).
Here are 10 nuclear Claude prompts that completely replace $3,000/month Bloomberg terminals 💰📈
Bookmark this thread - you’ll thank yourself later 🔥
1. The Goldman Sachs Fundamental Analysis Screener
"You are a senior equity research analyst at Goldman Sachs with 20 years of experience evaluating companies for the firm's $2T+ asset management division.
I need a complete fundamental analysis of a stock as if you're writing a research report for institutional investors.
Analyze:
- Business model breakdown: how the company makes money explained simply
- Revenue streams: each segment with percentage contribution and growth trajectory
- Profitability analysis: gross margin, operating margin, net margin trends over 5 years
- Balance sheet health: debt-to-equity, current ratio, cash position vs total debt
- Free cash flow analysis: FCF yield, FCF growth rate, and capital allocation priorities
- Competitive advantages: pricing power, brand strength, switching costs, network effects rated 1-10
- Management quality: capital allocation track record, insider ownership, and compensation alignment
- Valuation snapshot: current P/E, P/S, EV/EBITDA vs 5-year average and sector peers
- Bull case and bear case with 12-month price targets for each
- One-paragraph verdict: buy, hold, or avoid with conviction level
Format as a Goldman Sachs-style equity research note with a summary rating box at the top.
The stock: [ENTER TICKER SYMBOL AND ANY SPECIFIC CONCERNS OR QUESTIONS YOU HAVE]"
2. The Morgan Stanley Technical Analysis Dashboard
"You are a senior technical strategist at Morgan Stanley who advises the firm's largest trading desk on chart patterns, momentum signals, and optimal entry and exit points.
I need a complete technical analysis breakdown of a stock covering every major indicator.
Chart:
- Trend analysis: primary trend direction on daily, weekly, and monthly timeframes
- Support and resistance: exact price levels where the stock is likely to bounce or stall
- Moving averages: 20-day, 50-day, 100-day, 200-day positions and crossover signals
- RSI reading: current value with interpretation (overbought, oversold, or neutral)
- MACD analysis: signal line crossovers, histogram momentum, and divergence detection
- Bollinger Bands: current position within bands and squeeze or expansion status
- Volume analysis: is volume confirming or contradicting the current price move
- Fibonacci retracement: key pullback levels from the most recent significant swing
- Chart pattern identification: head and shoulders, double tops, cup and handle, or flags
- Trade setup: specific entry price, stop-loss level, and two profit targets with risk-reward ratio
Format as a Morgan Stanley-style technical analysis note with a clear trade plan summary at the top.
The stock: [ENTER TICKER SYMBOL AND YOUR CURRENT POSITION — LONG, SHORT, OR WATCHING]"
3. The Bridgewater Risk Assessment Framework
"You are a senior portfolio risk analyst at Bridgewater Associates trained in Ray Dalio's All Weather principles, managing risk for the world's largest hedge fund with $150B+ in assets.
I need a complete risk assessment of a stock or my portfolio.
Assess:
- Volatility profile: historical and implied volatility vs sector and market averages
- Beta analysis: how much the stock moves relative to the S&P 500 in up and down markets
- Maximum drawdown history: worst peak-to-trough drops over the last 10 years with recovery times
- Correlation analysis: how this stock moves relative to my other holdings
- Sector concentration risk: am I overexposed to one industry or theme
- Interest rate sensitivity: how rising or falling rates impact this stock specifically
- Recession stress test: estimated price decline in a 2008-style or COVID-style crash
- Earnings risk: how much the stock typically moves on earnings day and upcoming catalyst dates
- Liquidity risk: average daily volume and bid-ask spread analysis
- Hedging recommendation: specific options strategies or inverse positions to protect downside
Format as a Bridgewater-style risk memo with a risk dashboard summary table and portfolio-level recommendations.
My holdings: [LIST YOUR POSITIONS WITH APPROXIMATE ALLOCATION PERCENTAGES AND TOTAL PORTFOLIO VALUE]"
4. The JPMorgan Earnings Analyzer
"You are a senior equity research analyst at JPMorgan Chase who writes pre-earnings and post-earnings analysis for the firm's institutional trading clients managing billions in assets.
I need a complete earnings analysis for an upcoming or recent earnings report.
Analyze:
- Earnings history: last 6 quarters of EPS beats or misses with stock price reaction each time
- Revenue and EPS consensus estimates for the upcoming quarter from Wall Street analysts
- Whisper number: what the market actually expects vs the published consensus
- Key metrics to watch: the 3-5 specific numbers that will determine if the stock goes up or down
- Segment expectations: revenue breakdown by business line with growth estimates
- Management guidance: what leadership promised last quarter and whether they're likely to deliver
- Options implied move: how much the market expects the stock to swing on earnings day
- Historical earnings day patterns: average and median move over the last 8 reports
- Pre-earnings positioning: should I buy before, sell before, or wait for the reaction
- Post-earnings playbook: how to trade the gap up, gap down, or flat open scenarios
Format as a JPMorgan-style earnings preview note with a decision summary and trade plan at the top.
The stock: [ENTER TICKER SYMBOL AND EARNINGS DATE IF KNOWN]"
5. The BlackRock Dividend Income Analyzer
"You are a senior income portfolio strategist at BlackRock who constructs dividend portfolios for pension funds and retirees needing reliable passive income that grows faster than inflation.
I need a complete dividend analysis and income projection for a stock or portfolio.
Analyze:
- Current dividend yield vs 5-year average yield and sector average
- Dividend growth rate: annualized growth over 3, 5, and 10 years
- Consecutive years of dividend increases (Dividend Aristocrat or King status)
- Payout ratio analysis: percentage of earnings and free cash flow paid as dividends
- Dividend safety score: rate 1-10 based on payout ratio, debt levels, and cash flow stability
- Income projection: annual dividend income on my investment amount growing over 10 and 20 years
- DRIP compounding: total return projection if I reinvest all dividends automatically
- Ex-dividend date calendar: upcoming dates I need to own shares by to collect the payment
- Tax treatment: qualified vs ordinary dividend classification and tax-efficient account placement
- Yield trap check: is the high yield sustainable or a warning sign of a future dividend cut
Format as a BlackRock-style income analysis with a dividend safety scorecard and 10-year income projection table.
My investment: [ENTER TICKER SYMBOL OR LIST OF DIVIDEND STOCKS AND YOUR TOTAL INVESTMENT AMOUNT]"
6. The Citadel Sector Rotation Strategist
"You are a senior macro strategist at Citadel who manages sector rotation strategies based on economic cycles, Federal Reserve policy, and relative strength analysis across all 11 S&P 500 sectors.
I need a complete sector rotation analysis telling me which sectors to overweight and underweight right now.
Analyze:
- Economic cycle positioning: where we are in the expansion, peak, contraction, trough cycle
- Sector performance rankings: all 11 sectors ranked by 1-month, 3-month, and 6-month returns
- Relative strength analysis: which sectors are gaining momentum vs losing momentum
- Interest rate impact: which sectors benefit and which suffer from current Fed policy direction
- Earnings growth comparison: forward earnings growth estimates for each sector
- Valuation comparison: forward P/E for each sector vs its 10-year historical average
- Money flow analysis: which sectors are seeing institutional buying vs selling
- Defensive vs offensive positioning: risk-on or risk-off based on current market conditions
- Top ETF picks: best ETF for each recommended overweight sector with expense ratios
- Model sector allocation: exact percentage weights for an optimized sector portfolio right now
Format as a Citadel-style sector strategy memo with a ranking table, allocation recommendation, and ETF implementation guide.
My portfolio focus: [DESCRIBE YOUR RISK TOLERANCE, TIME HORIZON, AND CURRENT SECTOR EXPOSURES IF ANY]"
7. The Renaissance Technologies Quantitative Screener
"You are a senior quantitative researcher at Renaissance Technologies who builds systematic stock screening models using statistical patterns, factor analysis, and anomaly detection to find mispriced securities.
I need a multi-factor stock screening system that identifies the best opportunities based on data.
Screen:
- Value factors: P/E below sector median, P/FCF under 15, EV/EBITDA in bottom quartile
- Quality factors: ROE above 15%, stable margins, low debt-to-equity, high interest coverage
- Momentum factors: price above 200-day MA, relative strength rank in top 20%, positive earnings revisions
- Growth factors: revenue growth above 10%, EPS growth accelerating, expanding margins
- Sentiment factors: insider buying, institutional accumulation, short interest declining
- Custom composite score: blend all factors into a single ranking score from 1-100
- Top 10 stocks: highest composite scores with individual factor breakdown for each
- Sector distribution: ensure the screen isn't accidentally concentrated in one sector
- Backtest context: how this factor combination has historically performed vs the S&P 500
- Watch list: next 10 stocks that almost made the cut and what would push them in
Format as a Renaissance-style quantitative screening report with a ranked stock table and factor score breakdown.
My criteria: [DESCRIBE YOUR PREFERRED SECTORS, MARKET CAP RANGE, AND ANY FACTORS YOU WANT TO EMPHASIZE OR EXCLUDE]"
8. The Vanguard ETF Portfolio Constructor
"You are a senior portfolio strategist at Vanguard who builds low-cost, diversified ETF portfolios for investors ranging from aggressive growth seekers to conservative retirees needing capital preservation.
I need a complete ETF portfolio built for my specific financial situation.
Build:
- Asset allocation: exact percentages for US stocks, international stocks, bonds, REITs, and commodities
- Specific ETF selection: ticker symbol, expense ratio, and assets under management for each pick
- Core holdings: the 3-5 ETFs that form the foundation of the portfolio
- Satellite positions: 2-3 tactical ETFs for additional growth or income
- Geographic diversification: developed markets, emerging markets, and US allocation ratios
- Bond allocation: duration strategy based on current interest rate environment
- Expected return range: historical annual return at this allocation with best and worst year scenarios
- Rebalancing rules: how often to rebalance and what percentage drift triggers action
- Tax optimization: which ETFs go in taxable vs IRA vs Roth accounts for maximum tax efficiency
- Dollar cost averaging plan: how to invest a lump sum or monthly contributions across all positions
Format as a Vanguard-style investment policy statement with allocation pie chart description and a specific ETF purchase list.
My situation: [DESCRIBE YOUR AGE, INVESTMENT AMOUNT, RISK TOLERANCE, TIME HORIZON, AND ACCOUNT TYPES]"
9. The D.E. Shaw Options Strategy Architect
"You are a senior options strategist at D.E. Shaw who designs options strategies for sophisticated investors seeking income generation, downside protection, and leveraged upside with defined risk.
I need an options strategy recommendation based on my market outlook and risk tolerance.
Design:
- Outlook assessment: translate my view into the right options strategy category
- Strategy selection: covered calls, cash-secured puts, spreads, straddles, or iron condors with reasoning
- Exact trade setup: specific strike prices, expiration dates, and contract quantities
- Maximum profit calculation: the most I can make if the trade goes perfectly
- Maximum loss calculation: the most I can lose in the worst-case scenario
- Breakeven price: exactly where the stock needs to be for me to break even at expiration
- Probability of profit: estimated likelihood this trade makes money based on current implied volatility
- Greeks analysis: delta, theta, gamma exposure and what they mean for my position
- Adjustment plan: what to do if the stock moves against me (roll, close, or add to the position)
- Exit rules: when to take profits early and when to cut losses
Format as a D.E. Shaw-style options trade recommendation with a payoff diagram description and risk management rules.
My setup: [ENTER THE STOCK TICKER, YOUR DIRECTIONAL VIEW (BULLISH, BEARISH, NEUTRAL), TIME HORIZON, AND RISK BUDGET]"
10. The Two Sigma Macro Market Outlook
"You are a senior macro strategist at Two Sigma who synthesizes economic data, Federal Reserve policy, geopolitical risks, and cross-asset signals into a comprehensive market outlook for the firm's portfolio managers.
I need a complete market outlook covering everything that could move stocks in the next 3-6 months.
Assess:
- Economic indicators dashboard: GDP growth, unemployment, inflation, consumer spending trends
- Federal Reserve analysis: current policy stance, rate decision probabilities, and QT impact
- Earnings season outlook: aggregate S&P 500 earnings growth expectations and guidance trends
- Valuation assessment: is the overall market cheap, fair, or expensive by historical standards
- Credit market signals: high yield spreads, investment grade spreads, and what they're telling us
- Market breadth analysis: advance-decline line, percentage of stocks above 200-day MA, new highs vs lows
- Sentiment indicators: VIX level, put-call ratio, AAII survey, and CNN Fear & Greed Index
- Geopolitical risk factors: active conflicts, trade tensions, and election impacts on markets
- Seasonal patterns: what historical data says about market performance in the coming months
- Actionable positioning: specific overweight, underweight, and hedge recommendations for right now
Format as a Two Sigma-style macro strategy note with a market dashboard summary and a clear positioning recommendation.
My portfolio: [DESCRIBE YOUR CURRENT POSITIONS, BIGGEST CONCERNS, AND WHAT SPECIFIC MARKET QUESTIONS KEEP YOU UP AT NIGHT]"
I’ve been quietly testing every NotebookLM prompt that’s quietly 10x’ing research for students, founders & researchers in 2026.
Found 15 absolute killers that aren’t in any big list yet.
These turn NotebookLM from “nice audio toy” into a full research co-pilot.
Steal them all 👇
1/ THE “ONE-SENTENCE THESIS” PROMPT
Reddit power users swear by this to kill fluff instantly:
"Read every source and distill the SINGLE most important thesis that ties everything together. Then prove it with the three strongest pieces of evidence from the documents. End with one sentence the author would tattoo on their arm."
2/ ULTIMATE EXAM CRAMMER
Students are getting 90+ with this:
"Act as the world’s best tutor who knows exactly what will be on the exam. From all sources create:
• 8 high-yield questions (mix of MCQ + short answer)
• Model answers with page references
• 3 sneaky trap questions professors love
• One-paragraph “if you only remember one thing” summary"
BREAKING: Claude is a monster for market research.
I reverse-engineered how top teams at McKinsey, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan actually use it.
The gap is massive.
Here are 10 high-impact Claude prompts they’d rather you didn’t have (save this).
1. Market Sizing (TAM/SAM/SOM) from Scratch
Most founders pay consultants $3K just for a market sizing slide.
Claude does it in 30 seconds with actual logic:
Prompt:
You are a senior market research analyst at McKinsey.
Calculate the TAM, SAM, and SOM for [YOUR PRODUCT/SERVICE] in [TARGET MARKET].
For each:
- Show your math (top-down AND bottom-up approach)
- Cite the assumptions you're making
- Flag where your estimates are weakest
- Compare to any known market reports if applicable
Format as an investor-ready slide with numbers, not paragraphs. If my market is smaller than I think, tell me now.
2. Customer Persona Builder (Based on Real Data, Not Guesswork)
Consultants charge $5K to interview 10 people and hand you a persona deck with stock photos.
This is better:
Prompt:
You are a consumer insights researcher at Goldman Sachs
Build 3 detailed customer personas for [YOUR PRODUCT] in [INDUSTRY]
For each persona:
- Demographics + psychographics (what do they read, follow, trust?)
- Buying trigger: What event makes them Google your solution?
- Decision process: Who else influences their purchase?
- Objections: What's their #1 reason to say no?
- Exact phrases they'd use to describe their problem (for ad copy)
- No generic "35-year-old marketing manager" personas
- Base everything on behavioral patterns, not demographics
- Each persona should suggest a different acquisition channel
BREAKING: AI can now build financial models like Morgan Stanley analysts (for free).
Here are 12 Claude prompts that replace $200K+/year investment banking jobs
(bookmark this thread 🧵)
1/ DCF Valuation Model
You are a Senior Analyst at Goldman Sachs. I need a complete DCF (Discounted Cash Flow) valuation model for [COMPANY NAME].
Please provide:
- Free cash flow projections: Next 5 years with growth assumptions
- WACC calculation: Cost of equity + cost of debt breakdown
- Terminal value: Both perpetuity growth and exit multiple methods
- Sensitivity analysis: How value changes with different assumptions
- Discount rate justification: Why we chose this WACC
- Key drivers: What makes cash flow go up or down
- Comparable companies: How our assumptions compare to peers
- Valuation range: Bull case, base case, bear case scenarios
Format as investment banking pitch book valuation page with clear formulas.
Company: [DESCRIBE COMPANY, INDUSTRY, FINANCIALS]
2/ Three-Statement Financial Model
You are a VP at Morgan Stanley. I need a complete three-statement model for [COMPANY NAME].
Please provide:
- Income statement: Revenue, costs, EBITDA, net income (5 years)
- Balance sheet: Assets, liabilities, equity (5 years)
- Cash flow statement: Operating, investing, financing activities (5 years)
- Link formulas: How statements connect (net income → cash flow → balance sheet)
- Working capital: How AR, inventory, and AP change
- Debt schedule: Principal payments and interest expense
- Key assumptions: Revenue growth, margins, capex as % of sales
- Error checks: Balance sheet balancing and circular references
Format as Excel-style model with formulas explained in plain English.
Company: [DESCRIBE BUSINESS, CURRENT FINANCIALS, GROWTH STAGE]
Your phone isn’t personal. It’s a data sensor with a camera.
In 2026, privacy isn’t a feature. It’s a fight.
If you haven’t audited your device, you’re not the user. You’re the product.
Here’s the 18-step Ghost Protocol to take your phone back.
1. The "Invisible" Listener
Ever talked about "blue shoes" and seen an ad 5 minutes later? It’s not a coincidence, and they aren't "listening" to your voice. They’re tracking your ultrasonic cross-device pings. Your phone emits sounds you can't hear to talk to your smart TV and laptop. Let's kill that first.
2. Kill the "Significant Locations"
Your iPhone/Android keeps a hidden list of everywhere you go: your gym, your job, your "secret" spots.
- iOS: Settings → Privacy → Location Services → System Services → Significant Locations.
- Action: Clear History and turn it OFF. Stop giving them your routine on a silver platter.
If Google wants you to pay for Gmail storage, do this first before they lock you out of new emails.
I went from 14.9/15GB to 6GB in one afternoon.
I hope this helps you as it has helped me:
Rule #0: One account = one trap.
Multiple free accounts = infinite storage.
Most people know you can make extra Gmails…
Almost no one uses them correctly.
Method A – The "Archive Puppet" (easiest)
1. Create new free Gmail 2. On old account → Google Takeout → export everything (emails + Drive + Photos) 3. Import to new account via IMAP or manual upload 4. Delete originals from main account
→ Boom, fresh 15GB on main + old stuff safe on puppet