Canvas & Ratio
Choose your destination platform format
Layout Template
Choose a content structure for your slides
Preset Themes
Typography & Sizing
Brand Kit Customization
AGENCYConfigure brand assets for headers & footers
Outro Slide CTA
Customize your closing call-to-action slide
Background Pattern
Build Your Carousel
Drag and drop any post card below onto a slide, or use the quick buttons to insert content/images instantly!

π¨ BREAKING: Claude can now perform stock market research like a top consulting firmβfor free. Here are 10 powerful prompts that can replace the work of $100K/year stock analysts. π Save this for later.


1. Full Stock Research Report Act like a senior equity research analyst. Create a beginner-friendly research report on [COMPANY / TICKER]. Cover: business model, revenue streams, industry trends, competitors, financial performance, valuation, growth drivers, risks, bull/base/bear cases, and final research summary. Use recent public sources, cite dates, separate facts from assumptions, and do not give a buy/sell recommendation.

2. Earnings Call Breakdown Analyze the latest earnings call for [COMPANY / TICKER]. Summarize the 5 biggest takeaways, revenue changes, margins, guidance, management tone, analyst concerns, positive surprises, negative surprises, and what investors should watch next. Create a simple table of key metrics with latest result, prior result, change, and why it matters.

3. Red Flag Detector Act like a skeptical forensic analyst. Review [COMPANY / TICKER]for red flags in revenue quality, margins, cash flow, debt, dilution, insider activity, customer concentration, accounting, legal issues, and management language. Give each concern a severity score, explain why it matters, cite evidence, and create an overall red flag score from 1β10.

4. Competitive Moat Analysis Analyze the competitive moat of [COMPANY / TICKER]. Score brand, network effects, switching costs, cost advantages, scale, IP, distribution, regulation, data, and customer loyalty from 1β5. Compare with [COMPETITORS], explain the strongest advantages, biggest threats, and whether the moat is expanding, stable, or shrinking.

5. Valuation Comparison Compare [COMPANY / TICKER] with [COMPETITOR 1, 2, 3, 4]using market cap, revenue growth, margins, P/E, forward P/E, EV/revenue, EV/EBITDA, and price/free cash flow. Explain whether it looks cheap, fair, or expensive versus peers, what assumptions justify the valuation, and what could make the multiple expand or contract.

6. DCF Assumption Builder Help me build realistic DCF assumptions for [COMPANY / TICKER]. Create bear, base, and bull case assumptions for revenue growth, margins, tax rate, capex, working capital, free cash flow, discount rate, and terminal growth. Explain the reasoning behind each assumption and show how valuation changes under different discount rates and terminal growth rates.

7. Stock Catalyst Calendar Create a catalyst calendar for [COMPANY / TICKER] for the next 3, 6, and 12 months. Include earnings, product launches, investor days, regulatory decisions, lawsuits, macro events, industry conferences, management changes, buybacks, dividends, and major contracts. For each catalyst, explain timing, impact, upside risk, downside risk, confidence level, and source.

8. Management Quality Review Evaluate the leadership team of [COMPANY / TICKER]. Analyze CEO track record, CFO credibility, guidance accuracy, transparency, capital allocation, acquisitions, buybacks, dilution, insider ownership, compensation, board quality, and communication style. Score each area from 1β5 and explain whether management acts like long-term owners.

9. Bull vs. Bear Debate Simulate an investment committee debate on [COMPANY / TICKER]. Create a bull analyst and bear analyst. Have them debate growth, valuation, business quality, risks, financials, management, and upcoming catalysts. End with a neutral judge summary explaining which side has stronger evidence, what is uncertain, and what data I should verify next.

10. Beginner Stock Checklist Act like a patient investing teacher. Explain [COMPANY / TICKER]in simple language. Cover what it does, how it makes money, why investors care, what could go right, what could go wrong, profitability, growth, debt, valuation, and top risks. End with a beginner checklist: easy to understand, financially strong, growing, reasonably valued, risks understood, and needs more research.