mit einem Klick
earnings-preview
// Prepare for an upcoming earnings report or earnings week by identifying the reports that matter, framing the key debates, and surfacing the read-through risk that could affect the user's watchlist or positions.
// Prepare for an upcoming earnings report or earnings week by identifying the reports that matter, framing the key debates, and surfacing the read-through risk that could affect the user's watchlist or positions.
| name | earnings-preview |
| description | Prepare for an upcoming earnings report or earnings week by identifying the reports that matter, framing the key debates, and surfacing the read-through risk that could affect the user's watchlist or positions. |
Use this skill when the user needs to prepare before one company reports or before an earnings-heavy week.
This skill will not:
Act like a skeptical earnings prep analyst. Focus on what matters, what is already priced in, what could surprise, and where the read-through really matters.
Use it when the user wants to:
Ask for:
Helpful but optional:
Use the user's materials first: pasted schedules, watchlists, company notes, guidance excerpts, estimate tables, transcripts, screenshots, or provider details already mentioned in the conversation.
If you already have enough timing and context to do the analysis, do not fetch anything.
If key schedule or estimate context is missing:
FMP, TradingEconomics, or Polygon, use references/providers/fmp.md, references/providers/tradingeconomics.md, or references/providers/polygon.md directlyUse references/relevance-ranking.md when you need a simple way to prioritize reports and explain why they matter.
Assess each report on four anchors before ranking it:
Benchmark Relevance: whether the company can move a sector, supplier chain, customer set, or broad index. Example: NVDA is benchmark-relevant for semis and AI infrastructure; a small software name usually is not.Debate Intensity: whether the quarter has one or two live disagreements that matter more than the headline beat or miss. Example: gross margin durability or cloud booking reacceleration counts as a real debate; generic "can they beat" does not.Read-Through Strength: whether peers or related industries will plausibly react to the same datapoints. Example: capex guidance from a hyperscaler may matter for semis, power, cooling, and networking.Positioning Risk: whether sentiment, recent price action, or the user's exposure makes the event more dangerous to hold through.Use the anchors to classify:
must-watch: benchmark relevance is high and at least one of debate intensity, read-through strength, or positioning risk is also highwatch: relevant event, but consequences are narrower or easier to absorbbackground: useful context, but low priority unless it directly affects the user's bookPrefer this output order:
Priority ListCore Assessment FrameworkKey DebatesRead-Through MapPlan RiskEvidence That Would Invalidate This AnalysisSource And CaveatsAlways return:
earnings-preview for NVDA next week. I care about AI demand, gross margin durability, and read-through for semis."earnings-preview for AAPL, AMZN, and COST over the next ten days and tell me which reports matter most for index and sector read-through."Use when the user wants an agent to interact with the eToro API for market data, portfolio and social features, or trade execution.
Use when the user has a trade journal or trade log and wants repeated strengths, mistakes, environment-dependent patterns, and process changes without turning the review into hindsight theater.
Use when the user needs a conservative position size from account equity, risk budget, entry, stop, and trading friction before entering a trade.
Use when the user wants to test whether a proposed entry, stop, and target structure is coherent, asymmetric enough, and vulnerable to obvious failure modes before the trade is placed.
Build a ranked map of the catalysts that could move a watchlist, theme, or portfolio by showing what matters, when it matters, and how those events could transmit across related names or exposures.
Review a watchlist and rank which names deserve active attention, background monitoring, or removal based on catalysts, tradability, redundancy, and evidence quality for the user's style and timeframe.