ClawHub Stock Trading Skills: Big Demand, Thin Code
We audited ClawHub for stock trading skills, expecting to find a healthy mix of market screeners, portfolio tools, API connectors, and analysis agents for major exchanges.
What we found was a lot more interesting: strong user interest, but very little real implementation.
BytesAgain searched ClawHub for stock trading-related skills and found 9 relevant results. Out of those, only 2 contained actual Python code. That's the headline. The rest were mostly prompts, documents, templates, or strategy descriptions β useful in some contexts, but not the kind of executable tooling traders and builders usually expect when searching for "stock trading skills."
The most downloaded skill has no code
The biggest surprise was investment-analyst, which has 1,864 downloads and is the most popular stock-related skill we found.
But it is a pure document skill. No Python. No API calls. No live market data. No executable trading workflow.
That does not make it useless. A structured investment analysis document can still help users reason through opportunities. But it does highlight a major problem on ClawHub: downloads do not equal quality, completeness, or technical depth.
A skill can be popular because it has a good title, a broad use case, or strong discoverability β not because it actually does the job users imagine it does.
The only real stock market skill
Among the skills we reviewed, stock-market-analyzer stood out because it was the only real stock market skill with Python REST API functionality. It had 105 downloads, far fewer than the document-only leaders, but it was much closer to what developers and trading-tool builders are probably looking for.
This is exactly the kind of mismatch we watch for at BytesAgain: the useful technical asset is not always the one with the most downloads.
The other code-based result was crypto-investment-strategist, with 666 downloads. It includes Python code, which is good, but it is focused on crypto rather than traditional equities. Helpful for digital asset workflows, but not a solution for users who want NASDAQ, S&P 500, FTSE, or broader stock market coverage.
Templates are not trading tools
We also found warren-buffett-investment, with 467 downloads. It is more of a template-style skill and contains zero code.
Again, that can still be useful for learning or framing investment decisions. Buffett-style checklists and valuation prompts have a place. But they are not the same as a functioning stock analysis system.
The same applies to research-oriented resources like investment-research. These can support the thinking process, but they do not fill the technical gap.
The biggest gap: no serious US/UK stock API skill
Here is the most important finding from our audit:
There are zero dedicated skills for NASDAQ, S&P 500, or FTSE.
That is a huge gap.
There is no obvious high-quality skill for pulling US or UK stock data, comparing equities, screening markets, tracking indices, or building API-based analysis workflows around major exchanges.
For a category as popular as stock trading, that is a major opportunity. Builders could create skills for:
- NASDAQ and NYSE market data analysis
- S&P 500 stock screening
- FTSE 100 monitoring
- Earnings calendar workflows
- Portfolio risk checks
- REST API integrations for live or delayed stock data
Final verdict
ClawHub has interest in stock trading skills, but the category is still immature. The most downloaded resources are not necessarily the most functional, and the code-backed options are extremely limited.
Our takeaway: stock trading is underserved on ClawHub.
If you are a developer, this is a clear opening. If you are a user, be careful: check whether a skill actually contains code before assuming it can analyze markets or connect to stock APIs.
Explore the current landscape here: https://bytesagain.com/skills?q=stock+trading
