Get the FREE Ultimate OpenClaw Setup Guide →
I

Money

Verified

@ivangdavila

npx machina-cli add skill @ivangdavila/money --openclaw
Files (1)
SKILL.md
3.4 KB

Personal Finance Rules

Before Any Advice

  • Ask about existing debts, income stability, and country of residence — generic advice without context is dangerous
  • High-interest debt (credit cards, payday loans) must be paid first — no investment beats 20%+ guaranteed return of eliminating debt
  • Emergency fund of 3-6 months expenses comes before investing — without it, any crisis forces selling at the worst time

Inflation Reality

  • Cash in savings accounts loses purchasing power every year — 2-3% inflation means €10,000 becomes €7,400 in real terms after 10 years
  • Long-term projections must use real returns (after inflation) — 7% real is honest, 10% nominal is misleading
  • "Safe" bonds can lose to inflation — being conservative isn't the same as being safe

Investment Math

  • Fees compound against you — 1% annual fee takes 25% of returns over 30 years
  • Time in market beats timing the market — missing the 10 best days in a decade cuts returns in half
  • Past performance predicts nothing — last year's top fund is often next year's loser
  • Diversification is the only free lunch — single stocks are gambling, broad index funds are investing

Tax Awareness

  • Every country has tax-advantaged accounts — ask which ones apply before recommending where to invest
  • Capital gains, dividends, and interest are taxed differently — account type matters
  • Tax loss harvesting and rebalancing have tax implications — don't ignore them
  • Retirement accounts have withdrawal rules — early access often means penalties

Behavioral Traps

  • Lifestyle inflation silently erases raises — a €5,000 raise that becomes €5,000 more spending changes nothing
  • Loss aversion makes people sell winners and hold losers — the opposite of what works
  • "I'll start investing when I have more money" is the most expensive delay — small amounts now beat large amounts later
  • Checking investments daily increases bad decisions — less attention often means better returns

Insurance First

  • Protect existing assets before growing them — health, disability, liability coverage
  • Life insurance only matters if someone depends on your income
  • High deductibles with lower premiums often make sense for those with emergency funds
  • Insurance is for catastrophic risks, not minor inconveniences

Debt Hierarchy

  • Not all debt is equal — mortgage at 3% is different from credit card at 22%
  • Paying minimums on low-interest debt while investing the difference often wins mathematically
  • Student loans and mortgages may have tax benefits — factor them in
  • Debt-free feels good but isn't always optimal — opportunity cost matters

Practical Automation

  • Pay yourself first: automate savings on payday — what's left is what you spend
  • Automate bill payments to avoid late fees and credit damage
  • Increase savings rate with every raise — split the raise between lifestyle and saving
  • Annual rebalancing is enough — more frequent trading usually hurts

Red Flags

  • Any "guaranteed" high returns — if it sounds too good, it is
  • Pressure to decide quickly — legitimate opportunities don't vanish in 24 hours
  • Complex products you don't understand — complexity hides fees
  • Anyone who benefits from your investment decision giving you advice

Source

git clone https://clawhub.ai/ivangdavila/moneyView on GitHub

Overview

Money offers practical personal finance rules for saving, investing, and avoiding traps. It stresses starting with your context (debts, income stability, country), paying high-interest debt first, and building a 3-6 month emergency fund before investing. It also covers inflation, fees, taxes, behavioral traps, insurance, and automation to help you act with discipline.

How This Skill Works

It codifies a decision hierarchy and habits: assess context, clear high-interest debt, fund emergencies, then invest in diversified index funds with low fees. It emphasizes real-return thinking (inflation-adjusted) and a disciplined automation approach: pay yourself first, automate bills, and rebalance annually.

When to Use It

  • When you're deciding between paying down debt or investing
  • When inflation erodes cash and you need real returns
  • When choosing between single stocks and broad index funds
  • When optimizing taxes and account types before investing
  • When setting up automated savings and annual rebalancing

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Assess debts, income, and country; identify high-interest debt to pay first
  2. Step 2: Build a 3-6 month emergency fund and automate savings on payday
  3. Step 3: Create a simple plan: invest in broad index funds, account for taxes, and rebalance annually

Best Practices

  • Pay off high-interest debt first
  • Build an emergency fund of 3-6 months of expenses
  • Use real returns after inflation and beware misleading nominal returns
  • Prefer diversified broad index funds; watch fees and avoid timing the market
  • Automate savings, bill payments, and annual portfolio rebalancing

Example Use Cases

  • Prioritize eliminating credit card debt before investing
  • Calculate inflation impact: €10,000 with 2-3% inflation loses real value over 10 years
  • Choose broad index funds rather than single-stock bets
  • Use tax-advantaged accounts and understand differences in capital gains, dividends, and interest
  • Set up pay-yourself-first automation and annual rebalancing instead of frequent trading

Frequently Asked Questions

Add this skill to your agents
Sponsor this space

Reach thousands of developers