I Built a Personal Investment Advisor Gem — Here's What It Actually Does
I follow the markets closely. I manage my own portfolio across multiple accounts and I've developed a clear set of principles over the years about when to buy, when to hold, and when to take profits. What I wanted was an AI that understood those principles and could think through market questions with me — not one that gave me generic "diversify your portfolio" advice.
My Investment Advisor Gem does that.
What Is a Personal Investment Advisor Gem?
It's a Gemini assistant configured with your investing context — your strategy, your risk tolerance, your current holdings if you want to share them. Every question you ask is answered with that background already loaded.
The result is a conversation partner that responds to how you actually invest, not how a generic financial chatbot assumes you invest.
Why I Built This Gem
Most financial AI tools either give obvious advice or refuse to engage with anything specific. I needed something different:
- When I'm looking at a sector shift, I want to talk through what it means for my existing positions
- When I'm considering adding to a position, I want someone to stress-test my reasoning
- When a stock in my portfolio reports earnings, I want a quick read on whether anything changed
This Gem handles all three without starting from zero every time.
The Prompt I Use
Here's the core of my Gem's instructions:
You are my personal investment advisor. You understand equity markets, sector analysis, and portfolio strategy. When I ask about investments: - Engage with my specific situation, not generic advice - Help me stress-test my reasoning before I act - Flag risks I may be underweighting - Always note that your analysis is informational, not a regulated financial recommendation My strategy: long-term equity focus, buy on strong fundamentals, hold through volatility unless the thesis breaks. I take profits above 20% gains. I average down on strong conviction positions when price drops without a change in fundamentals.
That last paragraph is the key part. It tells the Gem how I actually operate, so its responses are calibrated to my approach rather than generic financial planning advice.
Real Examples — What I Actually Ask It
Some recent questions I've put to this Gem:
- "Semiconductors had a bad week. Does this look like sector rotation or something more structural?"
- "I'm up 22% on this position. The fundamentals haven't changed but the multiple has expanded. Should I take partial profits?"
- "This company just reported a miss but raised guidance. How do I interpret that?"
For the guidance question, it walked me through why a raised guidance beat can matter more than a single quarter miss, and what specific metrics to watch in the next reporting period. That kind of analysis took me 10 minutes to get versus an hour of reading through analyst notes.
What It's Good At (and Where It Falls Short)
Good at:
- Thinking through sector and macro context for a specific question
- Helping articulate and stress-test investment theses
- Explaining earnings reports and what the key signals are
- Keeping a consistent view of your strategy across conversations
Where it falls short:
- It doesn't have real-time pricing data unless you give it access via Google Search
- It cannot execute trades or connect to brokerage accounts
- For regulated financial advice, a licensed advisor is still necessary
I use it as a thinking partner, not an oracle. It helps me organize my reasoning before I act.
Try It Yourself — Starter Prompt
If you want to build a similar Gem, here's a starting point:
You are my personal investment advisor. Help me think through market questions specific to my situation. Stress-test my reasoning. Flag risks I may be missing. Always note that your analysis is informational, not regulated financial advice. My strategy: [your approach — time horizon, risk tolerance, how you decide to buy/sell]
Paste this into a new Gem at gemini.google.com, fill in your strategy, and test it with a real position you're currently thinking about.
- Series Overview: Gems vs GPTs vs Claude Projects
- Previous: My Personal Lawyer Gem
- You are here: My Personal Investment Advisor Gem
- Next: My Custom Portfolio Manager Gem (coming soon)
Related Posts
- Gemini Gems vs. ChatGPT GPTs vs. Claude Projects — How these custom AI tools compare before you build your first one
- Best Free AI Tools in 2026 — Where Gemini Gems fits in the broader AI tool landscape
- Is AI Safe to Use? Privacy and Security Guide — What to know before sharing portfolio details with an AI
Sources & Further Reading
- Google — Create and use Gems in Gemini — Official setup guide for Gemini Gems
- SEC — Ten Things to Consider Before You Make Investing Decisions — Useful baseline for any investment decision framework
- Investopedia — Fundamental Analysis — Reference for the approach this Gem works best alongside
Do you use AI to help think through investment decisions? What kinds of questions do you find it useful for? Let me know in the comments.
This is exactly the kind of AI use case I've been trying to figure out for my own investing. The point you made about not wanting generic "diversify your portfolio" advice really hit home — that's basically all you get from most financial tools. I love the idea of loading in your actual principles and risk tolerance so the conversation starts from a place of real context. Did you find it took a lot of iteration to get the Gem configured in a way that actually reflected your strategy accurately?
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