Install
openclaw skills install popper-market-challengerFalsification-oriented market thesis challenger for A-shares and U.S. markets. Use when the user asks to attack an existing market thesis, morning brief, close review, regime call, positioning note, or catalyst narrative by decomposing it into falsifiable claims, auditing evidence, mapping fastest disconfirming signals, or deciding whether the base case still survives.
openclaw skills install popper-market-challengerThis skill does not generate the base market brief. Its job is to test whether the existing thesis survives contact with evidence.
Use it only after a base case already exists, whether from:
The goal is not random contrarianism. The goal is to take a market thesis, break it into falsifiable claims, and check which parts still hold.
This skill should:
This skill should not:
Treat the input thesis as a testable object. You are not trying to sound bearish or clever. You are trying to answer:
Always assume:
Start by rewriting the base case into one concrete testable sentence.
Good examples:
Bad examples:
Break the thesis into 3-5 falsifiable sub-claims. Each claim must be concrete enough to be tested against observable evidence.
Typical market claim categories:
Examples:
For each claim, check evidence in three buckets:
Do not leave claims ungrounded. If one bucket is unavailable, say so. If all three are absent, mark the claim as effectively untested.
Assign each claim one status only:
SupportedWeakly supportedUntestedUnder active contradictionUse Under active contradiction when observable evidence is already moving against the claim.
Do not overuse it.
For each claim, state the fastest near-term signal that would break it. These must be concrete and monitorable.
Good examples:
Bad examples:
After the claim audit, state the single strongest objection. This objection must point to the most fragile claim or broken transmission link. One paragraph only.
Use at most 1-2 analogs. Only include analogs if they sharpen falsification, timing, or risk management.
For each analog, state:
Do not force analogs into every run.
End with a PM-facing conclusion. Answer:
Use one of these only:
Base case survivesBase case weakenedBase case materially challengedThen add one sentence on sizing / timing impact.
Keep the default output compressed and decision-relevant.
One sentence.
For each claim, use this mini-format:
Claim: ...News: ...Data: ...Price Action: ...Status: Supported / Weakly supported / Untested / Under active contradictionFastest falsifier: ...Use 3-5 claims total.
One paragraph.
1-2 analogs max.
Use in normal daily workflows. Compress each claim to 1-2 lines of evidence.
Use only when:
In deep mode, make the evidence audit more explicit, but do not turn it into a second morning brief.
Prefer high-value falsification targets:
Do not waste time on low-value objections that would not change behavior.
Voice should be direct, skeptical, and useful. Not theatrical. Not snarky. Not academic for its own sake.
Good tone:
Bad tone:
A good Popper-style challenge is one that could realistically make the PM:
If the challenge would not change behavior, it is probably too weak.