Ask what stocks to buy that will go way up.
If you make a spreadsheet of companies' stock prices for the last six months (from NASDAQ.com for example), and shared an image of that in your question and asked it, "which of these stocks has had the greatest percentage increase in stock price and please provide the % increase by company," it would probably be able to provide a useful answer.
If you make a spreadsheet of companies' stock prices for the last six months (from NASDAQ.com for example), and shared an image of that in your question and asked it, "which of these stocks has had the greatest percentage increase in stock price and please provide the % increase by company," it would probably be able to provide a useful answer.
When I use ChatGPT to provide me a VBA code for manipulating stock price/volume/stat data in Excel, I often take a screenshot of the result of that code from Excel and highlight the potential problem areas in red and ask ChatGPT, "Take a look at the numbers in red...they seem to be incorrect." When I do that, GPT can recognize the problems (if any) and rewrite the code to fix the problem it sees.
This is just my experience so far of course, but you have to look at an AI platform like a very young and inexperienced but incredibly smart assistant. If you ask it vague questions, it doesn't have enough experience to know what you want. Given that AI can't think per se, you have to do the thinking when preparing your question. If you give AI a very carefully thought-out question, you get a very precise answer.
Bottom line, AI will make a person much smarter because it is a tool that greatly expands that persons abilities. But it cannot know what you want unless you ask the right question.