From thinking-frameworks-skills
Reconciles financial statements by validating the identity opening + sum(transactions) = closing. Flags missing rows, double-counts, sign errors, and rounding diffs.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/thinking-frameworks-skills:statement-reconcilerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- [Overview](#overview)
A statement that doesn't reconcile is a statement that hasn't been parsed correctly. This skill enforces the only check that catches every failure mode of the parser at once: opening + Σ(transactions) = closing. When it fails, it diagnoses why — missing transaction, sign flip, double-counted row, rounding from a foreign-currency conversion — so the bookkeeper can fix or escalate before committing dirty data.
The caller provides the parser output:
account_id, period_start, period_end.opening_balance_cents, closing_balance_cents.transactions — array of {id, date, amount_cents, description_raw}.tolerance_cents (default 100 = $1.00).account_type — affects sign convention (see below).For cash and credit accounts:
closing_balance_cents = opening_balance_cents + Σ transactions.amount_cents
Sign conventions:
| Account type | Outflow (e.g., purchase, payment, withdrawal) | Inflow (e.g., deposit, payment received) |
|---|---|---|
checking / savings | negative | positive |
credit_card (household-ledger view) | negative purchase | positive card payment |
credit_card (issuer's balance view) | positive (balance grows) | negative (balance shrinks) |
This skill expects the household-ledger view for cash and credit cards: outflows are negative, inflows are positive. If the parser used the issuer view for a credit card, flip signs before reconciling.
For brokerage / 401k / HSA holdings statements, this skill does not apply (those are point-in-time, not flow). Skip.
Reconciliation Progress:
- [ ] Step 1: Confirm account_type is in {checking, savings, credit_card, mortgage}
- [ ] Step 2: Sum signed amount_cents
- [ ] Step 3: Compute computed_closing = opening + sum
- [ ] Step 4: Compute diff = closing − computed_closing
- [ ] Step 5: If |diff| <= tolerance, return ok: true
- [ ] Step 6: Else, run diagnostics
- [ ] Step 7: Emit reconciliation report
Trivial. Most statements pass step 5 immediately.
Walk these checks in order; the first that explains the diff wins.
Diagnostic A — sign flip suspect. If |diff| / 2 matches the absolute value of any single transaction within $0.50, that transaction's sign was likely flipped during extraction. Report: sign_flip_suspect: tx_id_X.
Diagnostic B — missing transaction. If |diff| matches a "Fees" or "Interest" line summary on the statement but no matching individual transaction was extracted, the parser missed the row. Report: missing_transaction_suspect: <amount> <description>.
Diagnostic C — double-counted transaction. If the same (date, amount, description) triple appears twice in the input, and |diff| matches that amount, drop one and re-check. Report: double_counted: tx_id_X.
Diagnostic D — fee/charge omission. If diff is small (≤ $50) and consistent with a typical fee, look for "Service Charge" / "Monthly Fee" / "Foreign Transaction Fee" lines that may have been missed.
Diagnostic E — rounding accumulation. If |diff| ≤ tolerance × N/100 for N transactions, a per-row rounding may have crept in. This is rare with integer cents but possible with foreign-currency lines. Report: rounding_drift_suspect.
Diagnostic F — period mismatch. If period_end does not match the statement's printed closing date, the wrong opening or closing was paired. Report: period_mismatch_suspect.
If no diagnostic fires, return ok: false with diagnostic: "unknown" so the bookkeeper escalates.
Default tolerance: $1.00 (100 cents).
Tighten to 0 for credit-card statements where the issuer reconciles to the cent. Loosen to $5 only when explicitly asked, and surface the exact diff so the user knows.
{
"account_id": "acc_chk_001",
"period_start": "2025-12-15",
"period_end": "2026-01-14",
"opening_balance_cents": 1124300,
"closing_balance_cents": 1247500,
"transactions_sum_cents": 123200,
"computed_closing_cents": 1247500,
"diff_cents": 0,
"tolerance_cents": 100,
"ok": true,
"diagnostic": null,
"suggestions": []
}
Failed example:
{
"account_id": "acc_cc_001",
"period_start": "2025-12-15",
"period_end": "2026-01-14",
"opening_balance_cents": 0,
"closing_balance_cents": -284300,
"transactions_sum_cents": -283100,
"computed_closing_cents": -283100,
"diff_cents": -1200,
"tolerance_cents": 100,
"ok": false,
"diagnostic": "missing_transaction_suspect",
"suggestions": [
{
"type": "missing_transaction",
"expected_amount_cents": -1200,
"hint": "statement summary lists 'Foreign Transaction Fee $12.00' but no transaction extracted with that amount",
"action": "re-parse PDF page 3, look for fee line"
}
]
}
reports/alerts/ entry, never a silent drop.diff_cents means the computed closing is higher than reported (i.e., we have transactions explaining more cash than the statement says exists) — usually a missing inflow or a wrong-signed outflow.npx claudepluginhub lyndonkl/claude --plugin thinking-frameworks-skillsGuides account reconciliations by comparing GL balances to subledgers, bank statements, or third-party data; covers processes, differences, and item categorization for bank recs, GL-subledger ties, intercompany.
Activate for: bank reconciliation, nostro reconciliation, suspense account, GL reconciliation, provision reconciliation, inter-company reconciliation, nostro break, unmatched item, reconciling item, MT940, MT950, MT942, aged items, reconciliation certificate, suspense clearing, four-way reconciliation, IFRS 9 provision reconciliation, settlement break, trade reconciliation, position break, GL-to-risk reconciliation. NOT for: IFRS 9 ECL model calculation (use ifrs9-ecl), capital adequacy reporting (use basel-capital), AML transaction monitoring (use aml-typologies).
Matches GL and subledger extracts by key, surfaces breaks (amount, quantity, timing, missing), and classifies each break by likely cause. Useful for daily or month-end recon across asset classes.