Financial Analysis Through
Real Understanding
Learn to read company fundamentals the way professionals do—with depth, context, and clarity
What You'll Actually Learn
Most courses dump theory on you and hope something sticks. We focus on what matters: reading financial statements without getting lost, spotting patterns that indicate real business health, and understanding why numbers move the way they do.
You'll work through actual company reports—not sanitized examples. The messy footnotes, the confusing adjustments, the stuff that makes you wonder if anyone actually understands what's happening. Because that's where the real learning happens.
By the end, you won't just know ratios. You'll understand how cash flow tells a different story than earnings, why some debt matters and some doesn't, and when management commentary is worth reading versus when it's just noise.
How the Program Works
Foundation Phase
Start with the basics you probably think you know but might not. Balance sheets, income statements, cash flow—how they connect and why that matters more than memorizing line items.
Analysis Depth
Move into ratio analysis, profitability measures, and leverage calculations. Not just formulas—context for when each metric matters and when it doesn't tell you much.
Real Application
Take everything to actual companies across different industries. Compare sectors, identify red flags, understand why similar businesses can have wildly different financial structures.
Meet Your Instructors
Henrik Lindström
Senior Financial Analyst
I spent years analyzing companies for institutional investors. The goal here is simple: teach you to ask the right questions before you calculate anything.
Iris Kowalczyk
Corporate Finance Specialist
Financial statements aren't puzzles to solve—they're stories about business decisions. Once you see that, the numbers start making sense in ways formulas never capture.
Saoirse Byrne
Equity Research Director
After covering dozens of industries, I've learned one thing: context matters more than precision. I'll show you how to find that context in the data you already have.