Since 2019

We Teach Real Financial Analysis

Started in a small office in Kaohsiung, we've spent six years figuring out how to actually teach financial analysis. Not the textbook version—the kind that works when you're staring at a balance sheet at 3 PM on a Tuesday.

How This Started

Back in early 2019, we noticed something odd. Companies kept hiring analysts who could recite formulas but couldn't spot trouble brewing in financial statements.

So we started teaching differently. Less memorization, more pattern recognition. We focus on what actually matters when you need to determine if a company can meet its obligations next quarter or in five years.

Our programs run for twelve months because that's how long it takes to really understand liquidity ratios in different market conditions. Quick courses skip the nuance—and nuance is where the real insight lives.

Financial analysis workspace with documents and laptop

What Matters to Us

These aren't corporate values written by committee. They're what we actually care about when we're building curriculum at midnight.

Real-World Context

Every example comes from actual financial statements. We don't simplify numbers to make the math easy—we teach you to work with messy, real data.

Honest Limitations

Financial analysis has blind spots. We teach you where ratios break down, when models fail, and what you can't predict no matter how good your data is.

Patient Progress

Understanding solvency analysis takes months, not weeks. We structure our autumn 2025 program to give you time to absorb concepts before adding complexity.

Who Teaches Here

We're not a large team. Just two instructors who spent years doing financial analysis before we started teaching it.

Henrik handles liquidity analysis—he spent seven years at a regional bank evaluating short-term financial health. Marco covers solvency metrics after working in corporate restructuring where he saw what happens when debt ratios go wrong.

Financial analysis teaching session in progress
Henrik Voss portrait

Henrik Voss

Liquidity Analysis Instructor

Teaches current ratio interpretation, quick ratio applications, and cash flow timing. His sessions focus on spotting liquidity problems three months before they become obvious.

Marco Delacroix portrait

Marco Delacroix

Solvency Analysis Specialist

Covers debt-to-equity ratios, interest coverage, and long-term stability assessment. His background in restructuring brings perspective you won't find in textbooks.

Detailed financial statement analysis workspace

Our Teaching Method

We don't lecture for three hours then send you home with practice problems. Our autumn 2025 program runs differently.

Each week you get one concept, real financial statements to analyze, and feedback on what you missed. By month six, you're working with complete annual reports and making judgment calls about financial health.

  • Start with a single company's quarterly data to learn one ratio properly
  • Add complexity gradually—comparing competitors, tracking trends over time
  • Work with Taiwan market examples because regional context affects interpretation
  • Practice explaining your analysis clearly because technical skill means nothing if you can't communicate findings
  • Review your mistakes thoroughly—most learning happens when you see why your initial read was wrong

Ready to Learn Financial Analysis?

Our next twelve-month program begins in autumn 2025. We take a limited number of students because we actually review everyone's work personally.

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