What You'll Actually Learn
Financial Statement Analysis
Learn to read balance sheets, income statements, and cash flow reports. We'll show you what red flags look like and how to spot companies cooking the books.
Valuation Methods
Master DCF models, comparable company analysis, and precedent transactions. You'll build these from scratch and understand when each method makes sense.
Risk Assessment Frameworks
Develop a systematic approach to evaluating investment risk. We cover portfolio theory, diversification strategies, and how to size positions appropriately.
Market Psychology & Behavior
Understand cognitive biases that destroy portfolios. We examine real cases where emotion trumped logic—and how to avoid those mistakes yourself.
Comprehensive curriculum combining theory with hands-on analysis of real companies and market situations
Learn From People Who've Done It
Our instructors have worked at hedge funds, managed portfolios, and made plenty of their own mistakes along the way. They'll share what actually works.
Astrid Kovalenko
Equity Analysis LeadSpent 12 years analyzing tech and healthcare stocks at a Toronto-based fund. Now teaches the same frameworks she used to evaluate billion-dollar opportunities.
Brigitte Lindström
Fixed Income SpecialistBuilt bond portfolios through three market cycles. She'll show you how interest rates, credit risk, and duration actually affect your returns.
Vesna Petrović
Risk Management ExpertFormer quantitative analyst who specialized in portfolio optimization and downside protection. Brings a practical perspective on managing uncertainty.
How We Teach This Stuff
Start With Real Companies
Forget textbook examples. You'll analyze actual businesses—studying their financial reports, competitive position, and growth prospects. By week three, you're building valuation models for publicly traded companies.
Challenge Your Assumptions
We push you to defend your investment thesis. Other students will question your logic, and you'll do the same for them. This back-and-forth sharpens your thinking faster than any lecture.
Learn From Mistakes
We study blown calls and failed investments. What looked good on paper? Where did the analysis break down? Understanding what goes wrong helps you avoid those pitfalls.
Build Your Own Framework
There's no single "right way" to invest. By the end, you'll have developed your own analytical approach—one that fits your personality, time constraints, and risk tolerance.