Learn Financial Analysis That Actually Matters
Starting September 2025
We built this program after listening to what people really struggle with when comparing companies. Not theory from textbooks. Actual analysis skills you'll use when making business decisions or investment choices in the Argentine market and beyond.
Request Program DetailsThree Paths, One Goal
Pick the learning approach that fits your schedule and style. All paths cover the same material—just structured differently based on how you learn best.
Weekend Intensive
For people who prefer to dive deep. Saturday and Sunday sessions that let you focus completely on mastering comparative analysis without weekday distractions.
12 weeks • Saturdays 9am-1pmEvening Track
Built around work schedules. Two evenings per week where you'll work through real company data and cases without giving up your days.
16 weeks • Tue/Thu 7pm-9pmSelf-Paced Online
Study whenever works for you. Access all materials immediately with weekly office hours for questions. Finish in 12 weeks or take 24—your choice.
Flexible timeline • Your scheduleYou'll Learn From People Who Do This Work
Our instructors aren't just teachers. They're analysts who spend their days comparing companies, evaluating financial statements, and making recommendations. They teach because they remember how confusing this stuff was when they started.
Every session includes real examples from work they've done recently—redacted and anonymized, but authentic. You'll see how professionals actually approach these problems when the stakes are real.
What surprised us most when designing this program? How much the instructors wanted to share their mistakes. They'll show you where they went wrong early in their careers, what they learned, and how that shaped their current approach.

Malcolm Dreyfus
Lead Analyst • 11 years

Ines Rowland
Senior Analyst • 8 years
What You'll Actually Learn
We organized this into four phases that build on each other. You can't really do phase three without understanding phase two—we tried different orders and this one just makes more sense.

Reading Financial Statements
Start with understanding what numbers actually mean. Balance sheets, income statements, cash flow—not memorizing definitions but learning to spot patterns and anomalies. We use real statements from Argentine companies because that context matters.
Weeks 1-3Comparative Metrics
Once you can read statements, you need ways to compare companies that don't have the same size or structure. Ratios, benchmarks, industry standards. This phase feels abstract at first but clicks when you start using it on real examples.
Weeks 4-7Context and Strategy
Numbers don't exist in a vacuum. Learn to factor in market conditions, competitive position, management quality. This is where analysis becomes more art than science—and where experience really shows up.
Weeks 8-11Building Your Analysis
Final phase is creating complete comparative analyses from scratch. Choose two companies, do the research, build your case. We'll provide feedback but won't tell you the "right" answer—because there often isn't one.
Weeks 12-16Questions People Actually Ask
These come from conversations with people considering the program. We kept the honest answers.
Do I need accounting knowledge before starting?
Not really. Basic comfort with numbers helps, but we don't assume you know accounting. We'll teach the fundamentals you need. What matters more is whether you're curious about why companies perform differently and willing to work through examples until they make sense.
What happens if I fall behind?
Honestly? It happens. People get busy. For structured tracks, we record everything so you can catch up. Self-paced students can adjust their timeline. We also have weekly office hours where you can ask about material you're stuck on—no judgment, just help getting unstuck.
Is this focused on Argentine companies?
We use plenty of Argentine examples because that's our market and the context many students care about. But the principles work anywhere. You'll analyze companies from various markets so you understand how to adapt your approach based on different regulatory environments and economic conditions.
Will this help me get a job in finance?
It might improve your skills and understanding, which can strengthen your profile. But we're not a job placement program and can't promise employment outcomes. What we can say is that students who complete this know how to do real comparative analysis—whether that helps with career goals depends on many other factors beyond our control.
How much work should I expect each week?
Plan for about 6-8 hours total including class time. Some weeks are lighter when you're reviewing concepts. Other weeks when you're building analyses take more time. The self-paced option lets you adjust this based on your schedule—some people do 4 hours weekly, others batch it into longer weekend sessions.

Bryce Templeton
Program Coordinator

Phoebe Karsten
Student Support Lead