ListOnPagely Logo

ListOnPagely

Start Reading Financial Statements Without Fear

Most people freeze when they see balance sheets or income statements. But understanding basic financial analysis isn't about complex formulas – it's about knowing what questions to ask and where to look for answers.

Learn Our Approach
Financial documents and analysis tools on desk

Three Core Skills That Actually Matter

You don't need an accounting degree. These practical skills help you make sense of numbers in business reports, personal investments, or company evaluations.

Reading Cash Flow

Cash flow tells you if a business can actually pay its bills. We teach you to spot warning signs like revenue growth paired with cash decline – something that happens more often than people realize.

Understanding Ratios

Ratios compare different numbers to reveal patterns. A high profit margin means nothing if debt ratios show the company borrowed heavily to get there. Context matters more than memorizing formulas.

Spotting Red Flags

Some patterns suggest trouble ahead. Inventory growing faster than sales, accounts receivable ballooning, or sudden changes in accounting methods – these deserve closer attention before making decisions.

Person analyzing financial charts and reports

How We Structure Learning

Our September 2025 course runs twelve weeks. You'll work with real company reports from Thai and regional markets, not textbook examples that skip the messy parts.

Each session builds on what you learned before. Week one covers basic terminology. By week six, you're analyzing actual quarterly reports and forming your own conclusions about company health.

  • Weekly analysis exercises using current market data
  • Small group discussions about different interpretations
  • Guest practitioners sharing mistakes they've made
  • Portfolio review sessions for personal investments

Where This Knowledge Gets Used

Financial analysis shows up in unexpected places. Here's where past participants applied what they learned.

Business meeting with financial presentations

Business Decisions

Arthit runs a manufacturing company in Lamphun. He used ratio analysis to identify which product lines actually generated profit versus which just looked busy. The results surprised him and changed his production priorities for 2024.

Investment portfolio review session

Investment Choices

Ploy manages her family's investment portfolio. After learning to read cash flow statements, she avoided investing in a company that showed revenue growth but negative operating cash flow. Six months later, that company restructured.

Instructor portrait

Meet Your Instructor

Financial Analysis Practitioner

I spent fifteen years analyzing company reports for investment decisions. Made plenty of mistakes along the way – like focusing too much on growth numbers while ignoring debt levels.

These courses share what I wish someone had taught me earlier. We focus on practical pattern recognition rather than theoretical perfection. The goal is helping you ask better questions when evaluating financial information.

Ask About Enrollment