Learning to analyse companies and choose your own stocks can be daunting.
After all, sound investing requires a lot of different skills. So many skills that it can be hard to know where to start learning.
Fortunately, there’s one investing skill that makes the rest of it so much easier.
And that skill is… learning how to read financial statements properly.
Once you can read a balance sheet, an income statement and a cash flow statement, your calibre as an investor instantly cranks up a gear.
Here’s why:
Instead of buying and hoping, you become a highly informed investor.
Instead of taking management’s word as gospel, you’re able to test their narrative against the numbers.
Instead of needing to trust other people’s analysis, you’re able to do your own work and come to your own conclusions.
If you’d like to learn how to read financial statements, my online course How To Read A Balance Sheet is here to help.
The course lets you look over my shoulder as I analyse all three financial statements for a real life company. By doing so, you’ll learn a process that you can use to analyse any set of accounts.
This training is usually priced at £399. But as a special Black Friday offer, you can try it for just £319 with the code FRIDAY80.
Click here to learn more about the course. If you’re serious about picking your own stocks, you need to have these skills in your locker.
Kind regards,
Steve Clapham
P.S. Thats not all!
Take this training and I’ll let you subtract the cost from my full Analyst Academy course, should you decide to join it before March 2023.
That’s an £80 saving today and over £200 off the Analyst Academy if you choose to continue learning there afterwards.
Are you ready to get comfortable with financial statements and do better analysis? Use the code FRIDAY80 before midnight Sunday to save £80 on your investment.
Yes! Let’s get started
Paying subscribers can read on to get their special extra discount.
PS if there is a problem, please try friday80, my developer is away and I haven’t done this before. I only discount once a year.