Financial Reporting Resources for Real Investors

We've gathered materials that actually matter. No fluff about becoming a millionaire overnight. Just straightforward resources on reading financial statements, understanding cash flows, and spotting what numbers really mean in Thailand's investment landscape.

Financial statement analysis workspace with documents and calculator

Statement Reading Basics

Balance sheets confuse most people at first. We break down what assets, liabilities, and equity actually tell you about a company's health. These materials focus on Thai market examples you'll recognize.

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Investment analysis and financial planning materials

Cash Flow Analysis

Profit doesn't always mean cash in the bank. Our materials explain how to track where money actually goes in a business—something that catches even experienced investors off guard sometimes.

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Quarterly Report Navigation

SET filings come with tons of footnotes and disclosures. We've created guides that help you find what matters quickly—because nobody has time to read 200 pages of regulatory language after work.

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Who Creates These Materials

Our team brings decades of combined experience from audit firms, investment analysis, and financial education. They've seen what trips people up and built resources accordingly.

Kasem Wattana, Senior Financial Analyst

Kasem Wattana

Senior Financial Analyst

Spent 15 years at PwC Bangkok before moving into investor education. Kasem knows every trick companies use in their footnotes—and teaches you to spot them too.

Preecha Somboon, Investment Research Specialist

Preecha Somboon

Investment Research Lead

Former equity analyst covering Thai consumer stocks. Preecha's materials focus on what financial reports reveal about competitive positioning and market share changes.

Somchai Prayut, Financial Reporting Educator

Somchai Prayut

Reporting Standards Expert

Worked with Thailand's accounting standards board for eight years. Somchai translates complex TFRS requirements into language actual investors can understand and use.

Quick Wins for Better Report Reading

Small habits that make financial statements less overwhelming. These take a few minutes to implement but save hours of confusion later.

1

Check the Audit Opinion First

Always flip to the auditor's report before diving into numbers. Qualified opinions or emphasis paragraphs signal problems worth understanding before you spend time analyzing the data.

2

Compare Three Years Minimum

One year tells you almost nothing. Three years reveal patterns—whether margins are trending, if growth is consistent, and how the company handles economic cycles.

3

Read Management Discussion Last

Form your own conclusions from the numbers first. Then read management's explanation. You'll spot when their story doesn't match what the financials actually show.

4

Track Working Capital Changes

Big swings in receivables or inventory deserve attention. They often signal operational issues before they show up in profit numbers—giving you advance warning.

Our Programs Start November 2025

Six-month courses beginning autumn cover financial statement analysis, ratio interpretation, and industry-specific reporting quirks. Classes meet weekly in Bangkok with materials accessible online.

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