About Aokirana
Financial reporting
explained for
real investors
Annual reports, earnings calls, disclosure notes — the documents companies publish are dense by design. Aokirana exists to make that information readable and testable.
Who we are
A local resource built around one hard question
Why do investors keep making the same reading mistakes when the answers are already in the filing?
Aokirana started in 2024 as an interactive quiz platform focused entirely on financial reporting literacy. The team noticed that most people who invest — even experienced ones — skip past the footnotes, misread segment data, or confuse operating income with net income. The gap between reading a report and understanding it is wider than most admit.
Every quiz, test, and feedback loop on this platform targets that specific gap. No trading signals, no portfolio tools — just the document-reading skills that make other analysis possible.
Four areas where
reading skills break down
Each topic on Aokirana targets a specific place where investor comprehension tends to fail — not because the reader is careless, but because reporting documents are written for compliance, not clarity.
Annual Reports
MD&A sections, segment breakdowns, and year-over-year comparisons — tested with realistic scenarios.
Key Financial Ratios
What the ratio actually measures versus what people assume it measures — a consistently surprising difference.
Earnings Releases
Adjusted figures, non-GAAP metrics, and what gets buried in the reconciliation tables at the bottom.
Red Flags in Disclosures
Accounting policy changes, auditor notes, and related-party transactions that reward a second read.
How it works
Feedback arrives before the habit forms
Getting an answer wrong and finding out immediately is more useful than reading a chapter about why it matters. Every question on Aokirana is built around that idea.
Pick a topic
Choose from the 4 reporting areas. Each has its own difficulty curve — start wherever your knowledge feels shaky.
Answer under pressure
Questions are framed like real decisions — not definitions. You read a passage, then answer what an investor would actually need to know.
See the reasoning
Each result shows not just the correct answer but why — which part of the document mattered and what the wrong reading missed.