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Show HN: Quantus – LeetCode for Financial Modeling

279 points| misstercool | 1 year ago |quantus.finance

Hi everyone,

I wanted to share Quantus, a finance learning and practice platform I’m building out of my own frustration with traditional resources.

As a dual major in engineering and finance who started my career at a hedge fund, I found it challenging to develop hands-on financial modeling skills using existing tools. Platforms like Coursera, Udemy, Corporate Finance Institute (CFI), and Wall Street Prep (WSP) primarily rely on video-based tutorials. While informative, these formats often lack the dynamic, interactive, and repetitive practice necessary to build real expertise.

For example, the learning process often involves:

- Replaying videos multiple times to grasp key concepts.

- Constantly switching between tutorials and Excel files.

- Dealing with occasional discrepancies between tutorial numbers and the provided Excel materials.

To solve these problems, I created Quantus—an interactive platform where users can learn finance by trying out formulas or building financial models directly in an Excel-like environment. Inspired by LeetCode, the content is organized into three levels—easy, medium, and hard—making it accessible for beginners while still challenging for advanced users.

Our growing library of examples includes:

- 3-statement financial models

- Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis

- Leveraged Buyouts (LBO)

- Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)

Here’s a demo video to showcase the platform in action. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDRNHgBERLQ

I’d love to hear your thoughts and feedback! Let me know what other features or examples you’d find useful.

50 comments

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itissid|1 year ago

Great work on the tool. Looks really useful for basic modeling for a businesses who need this.

As a salaried person I would like to see a version of this tool for planning ones own portfolios.

0. Set your risk parameters: Maximum drawdown, expected returns, time horizon, fixed income needed, broker platform etc.

1. Pick ETFs from a specific brokerage that match and find different kinds of ETFs for different asset classes, different startegies(US, ex-US, Currency Hedged, Buffer, Bullet Shares).

2. Tools: Rebalancer, be able to find what ETFs are cheap/expensive based on current evaluations(P/E) and Historical data. Like when fed is raising rates one can invest more in Bond Funds(like Bullet Share) that lock in that yield incrementally and vice versa.

aiden3|1 year ago

I love this idea, this is really cool. I work on a joint data/business team and this would be useful for us. One piece of technical feedback: it would be good if you could press = and then use the arrow keys to select parts of your formula (like in excel). With quantus, I need to press =, and then switch to my mouse, and then click the cell (for example EBITDA), then press '/' on my keyboard, then go back to my mouse to select revenue, and then finally press equal, and then submit the assignment.

You should also make the tutorials/mini assignments slightly harder. Its really easy to calculate EBITDA margin when there are 2 lines on the page: revenue and EBITDA. It would be better if there were a few red herrings (like in a real financial statement/operating model). It would be even better if there were some harder stages where someone needs to first calculate EBITDA through the income statement, and then EBITDA margin.

Final piece of feedback: the various mini assignments in a module should all operate off of the same broader set of tabs/excel sheet. It would be rewarding to keep filling out more and more of the broader model, and also to have the context of the entire financial model available at any given time.

Happy to chat more. I would like to add something like this to my team's employee onboarding / training process.

aiden3|1 year ago

A few more points of random feedback as I spend more time with it:

- In my wide monitor, the circle on the dark circle on the left that is supposed to be the background to the white descriptive text does not scale at the same rate as the text.. Which means that I can't read the right hand side of the text when opening the page wider than half of my screen (microsoft edge).

- Not a fan of the 3d birds on every page, sorry. If there needs to be birds, I prefer the birds on the homepage to the AI-generated looking ones on the /learn/module pages.

- Would be great to have 5+ LBO model building exercises for different business types/different formats.

- I don't know if this works in Google Sheets, but it would be good to have an exercise where people build a sensitivity table.

- An exercise where someone had to go to the investor relations website of a particular company, download a historical 10Q, seek out information from the income statement or balance sheet, and then calculate a metric or ratio would be excellent. (i.e,. something that brings you out of the context of Quantus/the in browser spreadsheet, but trains more on the actual action of seeking and using public filing data).

- I haven't been through everything, so you may already have it, but a double entry accounting exercise would be interesting. I find that people who haven't taken accounting courses in the past sometimes struggle with how the 3 statements fit together.

iknownthing|1 year ago

People generally use leetcode to prepare for interviews and learning is kind of a side-effect so I'm curious are these questions similar to those you would find in interviews (i.e. like leetcode) or is it more for general learning purposes?

misstercool|1 year ago

The current stage of finance interview is a little bit like coding interview 20 years ago, pre-leetcode time, where you write sudo code on a paper to answer some coding challenges. The coding interview nowadays are quite advanced, I believe Leetcode plays huge role.

The best way of learning financial modeling is by doing it on the excel. Even though many finance technical interviews still focus on behavior type of questions, discussing your model-building approach and assumptions. By practising different scenarios on Excel, timeboxing it, it will help you refine your responses during the interview.

teeray|1 year ago

“Thanks for interviewing with us at H&R Block. I’m sure you’ll be great at helping people file their Income Taxes. In the next 45 minutes, we would like you to examine this conference room full of Banker’s Boxes of records for a Fortune 500 company accused of financial wrongdoing. You must determine whether they are guilty or not, and if guilty, the nature and extent of their crime.”

westurner|1 year ago

How does your solution differ from JupyterHub + ottergrader or nbgrader? What about Kaggle Learn?

From taking the Udacity AI Programming in Python course, it looks like Udacity has a Jupyter Notebooks -based LMS LRS CMS platform.

How does your solution differ from the "Quant Platform" which hosts [Certificate in] "Python for Finance": https://home.tpq.io/pqp/

Do you award (OpenBadges) educational credentials as Blockcerts (W3C VC Verifiable Claims, W3C DIDs Decentralized Identifiers,) with blockchain-certificates/cert-issuer? https://github.com/blockchain-certificates/cert-issuer#how-b...

misstercool|1 year ago

Our goal is to help users improve their finance and accounting knowledge. This includes acing job interviews and learning how to create different financial models for varied sectors. Currently, we have no plans to provide coding lessons or provide certificates.

stonlyb|1 year ago

What are the next set of library additions you're planning? Will tune in for when you release something on VC term sheets, convertible note / SAFE note conversions, and Techno Economic Analysis.

jbs789|1 year ago

This looks really technically impressive.

As someone who has worked in financial services for close to 20 years now, what I find interesting is how the experienced deal makers/traders/entrepreneurs have established mental models about how things work, then when evaluating a deal distill that down to a handful of reasons to do it (or not).

So the hard part is knowing what to focus on, which changes based on the environment and over time, rather than constructing the excel model.

misstercool|1 year ago

Absolutely, the current platform is designed to help beginners and intermediate learners to hone their technical skills. I am considering expanding in areas such as allowing users to share their models and strategies. I understand it can be daunting for newcomers to an industry to figure out the best way to construct models. What are your thoughts on this?

jbs789|1 year ago

These are always interesting to me bc people respond with suggestions for changes.

But what’s the authors overall objective? Is it to create a marketable product? For whom?

mclau156|1 year ago

I have attempted to do financial modeling practice with ChatGPT and Claude, but they struggle to come up with interesting data needed to make any real insights, is this really just testing our knowledge of which business terms to use and which functions to use, or is there enough good data to require some ingenuity to gain insights from?

misstercool|1 year ago

Yea, I might do more in depth AI integration in the future. The hint function has been the most popular one in assassinating users learning how to solve the financial modeling problems. This platform is designed with the goal of assisting users in enhancing their practical skills in financial modeling.

s0rr0wskill|1 year ago

Who is the target audience for this?

As someone who has a CS background but would like to learn more about finance but not get too deep into the weeds of math & statistics, would this be a good resource? Or is this more for people who want to break into quant and practice/learn concepts for interviews?

thethimble|1 year ago

Judging by the content this is probably for people interested in moving into investment banking.

Doesn’t look like stats or advanced math is a major prerequisite.

curious_cat_163|1 year ago

Just signed up. Would be cool to learn about Derivates!

I have an earnest question and I reckon you might have given it some thought. Is teaching financial modeling to humans a growing market? If so, why do you think that?

If you think not, is the idea here to test this space for a product that comes down the road? :)

noleary|1 year ago

Brings me back to my many evenings and weekends spent poring over Breaking into Wall Street PDFs :)

This is really awesome

josh_carterPDX|1 year ago

Thank you for building something like this. Financial modeling can be daunting, but I think it's the most important tool for entrepreneurs to have in order to understand how best to run their business. Can't wait to spend some time playing with this tool!

coffeecantcode|1 year ago

Just signed up, really looking forward to sharpening my financial modeling skills, even after graduating and moving into a field where I don’t do that sort of thing anymore.

Any plans to create a native mobile application? I couldn’t seem to find one on the App Store.

misstercool|1 year ago

That's an excellent query! Many have asked for a mobile app. Right now, we're improving the desktop version as Excel works best on it. Making Excel easy to use on a mobile app isn't easy. Our plan is to first make a mobile app centered around finance quizzes and concepts. Then, we'll aim to provide a complete Excel experience for financial modeling on mobile.

hperpkl|1 year ago

I'd like to use it internally as our non-fund is investable and participates across multiple asset classes and is flexible in a way to use financial instruments, so this would be helpful

matt3210|1 year ago

Well… there goes a few weekends of my life wasted. Thanks

jalcazar|1 year ago

Looks like something I want to use.

Would this help me preparing to [aspirationally] compete in the FMWC (Financial Modeling World Cup) ?

jkcchan|1 year ago

really cool, very slick. the beginner content feels very AI gen'd, which isn't necessarily a problem. my eyes are conditioned to glaze over this type of content, so maybe my issue haha. but i really like the concept, and agree there's a huge gap in the landscape for a tool like this, so great work!

misstercool|1 year ago

Sure! While beginner content isn't unique, chatGPT can handle such questions effectively. Our main aim is to create a mind map that helps users understand concepts deeply and apply them to build various financial models.

edweis|1 year ago

Great interface. I love the fact we can use Google Sheet to do the math.

misstercool|1 year ago

thanks! IMO, excel spreadsheet is like the compiler for finance folks, there is no better way to learning and practising finance on this interface.

101008|1 year ago

This looks amazing and one of the things I'd love to try if I'd have infinite time*

* Not that I use my time wisely, but lately I feel very tired when I am on my free/own time, so I don't want to do anything that would require concentration.

mdrzn|1 year ago

Looks interesting! Is it free? I don't see any pricing page.

headelf|1 year ago

Isn't the purpose of AI so I don't have to learn this?

headcanon|1 year ago

Rest assured that the prevalence of AI means these skills will be even more important somehow. AI just made writing and coding skills even more important, not less, and I'd imagine the same will be true of finance and accounting.

misstercool|1 year ago

Just my personal opinion, feel free to disagree ;). There are few issues preventing finance being replaced by AI.

1. The large portion of finance is customization. AI works on the simple models, but it may struggle to perform adequately with complex, company-specific situations. Take pilot as example, it is an accounting and bookkeeping company with the combination of tech solution and human services. There is always human in the loop.

2. Finance deals with the numbers, the bar of accuracy is very high.

However, I believe AI can make learning finance much simpler, that is why I build this platform.

daneyh|1 year ago

'failed to fetch' when trying to sign up.

fHr|1 year ago

Cool, will try this out!