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Financial Instruments for Total Beginners

Most people spend years hearing about stocks, bonds, and ETFs without anyone explaining what they actually are. This course fixes that, building a clear mental model of how financial instruments work from the ground up.

Updated Jun 7, 2026

About this course

Most financial education starts in the middle. It assumes you already know what a bond is, why interest rates matter, or what an ETF actually holds. This course starts at the beginning: what financial instruments are, why they exist, and how to think about the tradeoffs between them before you ever open a brokerage account. You'll move through the full landscape in order of complexity. Cash and savings accounts first, because that's where most people already are. Then bonds, where the mechanics trip people up (prices fall when rates rise, and there's a real reason for that). Then stocks and the two ways they actually make you money. Then funds, which are where most beginners should probably be spending most of their time. The final unit covers derivatives and crypto without hype in either direction: here's what they are, here's how they work, here's why they carry more risk than the other categories. By the end, you won't be a portfolio manager. But you'll be able to read a fund's expense ratio and know why it matters, explain why your bond ETF dropped when the Fed raised rates, and make a reasonable decision about where to put money based on your actual time horizon. That's a different thing from memorizing definitions. It's knowing how the pieces fit together.

Details

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Last updated Jun 7, 2026
6 Units, 14 lessons
6 Projects
4 Assessments

Skills you'll gain with this course

Reading Financial Instruments

Identify what any common financial instrument is, who issued it, and what risk and return profile it carries.

Understanding Bond Mechanics

Explain why bond prices move in the opposite direction of interest rates, and distinguish credit risk from rate risk.

Evaluating Funds

Compare ETFs, mutual funds, and index funds on cost and structure, and calculate how a small expense ratio difference compounds over time.

Assessing Risk and Return

Rank asset classes by historical risk and return, and match investments to an appropriate time horizon.

Navigating Stocks

Calculate total return from price appreciation and dividends, and interpret a basic P/E ratio in context.

Syllabus

6 Units • 14 Lessons • 6 Projects • 4 Assessments

Ways To Learn Included

Every lesson enables you to learn in a variety of ways.

3 min read
587 words

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Carbon Dioxide
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What is the primary greenhouse gas responsible for trapping heat?
Carbon Dioxide
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The earth's atmosphere is composed
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Listen: Greenhouse gases explained
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