What We Cover
The course catalog at Prexvante is built around the financial questions that come up most often in everyday Argentine life. These are not abstract investment theories. They are practical topics with real implications for household budgets, savings decisions, and credit management.
Monthly budget planning addresses how to organize income and expenses into a workable structure. This includes understanding the difference between fixed and variable costs, identifying where money actually goes, and setting targets that are realistic rather than aspirational.
Credit card use is explored as a financial instrument. The course explains how billing cycles work, what minimum payments actually cost over time, and the structural differences between using a card as a payment tool versus as a source of credit.
The comparison between fixed-term deposits (plazo fijo) and remunerated accounts (cuenta remunerada) covers two of the most common savings instruments available to Argentine residents. The course explains how each works mechanically, what liquidity means in each context, and how interest is calculated and credited.
The Argentine capital market course introduces the regulatory framework, the main instruments traded, and the institutions involved. This includes an overview of the Comisión Nacional de Valores (CNV), the Buenos Aires Stock Exchange (BYMA), and basic instrument categories such as government bonds (títulos públicos), corporate bonds (obligaciones negociables), equities (acciones), and mutual funds (fondos comunes de inversión).
Who This Is For
Prexvante is designed for adults who want to understand financial topics that affect their daily lives. No prior financial knowledge is required. The courses assume curiosity, not expertise.
The content is particularly relevant for people navigating financial decisions for the first time. Someone opening their first savings account. A young professional trying to understand what a plazo fijo actually means. A household trying to build a budget that accounts for Argentine inflation dynamics.
These courses are also useful for people who have some experience with financial products but want a clearer, more structured understanding of how specific mechanisms work.
Each course is self-contained. You don't need to complete multiple courses to understand any single one. The content is organized so that a reader unfamiliar with the topic can work through a module and arrive at a clear, accurate understanding of that subject.
Format and Structure
Each micro-course is divided into modules. A module is a self-contained reading unit that covers one aspect of the broader topic. Modules are sequenced so that each one builds logically on the previous, but they can also be read independently for reference.
Module structure
A clear statement of what the module covers and what the reader will understand after completing it.
Explanatory content using plain language with technical terms defined when introduced.
Practical examples grounded in the Argentine financial context.
A brief summary of the key points covered.
The reading level is accessible without being simplified. The goal is precision and clarity, not reduction to the point of inaccuracy.
Argentine Context
All courses are written with the Argentine financial environment as the primary reference point. This matters because financial products, regulations, and terminology in Argentina differ meaningfully from those in other countries.
A plazo fijo in Argentina operates under specific regulations from the Banco Central de la República Argentina (BCRA). The treatment of inflation, the distinction between peso and dollar-denominated instruments, and the specific institutional actors in the local capital market are all addressed as they actually exist in Argentina, not as generic international descriptions.
This contextual grounding is one of the defining characteristics of the content on this platform. The goal is not to teach abstract financial concepts but to help people understand the specific financial environment they actually live and work in.
What We Don't Do
The distinction between educational content and financial advice is fundamental to how Prexvante is designed. Understanding this distinction is important for anyone using this platform.
This platform does not provide investment recommendations. No course on Prexvante tells you what to buy, when to buy it, how much to invest, or what returns to expect. These are decisions that depend on individual circumstances, risk tolerance, financial situation, and goals that only the individual can assess fully.
Investment advice in Argentina is regulated. Anyone providing personalized investment recommendations must be appropriately registered and authorized. Prexvante is an educational platform, not a financial advisory service, and does not hold or claim any advisory authorization.
What the platform does is provide accurate, structured information about how financial instruments and systems work. That knowledge can help inform better decisions. The decision itself remains with the individual.
Access and Availability
Course content on Prexvante is accessible without registration. The platform does not require an account to browse or read course material. There is no paywall on the core educational content.
The courses are available in both Spanish and English. The Spanish version is written for an Argentine audience, using local terminology, regulatory references, and examples. The English version is a direct equivalent intended for readers more comfortable in English or for comparative reference.
Content is updated when regulatory changes or significant market developments make existing material outdated. The publication or revision date is noted on each course page.