Real Numbers Behind Financial Analysis

We track what actually matters for investment professionals working across Southeast Asian markets. These statistics reflect patterns we've observed from mid-2024 through early 2025, drawn from client interactions and market data analysis. Nothing here is cherry-picked—just honest numbers about how professionals engage with financial research tools.

1,847
Active Monthly Users

Investment professionals who accessed our platform regularly between January and April 2025, mostly portfolio managers and research analysts.

68%
Return Rate

Percentage of professionals who came back within 30 days after their first visit. Many cite the depth of Philippine equity market coverage as their primary reason.

3.4
Average Session Length (hrs)

How long analysts spend on our platform per session. The longer duration reflects complex financial model reviews rather than quick lookups.

412
Custom Reports Generated

Number of tailored financial analysis reports created for clients in Q1 2025, covering sectors from real estate to consumer goods.

92%
Data Accuracy Score

Our internal verification benchmark for financial data points. We cross-reference with multiple sources before publishing any figures.

23
Coverage Markets

Number of Asian equity markets we currently track, with the Philippines, Indonesia, and Thailand receiving the most detailed attention.

Usage Patterns Tell Stories

Our platform sees peak activity between 7 AM and 10 AM Manila time—right when analysts prepare morning briefs. Tuesday and Wednesday are consistently our busiest days, probably because that's when most earnings calls happen.

Mobile usage sits around 18%, which makes sense for professionals who primarily work from office desktops with multiple monitors. But that mobile figure jumps to 34% during earnings season when people check updates between meetings.

The average user explores about 14 different company profiles per session. They're not just reading—they're comparing financials, checking historical performance, and building investment theses.

Financial analysis workspace showing market data and research materials

How Professionals Actually Use Our Platform

1

Initial Research Phase

Most analysts start by pulling quarterly reports and historical financials. They spend roughly 45 minutes just reviewing raw numbers before moving to comparative analysis. One portfolio manager told us she always checks our data against Bloomberg first—and finds our Philippine coverage more current about 70% of the time.

2

Cross-Sector Comparisons

After individual company reviews, users typically compare 3-5 firms within the same sector. Banking and real estate get the most comparison traffic. The peer benchmarking tools see about 2,300 uses weekly, with analysts focusing heavily on margin trends and capital efficiency ratios.

3

Deep Analysis Work

This is where session times really extend. Users download detailed financial models, export custom datasets, and generate valuation scenarios. About 40% of professionals return to saved analyses multiple times over several weeks, updating assumptions as new information becomes available.

4

Report Generation

The final stage involves creating client-ready materials. Our export functions get used about 180 times daily, mostly for PDF reports with embedded charts. The typical report pulls data from 8-12 different sources within our platform, combining macro trends with company-specific metrics.

What Power Users Say

Portrait of Remington Valerio
Remington Valerio
Equity Research Analyst

I've been using UltraPrimeBridge since November 2024, mainly for Philippine property developers. The granular data on project timelines and pre-sale rates isn't available anywhere else at this level of detail. Saves me probably six hours per week compared to manual company filings review.

Portrait of Caelum Pangilinan
Caelum Pangilinan
Portfolio Manager

The cross-market comparison tools changed how our team evaluates regional opportunities. We started using the platform in February 2025 and it's become central to our Southeast Asia allocation decisions. The interface feels like it was built by people who actually do this work daily.