Ankam, Inc. (ANKM)
What problem does the company solve?
Ankam is a technology company focused on personal finance through mobile applications. Founded in 2018 with dual headquarters in Las Vegas and Taipei, the company develops consumer-facing tools for expense tracking and financial management. Expense Minder, its flagship product, allows users to categorize transactions, set saving goals, receive bill reminders, and organize spending by category. MoneySaverApp extends this approach by aggregating discount cards and deals on a single platform. Both applications tackle the friction that keeps ordinary people from tracking where their money goes.
What makes Ankam different from major fintech competitors?
Unlike established players such as Mint or YNAB, Ankam operates as a micro-cap OTC-traded company with limited capital and distribution. This creates a radically different business model: the company pursues geographic expansion through subsidiaries rather than single-market dominance. In 2023 it formed Ankam LLC in Wyoming to manage MoneySaverApp; in 2024 it acquired Apex Intelligence LLC (a currency converter service) and incorporated Mei Sheng Corporation Limited to operate in Hong Kong and Taiwan. This subsidiary-building approach is more common in Asia-focused holding companies than in U.S. fintech firms.
How does Ankam make money?
The company derives revenue primarily from user adoption of its mobile applications—through subscription tiers, in-app purchases, or advertising. Growth has been rapid at the micro-cap scale: fiscal 2025 revenue of $325,000 represented a 211% increase from $104,450 in the prior year. With four employees as of mid-2026, Ankam remains in early stages. The company also engages in strategic corporate investments and acquisitions, generating returns through subsidiary operations.
Why track this stock?
ANKM appeals to investors hunting micro-cap fintech exposure in untapped markets, particularly Asia. The OTC listing means minimal liquidity and high volatility. Upside hinges on user adoption and potential acquisition by a larger financial software firm; downside is the risk of indefinite obscurity. Investors can access the company’s regulatory filings through the SEC’s EDGAR database using CIK 1781629, including annual 10-K and quarterly 10-Q reports that detail financial condition, product development, and board governance changes.