How to Read the Chart A rising P/E can mean the stock price is increasing faster than earnings — which may indicate overvaluation or high investor optimism about future growth. A falling P/E can ...
Why Does It Matter? The P/E ratio is the most widely used valuation metric in investing. It helps investors determine whether a stock is expensive or cheap relative to its earnings. Comparing a ...
A measure of natural liquidity. The IR identified the bookends of every long-term stock market cycle since 1900.
A measure of natural liquidity. The IR identified the bookends of every long-term stock market cycle since 1900.
Why Does It Matter? The P/E ratio alone does not tell you whether a company's valuation is justified by its growth prospects. A company with a P/E of 30 might be cheap if it is growing earnings at 40% ...
Protection from market crashes. We help investors identify every crash since 2000, in advance, using our proprietary model.
Protection from market crashes. We help investors identify every crash since 2000, in advance, using our proprietary model.
A measure of natural liquidity. The IR identified the bookends of every long-term stock market cycle since 1900.
How to Read the Chart A rising yearly growth rate indicates that earnings are accelerating — the company is growing faster than it was before. A declining growth rate, even if still positive, signals ...
Protection from market crashes. We help investors identify every crash since 2000, in advance, using our proprietary model.
Protection from market crashes. We help investors identify every crash since 2000, in advance, using our proprietary model.