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I'm looking for a site that is easy to navigate and gives #'s such as sales, eps, equity, cash, and ROIC. Some of the sites that I have been to don't give too much info. I'm willing to go to the investors websites that you have to pay for. I'm want to get into the stock market but need to run some numbers before I make any serious trades.

2007-03-05 15:50:24 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Investing

5 answers

standard and poors is good stuff, and it's available all over the place. also, not to sound like an advertisement, but if you sign upu for an ameritrade account, you don't even have to trade and you'll get all the goldman sachs research for free...

2007-03-05 18:24:47 · answer #1 · answered by mzimmerman@rocketmail.com 2 · 0 0

1

2016-12-24 02:00:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you want all of the nitty gritty in the numbers, I'd go to the website of the Securities and Exchange Commission at http://www.sec.gov and look up information under the Edgar application. You'll have to do some consolidating of the numbers yourself, but the SEC keeps records of quarterly and annual reports of all publicly traded companies, and the format that most companies produce their documents in is pretty clear cut if your just looking for sales numbers.

Yahoo Finance does a pretty good job of consolidating this information for you, but getting historical numbers for anything other than share price does not appear to be what Yahoo is specializing in.

Etrade, my current broker, will give you a wide variety of statistical information under "Fundamentals" or "Earnings" for a particular stock, but most of that is either real-time or historical through the latest SEC filings. I don't think that will give you the kind of historical perspective I think you are looking for over a broader period of time.

2007-03-05 16:39:34 · answer #3 · answered by G A 5 · 0 0

Try money.msn.com. You can build a free report with 10 year summary financial information. That may be of help to you. Also, its free.

2007-03-06 02:21:16 · answer #4 · answered by ajherden 3 · 0 0

I believe Quicken has that information on its website (I'm pretty sure you'd need to open an account.)

Valueline (which you can get for free at any decent library) will have it as well.

2007-03-05 19:03:03 · answer #5 · answered by Adam J 6 · 0 0

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