On this page you'll find the current S&P 500 price to sales ratio (also known as the price to revenue multiple), summary statistics on the maximum, minimum, average, and median P/S reading, and the history of the S&P 500 P/S ratio. ...
The Bloomberg chart below shows the current % of members within the S&P 500 (SPX), Nasdaq Composite (CCMP) and Russell 2000 (RTY) that are trading above their respective 200-day Simple Moving Averages. The S&P 500 and Russell 2000 are slightly lower on the week, but the Nasdaq Composite ...
“We think this is likely, with residual seasonality behind us, the labor market in better balance, deflation in certain key goods prices, and housing inflation potentially due to switch to a lower gear,” he said. Thursday's report was welcome news in bond markets.Treasury yields, which mov...
Weekly S&P 500 ChartStorm - Seasonality, Statistics, And Earnings by Topdown Charts Topdown Charts yep, that's the important part that a lot of people leave off: "sell in May" ... but come back in October. The full old-timey saying is: "Sell in May and go away, and come on back...
He also said seasonality is likely to slump in September, but might pick up in October and December. “September seasonality should be coming in on the downside so I would argue it will basically continue,” he said. —Carmen Reinicke ...
Since the 2009 stock market bottom, software ($DJUSSW) has no doubt been one of the bull market leaders. But one look at the seasonality chart for this past decade suggests caution as we head into June: The odds of software stocks rising during June has been less than any other...
The seasonality effect is well documented in both the professional and academic literature (see for example https://b.gatech.edu/Xn...). If an observed phenomenon is statistically significant, then by definition it is not random, or coincidence. In any event, what I was getting at with my...
www.barchart.com Is January a Good Month for Stocks? According to data compiled by LPL Financial, the S&P 500 has risen 1% in January, on average, since 1950. The firm's number-crunching further shows the following: When stocks rise over 10% between November and December – as was the...
“I’d pin some of the drop on seasonality. September is typically a rough month of the year for the stock market – and the S&P 500 has fallen on the Tuesday after Labor Day every year since 2016. People may simply just be catching up to what they missed during the dog days ...
a 1.1% loss for the S&P 500 SPX. Charting 2009's course Our New Year seasonality charts toast more gains. Pretty much the whole bandwagon of mid- and small-cap stocks in the domestic and foreign markets looks likely to jump. Large-caps, on the other hand, in the domestic or ...