Shiller, R
On this page you'll find the current S&P 500 price to earnings ratio, summary statistics on the maximum, minimum, average, and median P/E reading, and the history of the S&P 500 P/E ratio. Find a S&P 500 PE Ratio visualization and calculator, as well as the monthly P/E ratio histor...
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. ...
PE ratio:16.7x PEG ratio:6x SP 500 earnings yield:+5.98% vs last week’s +5.94% Year-over-year growth of fwd est:+2.8% vs last week’s +3% (Source: IBES by Refinitiv) What does the trend in Q1 ’19 SP 500 Earnings Look Like ? Click to enhance / enlarge Look at the change...
Previous Close - Market Cap 1.72M PE Ratio - EPS - Volume (Avg. Vol.) 44,533 Day's Range $151.60 - $154.61 52-Week Range $109.44 - $160.38 Dividend & Yield $0.45 (0.29%) About InvestorPlace Products Contact Us Help Careers Advertise With Us Disclosures & Disclaimers Privacy...
PE ratio:16x PEG ratio:3.5x SP 500 earnings yield:6.23% vs last week’s 6.07% Year-over-year growth of fwd est:+4.66% vs last week’s 4.76% Summary / conclusion:May ’19 was quite brutal for the SP 500 as the key benchmark is now down 4.5% year-to-date, and both the SP 500...
This week’s buzz chart, shows monthly P/E Ratios for S&P 500 from 1871. It demonstrates that the P/E Ratio is on higher end of the spectrum.
Mar1781801821841861881901921941D5D1M3M6MYTD1Y3Y5Y10Y20YALL End of interactive chart. Previous Close $182.47 Market Cap - PE Ratio - EPS - Volume (Avg. Vol.) 122,740 Day's Range $180.35 - $182.83 52-Week Range $167.42 - $198.61 Dividend & Yield $3.87 (2.12%) ...
Current PE is estimated from latest reported earnings and current market price. Source: Robert Shiller and his book Irrational Exuberance网页链接for historic S&P 500 PE Ratio. SEE ALSO Shiller PE RatioS&P 500 Price to Sales RatioS&P 500 Price to Book ValueS&P 500 Earnings YieldInflation Adjusted ...
Personally, I prefer the backward-looking as reported P/E ratio because it reflects something that actually happened. But thedownsideto that measure is it doesn't address what might happen in the future. The problem with using forward-looking P/E ratios is that you aredependenton forecasts. ...