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S&P 500 Shiller P/E ratio compared to trailing 12 months P/E ratio The ratio was invented by American economist Robert J. Shiller . The ratio is used to gauge whether a stock, or group of stocks, is undervalued or overvalued by comparing its current market price to its inflation-adjusted historical earnings record.
2007-04-28 02:11 Lalala666 500×280×0 (74832 bytes) 2007-04-28 02:03 Lalala666 500×290×0 (74830 bytes) A rendering of the NASDAQ Composite index from 1994 to 2005, showing the stunning peak in early 2000 that coincides with the dot-com bust. The data in the file is daily, so you can get some very good resolution from i ont if you want to.
The B400 had a 10-year annualized return of 9.9%, compared to a DJIA annualized return of 5.2%, an S&P 500 return of 5.1%, a NASDAQ return of 7.5% and a DJUSTSM return of 6.0% for the same time period. An updated chart of the B400 has appeared in The Trader section of Barron's magazine since the index's inception.
The Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Index, also called the FTSE 100 Index, FTSE 100, FTSE, or, informally, the "Footsie" / ˈ f ʊ t s i /, is the United Kingdom's best-known stock market index of the 100 most highly capitalised blue chips listed on the London Stock Exchange.
2009-05-22 TSE to begin to offer Historical Data of TOPIX Style Index Series; 2009-07-01 TOPIX celebrates 40th Anniversary; 2009-11-24 TOPIX Futures to trade on NYSE Liffe beginning in the summer of 2010; 2010-03-08 TSE to begin calculation of the Tokyo Stock Exchange Dividend Focus 100 Index – a new exchange index focused on dividend yield
[list 2] In the US, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down an additional 10%, the NASDAQ Composite closed down 9.4%, and the S&P 500 closed down 9.5%. This caused the NASDAQ and S&P 500 to fall to more than 20% below their all time highs, and so the declines activated a trading curb at the New York Stock Exchange for the second time that ...
On Black Monday, the DJIA plummeted 508 points, losing 22.6% of its value in one day. The S&P 500 Index dropped 20.4%, falling from 282.7 to 225.06. The NASDAQ Composite lost only 11.3%, not because of restraint on the part of sellers, but because the NASDAQ market system failed.
Robert Shiller's plot of the S&P composite real price–earnings ratio and interest rates (1871–2012), from Irrational Exuberance, 2d ed. [1] In the preface to this edition, Shiller warns that "the stock market has not come down to historical levels: the price–earnings ratio as I define it in this book is still, at this writing [2005], in the mid-20s, far higher than the historical average