Equity Research Terminal
FEATURED TICKERS
Finpocalypse is a free, SEC-native valuation research tool for US-listed equities. For any ticker, it shows where the stock trades today relative to its own ten-year history of price-to-earnings (P/E) and price-to-sales (P/S) multiples. Instead of asking whether a multiple is “high” in the abstract, it answers a sharper question: is this company cheap or expensive compared with how the market has normally priced it over a full decade of filings?
Every figure is rebuilt directly from SEC EDGAR 10-K and 10-Q filings — audited financial statements — rather than analyst estimates, price targets, or chart patterns. That means you can audit each P/E, P/S, margin, and growth number against the original filing, and the data refreshes automatically after each new report.
HOW IT WORKS
We read each company's 10-K and 10-Q straight from SEC EDGAR and rebuild trailing-twelve-month earnings, revenue, cash flow, and split-adjusted share counts from the raw XBRL facts.
Ten years of filings become a per-quarter P/E and P/S series, so every multiple is anchored to an actual reported period — not a vendor snapshot that quietly restates itself.
Today's multiple is placed against the company's own 10-year percentile bands and graded, so you instantly see whether a stock is cheap or expensive versus its own history.
POPULAR TICKERS
Or open the S&P 500 P/E heatmap to see every company colored by its current valuation.
FREQUENTLY ASKED
Every metric is computed from SEC EDGAR filings — the audited 10-K and 10-Q reports US-listed companies file. We do not use analyst estimates, price targets, or paid data feeds for valuation, so the numbers are auditable against the source documents.
The composite grade (A through F) scores a company's current P/E and P/S, growth, and balance-sheet quality against its own 10-year history. A high grade means the stock looks cheap and healthy relative to how the market has priced it before; a low grade means the opposite.
A P/E of 30 is expensive for a bank and cheap for a fast-growing software company. Comparing each company to its own 10-year percentile range removes that cross-industry noise and answers a sharper question: is this stock cheap or expensive versus how it has normally traded?
Yes. Valuation history, percentile bands, 35+ financial metrics, and the S&P 500 P/E heatmap are free to use. Finpocalypse is a research tool, not a broker, and does not provide individualized investment advice.