Page 1 of 1
Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: April 15th, 2019, 10:47 am
by AsleepInYorkshire
I'd be grateful if someone could recommend or point me in the right direction for fundamental information please. I've been using the LSE website but suspect there may be something more user friendly out there.
Also does anyone know where I can obtain price charts and other fundamentals over 5 years old please?
Thank you in advance for any assistance/ help offered.
Oh I should say I'm happy to pay for this kind of information but only if such payment brings value to the table over and above any free offerings
Thank you
AiY
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: April 15th, 2019, 11:01 am
by kiloran
No recommendation as such, but I've compiled a list of various useful data sources:
http://lemonfoolfinancialsoftware.weebl ... sites.html--kiloran
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: April 15th, 2019, 11:08 am
by AsleepInYorkshire
Thank you for your help and kindness
AiY
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: April 15th, 2019, 11:13 am
by Dod101
The best fundamental information source is the Annual and Interim Reports. That is where I guess all these third party sources get their data (and they do not always transcribe it very accurately)
Dod
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: April 15th, 2019, 12:54 pm
by monabri
AsleepInYorkshire wrote:I'd be grateful if someone could recommend or point me in the right direction for fundamental information please. I've been using the LSE website but suspect there may be something more user friendly out there.
Also does anyone know where I can obtain price charts and other fundamentals over 5 years old please?
Thank you in advance for any assistance/ help offered.
Oh I should say I'm happy to pay for this kind of information but only if such payment brings value to the table over and above any free offerings
Thank you
AiY
Be careful about simply looking at share price on a historical basis ...there are occasions when there have been share splits/consolidations/special dividends returned to the shareholders and this might not be apparent from a simple chart of time v price. Its not always obvious if these have occurred.
I use dividenddata (free - see Kiloren's list) which I find very useful for yield history, dividend history and share splits/consolidations/special dividends. .
If you do simply want share prices , then type in the companies name into Google ( example AV. Share price) and you will get a graph ( see caveats above).
What do you class as fundamental information?
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: April 24th, 2019, 2:05 pm
by marronier
Try
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets and under market data click on A - Z for company info.
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: June 3rd, 2019, 3:24 pm
by gbjbaanb
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: June 3rd, 2019, 3:36 pm
by kiloran
Thanks, but it's already on the list
--kiloran
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: June 3rd, 2019, 6:06 pm
by OhNoNotimAgain
Historic data is as much use as the proverbial chocolate teapot.
Re: Free Fundamentals Source
Posted: June 4th, 2019, 3:09 pm
by gbjbaanb
kiloran wrote:Thanks, but it's already on the list
--kiloran
and to think I checked the list twice before posting!