$426.06-5.17 (-1.20%)
S&P Global Inc., together with its subsidiaries, provides benchmarks, data, analytics, and workflow solutions in the global capital, energy and commodity, and automotive markets.
S&P Global Inc. in the Financial Services sector is trading at $426.06. The stock is currently 26% below its 52-week high of $579.05, remaining 12.8% below its 200-day moving average. Technical signals show neutral RSI of 46 and bearish MACD signal, explaining why SPGI maintains its current current market pressure. The Whystock Score of 50/100 suggests a balanced risk-reward profile.
Simplified model based on P/E and ROE. Not a substitute for full valuation analysis. Data may be delayed. See our Terms.
S&P Global Inc., together with its subsidiaries, provides benchmarks, data, analytics, and workflow solutions in the global capital, energy and commodity, and automotive markets. It operates through five segments: S&P Global Market Intelligence, S&P ...
The Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 reached new peaks on Friday, scoring their fifth consecutive we
US benchmark equity indexes were mostly higher intraday as a post-earnings rally in Apple (AAPL) sha
Adeia (ADEA) shares are in focus after S&P Global Ratings raised the company’s issuer credit rating to BB from BB minus. The agency assigned a stable outlook that highlights progress in strengthening the company’s financial profile and cash generation. See our latest analysis for Adeia. The S&P rating upgrade arrives after a strong run in the shares, with a 30 day share price return of 32.54% and an 81.17% year to date share price return, alongside a 1 year total shareholder return of 161.20%...
SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI could all be fast-tracked into the S&P 500 after their potential IPOs under new rules proposed late Thursday. S&P Dow Jones Indices unveiled a number of potential changes to its eligibility criteria and rules for so-called Megacap companies, in a document published late Thursday. Megacap companies would also be exempt from financial viability criteria requiring them to be profitable before being included in S&P indexes.
The owner of the S&P 500 index is considering changing rules governing the widely followed benchmark to fast track inclusion of SpaceX, OpenAI and other so-called megacap companies that could go public as soon as this year. Currently, newly-listed U.S. companies that seek a listing through an initial public offering only become eligible for inclusion in the S&P 500 and other S&P indices after trading on an exchange for a minimum of a year. S&P Global’s index arm is seeking public input on the possibility of easing these restrictions so that megacap companies could join the S&P 500 after six months and without being profitable.