Where can I find old stock prices?

Where can I find old stock prices?

Online brokerage sites such as eTrade and TD Ameritrade or apps like Robinhood will have both real-time and historical quote data for customers and usually limited access for non-customers as well. Financial websites like Motley Fool or Google Finance will also provide quote information for both stocks and indices.

What was the price of IBM stock in 1970?

Compare IBM With Other Stocks

IBM Historical Annual Stock Price Data
Year Average Stock Price Annual % Change
1971 16.0933 5.90%
1970 14.8562 -12.83%
1969 16.4559 15.71%

How do I find the value of a stock on a certain date?

Use the “Historical Stock Price Values” tool on the MarketWatch website to find stock prices for a specific date. Enter the symbol of the stock, or a keyword for the company if you don’t know the stock symbol, into the first box in the tool.

How many stock splits has IBM had?

A stock dividend is a dividend payment made to stockholders that is made in stock rather than cash. The last IBM stock split occurred in 1999 and the last stock dividend distribution occurred in 1967. View information on our 15 stock splits and 26 stock dividends.

How do you find historical price?

Calculating the historical return is done by subtracting the most recent price from the oldest price and divide the result by the oldest price.

How do I find historical stock prices for delisted companies?

Where can I find daily stock price data for delisted securities? Enter a company name or ticker in the main search bar and select the appropriate company to load the company overview page. Hover over the Price Charts tab and select Price History.

When did IBM go public?

International Business Machines (IBM) has been a publicly traded company since being incorporated as the Computing Tabulating Recording Company in 1911. Since then, the company has experienced phenomenal growth. IBM’s stock has regularly split and paid healthy dividends since 1913.

How do you find the value of stock?

The most common way to value a stock is to compute the company’s price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio. The P/E ratio equals the company’s stock price divided by its most recently reported earnings per share (EPS). A low P/E ratio implies that an investor buying the stock is receiving an attractive amount of value.

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