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Stock Page

Read every section of a company page — profile, key stats, charts, dividend history, financial statements, and peer comparison.

6 min read

The stock page in ScreenerHub is the company-level view that pulls together everything available on a single ticker in one place. Use it to move from a screener result or watchlist entry to a full picture of the business — price context, financial health, dividend record, and how the company sits relative to its peers.

What the stock page is for

The stock page answers three questions in one place:

  • What does this company do, and what are its most important financial metrics right now?
  • How has revenue, profit, and the dividend grown or changed over time?
  • How does this company compare to the others in its peer group?

It is not a research terminal. It does not replace reading a company's own filings. It gives you the first pass — enough to decide whether a name from your screener results deserves deeper attention or can be set aside.

How to read it

Profile header

The header shows the company name, ticker, exchange, and current price. Below the price you see today's change in absolute and percentage terms, plus the one-year price return. The sector and industry classification appears to the right.

The About section below the header is a plain-text description of what the company does — its main business lines, geographic exposure, and how it generates revenue. Read it before interpreting any of the numbers below.

Key stats

The key stats block is a grid of the most-referenced financial metrics:

  • Market cap — the total market value of all shares outstanding
  • P/E ratio (TTM) — price divided by trailing twelve-month earnings per share
  • EPS (TTM) — earnings per share over the trailing twelve months
  • Dividend yield — annual dividend divided by current price
  • Revenue (TTM) — trailing twelve-month revenue
  • Net income (TTM) — trailing twelve-month net income
  • Average volume — average daily trading volume
  • Beta — the stock's historical price sensitivity relative to the market
  • Full-time employees — total headcount as reported

Each metric has a tooltip explaining what it measures and what the unit means. Hover over the question-mark icon next to a label to read it.

All monetary values follow your currency preference — USD, EUR, or the stock's native currency. Switch your preference in the top navigation bar.

Price chart

The price chart shows closing price history. Use the time-period tabs to switch between one month, three months, six months, one year, three years, and five years.

The chart is for directional context — trend, volatility, and drawdown pattern. It does not provide technical analysis overlays or volume bars.

Financial statements

The Financials tab shows income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow data. Toggle between annual and quarterly periods using the tabs above the table.

Free accounts see the five most recent annual periods and five most recent quarters for US-listed stocks. Pro accounts see up to thirty annual periods and twenty quarterly periods. Non-US exchanges are available on Pro plans only.

The columns you see represent reporting periods. Scroll horizontally to see older periods. Click a row label to read the definition in the glossary.

Revenue and profit chart

Inside the Revenue Analysis tab, the revenue-to-profit chart plots revenue and net income side by side across reporting periods. Use it to see the trend in both the top line and the margin without reading individual table cells.

Switch between annual and quarterly views with the toggle above the chart. Annual gives a cleaner trend signal; quarterly surfaces seasonality and recent turning points.

Dividend record

The Dividends tab shows the full dividend history and, if the company pays a dividend, a chart of per-share payments over time.

The dividend overview at the top of the tab shows:

  • current annualized dividend rate
  • trailing twelve-month yield
  • five-year average yield
  • payout ratio

Below the overview, the dividend history chart plots each individual payment. Years of consistent or growing payments are visible at a glance. Gaps or reductions are equally obvious.

Free accounts see five years of dividend history for US-listed stocks. Pro accounts see the full available history. Non-US dividend data is available on Pro plans only.

The dividend peer comparison below the chart ranks the company alongside its peers by yield and payout ratio so you can see whether the dividend is competitive within the sector.

Data freshness indicator

A timestamp at the bottom of each data section shows when that section was last updated. Screener data (used for key stats) refreshes daily. Price data is end-of-day. Financial statement data updates when a company files its quarterly or annual report.

If a value shows a dash (), the data point is not available for that ticker, either because the company does not report it or because it has not yet been updated after the most recent filing.

Peer set

The Overview tab includes a peer comparison table. Peers are companies in the same sector and industry with a comparable market cap. For each peer you see the current price, market cap, P/E ratio, dividend yield, and one-year return.

Click any peer name to open that company's stock page. The comparison is not customizable — the peer set is determined automatically based on the company's industry classification.

Screener Quick Check

If you have saved screeners, the Quick Check panel on the Overview tab shows whether the company currently passes or fails each of your saved screener definitions. Each rule is evaluated against live screener data and displayed as a pass or fail indicator.

Use Quick Check to immediately answer: "Would this stock pass the screens I care about, given today's data?"

Common patterns

Move from screener result to company page. Click any row in Studio's result table to open that company's stock page directly. The stock page keeps the Studio context — you can go back to the result table without losing your criteria.

Check the dividend peer comparison before adding to a watchlist. If you are building a dividend watchlist, use the dividend peer comparison to see whether the yield stands out within the sector or is just in line with peers. A high yield that is simply the sector average is a weaker signal than one that meaningfully exceeds it.

Use financial statements to validate a screener criterion. If Studio returned a company on a revenue growth screen, open the financial statements and confirm the trend across multiple periods. A single good year does not always signal a durable trend.

Read the About section before acting. The company description often reveals details that the numbers miss — whether the company is restructuring, what its main revenue segment is, or whether it operates in a region you have excluded from your strategy.

What it is not

The stock page is not a recommendation. Nothing on the page signals a buy, sell, or hold. The data describes what the company has reported and what the market currently prices in — your interpretation and decision-making are separate.

The stock page is not a real-time feed. Price data is end-of-day. Key stats update daily. If you need intraday pricing or live quote feeds, use your broker's platform.

The stock page is not a back-testing or portfolio tool. It does not show your position size, cost basis, or return on investment. For tracking stocks you own, use the Watchlist to organize names you want to monitor.

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