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Valuation dip finder

Which big companies trade cheapest relative to their own valuation history? Every S&P 500 stock, ranked by how its current Price / Sales (P/S) compares to its last 10Y — the lower the percentile, the cheaper it is versus how the market has normally priced it. Built using SEC filing data. Revenue and earnings growth are shown so discerning investors can avoid value traps.

Metric
History
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#PriceP/S trend
1CRM3.5×
0th
-54%-56%+11%+14%+16%+29%-4%
2IT1.5×
0th
-59%-74%+2%-15%-15%-41%-8%
3LULU1.1×
0th
-78%-77%+4%-4%-3%-19%-4%
4ADBE3.5×
0th
-72%-70%+11%+12%+12%+7%-6%
5CMCSA0.4×
0th
-48%-59%+1%+15%+25%+20%+0%
6INTU3.7×
0th
-62%-65%+15%+26%+26%+32%-1%
7FI1.4×
0th
-69%-78%+2%-7%-17%-1%-5%
8ACN1.5×
0th
-49%-60%+7%+26%+28%-0%+0%
9TYL5.4×
0th
-42%-54%+9%+16%+16%+9%-0%
10KLAC2.4×
0th
-58%-89%+13%+16%+14%+26%-1%

Percentile = where today's multiple sits within the stock's own daily range over the selected window (0 = cheapest it's been, 100 = most expensive). Multiples use trailing-twelve-month fundamentals from SEC filings; only positive multiples are ranked. Cheap vs history is not a buy signal — always check whether the discount reflects a real change in the business. Not investment advice.

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