I really like the way the S&P app is built in for fundamental analysis and for now I am inclined to use it more than the Terminal for data.I just feel like the info provided means I have less manual manipulations to do than with the info I get from Bloomberg. Nice company specific news with daily reports from the team at S&P +1 Capital IQ.īoth have an excel add in from what i've read but I have yet to try the S&P one.Īll in all I've only recently started playing around with it so my knowledge is very weak with S&P. Not gonna compare on this one since it isn't fair game imo. Having access to only one source of analysis (S&P) understandable hehe. The prefix for a range formula is CIQRANGE. Yale researchers with a Capital IQ account can download and. Note: To use Capital IQ while off-campus, you will need to connect to the Yale network via VPN. The financial statements are very very detailed and you can see that it has fundamental analysis in mind the way it's layed out. The S&P Capital IQ Excel Plug-in allows you to pull in a range of metrics at once with just one formula. Once your account is established, you can l og in with your username and password at while on the Yale network. The Equity screening is god awful at least the first few times I've tried it compared to the alternative on the terminal. Web app that is much slower to use than a Terminal +1 for Bloomberg I've started dabling around with it to compare with my Bloomberg Terminal and here are my first impressions.
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