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  1. Data: The latest overall data update was on January 5, 2024; my next one will be in January 2025. My country risk premiums also get updated midyear; my latest update is as of July 2024. Check under data for downloads and links, as well as archived data from prior years.

    • Data

      Data Breakdown: I explain how I break the data down by...

    • Tools

      The online tools are the latest addition and while I wish I...

    • Teaching

      Welcome to my teaching page. This page contains links to...

    • Online Classes

      Class : Description : Online variants: Accounting: This is...

    • Spreadsheets

      Browser warning: Starting in August 2021, Google Chrome...

    • Writing

      I love writing, though I do not say much that is new or...

    • Class Material

      Much of the raw material (data) that we use for valuation...

    • Regular Classes

      In my day job, I teach the Corporate Finance and Valuation...

  2. Data Breakdown: I explain how I break the data down by variable, by industry, by region, by time and by company. Current Data: This is where the data resides, broken down into corporate finance, valuation and portfolio management sections.

  3. 5 de ene. de 2024 · Annual data on interest rates, inflation rates, GNP growth and the weighted dollar from 1981 through most recent year.

  4. In the data section, in the link, you will find data for use in valuation and corporate finance. I have the most updated values (usually at the start of each calendar year for key inputs (margins, risk measures, return measures), classified by industry and by region (US, Emerging Markets, Europe, Japan etc.).

  5. 6 de ene. de 2023 · Aswath Damodaran shares his annual data update on global publicly traded firms, covering profitability, risk, leverage and valuation metrics. He explains his data sources, estimation choices and objectives for using data in corporate finance and valuation.

  6. DATA UPDATE 2 FOR 2022: A WINNING YEAR FOR STOCKS, BUT... Looking back and forward... Déjà vu! 2. ̈ Leading into 2021, the big questions facing investors were about how quickly economies would recover from COVID, with the assumption that the virus would fade during the year, and the pressures that the resulting growth would put on inflation.

  7. people.stern.nyu.edu › adamodar › New_Home_PageDamodaran Online

    Damodaran Online