Market dashboard for busy investors
WealthScout gives you a single place to track what matters — stocks, ETFs, indices, forex, crypto and macro data. Built for passive investors who want to stay informed without spending hours reading financial news. Fully customizable: add the tickers you care about and get AI-powered insights, an economic calendar and a daily news feed for your watchlist.
📈 Stocks & ETFs
🌍 Global Indices
💱 Forex & Crypto
📅 Economic Calendar
🤖 AI Insights
📰 Watchlist News
Holdings
8
stocks + ETFs
Best Today
NVDA
+2.95%
Worst Today
IUSQ.DE
+0.04%
My Stocks 7
AAPL
Apple
298.01
USD
▲ 0.70%
Performance
1D
+0.7%
1W
+0.8%
1M
-0.3%
3M
+19.8%
YTD
+10.2%
1Y—
52-Week Range
198.96
298.01
317.40
P/E Fwd
31.0×
RSI
51
P/B
41.0×
Beta
1.09
Yield
36.00%
MSFT
Microsoft
379.40
USD
▲ 0.13%
Performance
1D
+0.1%
1W
-2.8%
1M
-8.9%
3M
-2.3%
YTD
-19.4%
1Y—
52-Week Range
356.28
379.40
555.45
P/E Fwd
19.6×
RSI
35
P/B
6.8×
Beta
1.10
Yield
96.00%
NVDA
NVIDIA
210.69
USD
▲ 2.95%
Performance
1D
+3.0%
1W
+2.8%
1M
-4.4%
3M
+18.1%
YTD
+11.7%
1Y—
52-Week Range
142.03
210.69
236.54
P/E Fwd
16.6×
RSI
50
P/B
26.1×
Beta
2.20
Yield
47.00%
AMZN
Amazon
244.39
USD
▲ 2.90%
Performance
1D
+2.9%
1W
+1.2%
1M
-5.8%
3M
+17.1%
YTD
+7.9%
1Y—
52-Week Range
196.00
244.39
278.56
P/E Fwd
24.7×
RSI
44
P/B
5.9×
Beta
1.44
GOOGL
Alphabet
368.03
USD
▲ 1.17%
Performance
1D
+1.2%
1W
+2.9%
1M
-5.0%
3M
+19.9%
YTD
+16.9%
1Y—
52-Week Range
162.00
368.03
408.61
P/E Fwd
25.4×
RSI
49
P/B
9.3×
Beta
1.24
Yield
24.00%
META
Meta
577.22
USD
▲ 1.70%
Performance
1D
+1.7%
1W
+1.6%
1M
-4.1%
3M
-4.8%
YTD
-11.1%
1Y—
52-Week Range
520.26
577.22
796.25
P/E Fwd
15.9×
RSI
43
P/B
6.0×
Beta
1.23
Yield
36.00%
TSLA
Tesla
400.49
USD
▲ 1.04%
Performance
1D
+1.0%
1W
+0.3%
1M
-0.9%
3M
+5.3%
YTD
-8.6%
1Y—
52-Week Range
288.77
400.49
498.83
P/E Fwd
160.2×
RSI
47
P/B
18.3×
Beta
1.80
ETFs & Funds 1
IUSQ.DE
iShares MSCI World
105.96
EUR
▲ 0.04%
Performance
1D+0.0%
1W+1.9%
1M+3.4%
3M+14.8%
YTD+14.0%
1Y—
52-Week Range
81.62105.96106.36
RSI · 14D
66.6
healthy
Fund Details
MSCI All Country World Index (Net)
Index Valuation
P/E
21.9×
Fair
P/B
3.32×
Fair
Index P/E vs History
Now
21.9×
History building — 51 more data points needed for full 1Y context
Market Indexes
S&P 500
^GSPC
7500.58 USD
1W
+1.4%
1M
+2.0%
YTD
+9.4%
5943
52W RANGE
7621
Global Macro 2
🇺🇸
United States
US · USD
GDP Growth
+2.3%
2026
Inflation (CPI)
3.2%
2026
10Y Bond Yield
4.49%
^GSPC
7500.58
+1.08%
🇵🇱
Poland
PL · PLN
GDP Growth
+3.3%
2026
Inflation (CPI)
3.3%
2026
Obligacje skarbowe
OTS 3M
2.00%
ROR 1Y
4.00%
DOR 2Y
4.15%
TOS 3Y
4.40%
COI 4Y
4.75%
ROS 6Y
5.00%
EDO 10Y
5.35%
ROD 12Y
5.60%
Calendar
Earnings & Dividends
Next 90 days · your watchlist
2026-06-25
META
DIV
Dividend Payment
2026-06-26
NVDA
DIV
Dividend Payment
2026-06-30
PEP
DIV
Dividend Payment
2026-07-09
PEP
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-07-22
TSLA
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-07-23
GOOGL
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-07-29
MSFT
EARN
Earnings Report
META
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-07-30
AAPL
EARN
Earnings Report
AMZN
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-08-06
PKN.WA
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-08-20
MSFT
DIV
Ex-Dividend Date
2026-08-26
NVDA
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-08-27
CDR.WA
EARN
Earnings Report
2026-09-10
MSFT
DIV
Dividend Payment
Macro Events
Rate decisions & key releases
No upcoming macro events scheduled.
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Glossary
Valuation
P/E FwdForward Price-to-Earnings›
Stock price divided by next 12 months' expected earnings per share. Tells you how much you're paying today for future profits. P/E of 20× means you pay €20 for every €1 of projected earnings. Because it's forward-looking, it reflects growth expectations — a high P/E doesn't always mean expensive if growth is strong. Always compare within the same industry; banks and tech have very different normal ranges.
Below 15× is often considered value territory · 15–25× is fair · above 30× implies high growth expectations
P/E TrailTrailing Price-to-Earnings›
Stock price divided by actual earnings over the past 12 months (reported, not estimated). More reliable than forward P/E because it uses real numbers, but backward-looking. A large gap between trailing and forward P/E signals analysts expect earnings to change significantly — if forward is much lower, strong growth is priced in.
Forward P/E well below trailing → analysts expect strong earnings growth ahead
P/SPrice-to-Sales›
Market capitalisation divided by annual revenue. Useful for companies with no earnings yet (startups, high-growth tech) where P/E is meaningless. P/S of 5× means the market values the company at 5× its annual revenue. The catch: it ignores profitability entirely — a company burning cash can still look "cheap" on P/S.
Below 1.5× is cheap for most industries · software companies routinely trade at 5–15×
P/BPrice-to-Book›
Market capitalisation divided by net book value (total assets minus total liabilities). P/B of 1× means the market values the company at exactly what its accountants say it's worth. Below 1× can signal deep value — or hidden problems. Most relevant for asset-heavy businesses like banks, insurers, and manufacturers. Less useful for software companies where most value is intangible.
Banks often trade near 1× book · tech companies can trade at 10–50× because software has no book value
EV/EBITDAEnterprise Value / EBITDA›
Enterprise Value (market cap + net debt) divided by EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortisation). Unlike P/E, it's capital-structure neutral — doesn't matter whether a company is funded by debt or equity, making cross-company comparisons fairer. Widely used in M&A to assess what an acquirer would actually pay.
Below 10× is cheap · 10–15× is fair · above 20× is expensive for most non-tech industries
P/E HistoryP/E vs Historical Average›
Compares the current P/E ratio to the stock's own 1, 3, and 5-year averages. More useful than comparing to market-wide averages, because every company has its own "normal" valuation range. A stock trading at a HIGH vs its own history may be overbought even if the absolute P/E looks reasonable. The 5-year percentile shows where today's P/E sits in the full historical distribution.
P/E at 90th percentile = more expensive than 90% of all observations over the past 5 years
Technical Indicators
RSIRelative Strength Index›
Momentum oscillator (0–100) measuring speed and magnitude of recent price changes. Calculated by comparing average gains vs average losses over the past 14 days. Below 30 = stock may be oversold (potential bounce). Above 70 = stock may be overbought (potential pullback). Important caveat: in strong trends, RSI can stay extreme for weeks — it's a signal to investigate, not a mechanical buy/sell trigger.
RSI 28 during a broad market dip offers better mean-reversion odds than RSI 28 in a collapsing sector
MACDMoving Avg Convergence/Divergence›
Tracks the relationship between two exponential moving averages (12-day and 26-day). The MACD line is their difference; the signal line is a 9-day EMA of MACD; the histogram is MACD minus signal. A bullish cross (MACD crosses above signal) suggests building upward momentum. Best used to confirm trend direction — combine with RSI to avoid false signals in choppy markets.
Histogram turning from negative to positive is an early sign of momentum shift before the lines actually cross
BBBollinger Bands›
Three lines plotted around price: a 20-day moving average flanked by upper/lower bands placed 2 standard deviations away. BB% shows where price sits: 0% = lower band, 50% = midline, 100% = upper band. As volatility increases, the bands widen; during quiet periods they squeeze. "Squeezes" often precede big moves. Touching the upper band alone is not a sell signal in a strong uptrend.
BB% below 10% after a squeeze = potential breakout setup · above 90% in isolation = stretched but not necessarily a top
MA50 / MA200Moving Averages›
Simple averages of closing prices over the last 50 and 200 trading days. The 50-day MA reflects medium-term trend; the 200-day MA reflects long-term trend. A Golden Cross (MA50 crosses above MA200) is a widely watched bullish signal. A Death Cross (MA50 crosses below MA200) is the opposite. Both are lagging indicators — they confirm trend changes after they happen, not before.
Price above both MAs with MA50 > MA200 is the classic "healthy uptrend" structure
52W52-Week Range›
The highest and lowest closing price over the past 52 weeks. The thermometer shows where today's price sits within that range. Trading near the 52W high signals strong momentum — stocks making new highs tend to continue higher more often than not. Near the 52W low may indicate distress, capitulation selling, or deep value. Always check why a stock is near its low before buying the dip.
Stocks within 5% of their 52W high have historically outperformed the market over the following 6 months on average
BetaMarket Sensitivity›
How much a stock tends to move relative to its benchmark index. Beta 1.0 = moves in line with the market. Beta 1.5 = historically moves 50% more (amplified upside and downside). Beta 0.5 = half the market's volatility (defensive). Beta below 0 = inverse relationship (rare; some gold miners). Beta is calculated from past returns and may not reflect future sensitivity after major business changes.
During a 10% market drawdown: Beta 1.5 stock loses ~15% · Beta 0.5 stock loses ~5%
Fundamental Health
ROEReturn on Equity›
Net profit divided by shareholders' equity. Measures how efficiently a company generates profit from the money shareholders have put in. ROE of 20% means the company earns €0.20 for every €1 of equity. High ROE can mean a strong competitive moat — or high leverage inflating the number. Always check D/E alongside ROE: a company can boost ROE by taking on debt, which amplifies risk.
Consistently above 15% = strong · above 20% = excellent · Buffett targets >15% sustained over many years
ROAReturn on Assets›
Net profit divided by total assets. Shows how efficiently management uses everything the company owns to generate profit. Unlike ROE, it's not inflated by debt because total assets include debt-financed assets. Particularly useful for comparing asset-heavy companies like retailers, manufacturers, and airlines.
Above 10% is excellent across most industries · banks operate at 1–2% due to their balance sheet structure
ROSNet Profit Margin›
Net income divided by total revenue — the percentage of each euro of sales that becomes profit after all costs, taxes, and interest. High margins indicate pricing power and operational efficiency. Margins vary enormously by industry: software companies may achieve 25–40%, supermarkets often earn under 3%. The trend matters more than the absolute level — a rising margin signals improving unit economics.
Apple ~25% · Amazon retail ~3% · Goldman Sachs ~20% · airlines ~3–5%
CRCurrent Ratio›
Current assets divided by current liabilities — measures whether a company can pay its bills due within the next 12 months. Above 1.0 means assets exceed short-term obligations. Between 1.5–3.0 is generally healthy. Below 1.0 is a yellow flag. Very high ratios (>4) can mean cash is sitting idle rather than being invested productively.
Ratio of 0.8 means for every €1 owed in the next year, the company holds only €0.80 in liquid assets
QRQuick Ratio›
Like the current ratio but excludes inventory, which can be slow to convert to cash. Formula: (Cash + Receivables) ÷ Current liabilities. A stricter test of immediate liquidity. Above 1.0 is safe — the company can cover short-term debt without selling any inventory. Particularly important for companies with large, slow-moving inventory like retail or manufacturing.
A retailer with CR 2.0 but QR 0.6 has half its current assets tied up in unsold inventory
Cash RatioCash & Equivalents / Current Liabilities›
The strictest liquidity test: cash and near-cash investments only, divided by current liabilities. Asks: "Could this company pay all short-term debts right now, without selling anything?" Most companies don't hold this much cash (it's inefficient), so 0.5 is already solid. Useful during credit crunches when other assets suddenly become hard to liquidate.
0.2–0.5 is common and acceptable · Apple historically holds >1.0 due to its enormous cash pile
DRDebt Ratio›
Total debt divided by total assets — the percentage of assets financed by creditors rather than shareholders. Below 0.4 is generally low-risk; above 0.7 means the company is highly leveraged and vulnerable to interest rate rises or earnings downturns. Industry context matters enormously — utilities and real estate routinely carry DR above 0.7 as a normal part of their business model.
DR 0.3 = fortress balance sheet · DR 0.75 = high leverage, interest coverage becomes critical to watch
D/EDebt-to-Equity›
Total debt divided by shareholders' equity. D/E of 1.0 means equal parts debt and equity. Below 0.5 is conservative; above 2.0 means debt is more than double equity — manageable in stable industries with predictable cash flows (telecom, utilities) but risky in cyclical ones. Note: negative equity (common in buyback-heavy companies) makes this ratio meaningless.
D/E 0.2 = nearly debt-free · D/E 3.0 in a cyclical industry = significant risk in a downturn
Dividends & Returns
YieldDividend Yield›
Annual dividends per share divided by current stock price, expressed as a percentage. A 4% yield means you receive 4% of your investment back each year in cash. Higher yield isn't always better — a spike in yield often means the stock price has fallen sharply, signalling trouble ("yield trap"). Always check whether the dividend is covered by earnings and free cash flow.
Yield above 7% deserves scrutiny — either the market expects a cut, or it's genuinely exceptional value
DPRDividend Payout Ratio›
Dividends paid divided by net earnings — how much of each euro earned is returned to shareholders. 0–75% is generally sustainable. Above 100% means paying out more than it earns — funded by debt or reserves, unsustainable long-term. A ratio of 0% means no dividend, or the company reinvests all profits for growth (common in tech).
Utilities pay 60–80% sustainably · a retailer paying out 110% of earnings is a dividend cut waiting to happen
ETF-Specific
TERTotal Expense Ratio›
The annual cost of owning an ETF, deducted automatically from the fund's assets — you never pay a separate bill. TER of 0.20% means €2 per year is deducted per €1,000 invested. For passive index ETFs, TER is one of the most important factors in long-term returns — two ETFs tracking the same index but with 0.07% vs 0.50% TER will diverge significantly over 20 years due to compounding.
Over 20 years, 0.50% vs 0.07% TER on €10,000 costs roughly €900 in lost returns (at 7% annual growth)
AUMAssets Under Management›
Total value of all investor assets in the fund. Larger AUM means better liquidity (tighter bid-ask spreads), lower operational risk, and more stable fund continuation. Very small ETFs (<€50m) can be closed by the provider if uneconomical. AUM above €500m is typically well-established. For niche or thematic ETFs, always check AUM — many close within 3–5 years.
ETF at €50m AUM might trade with 0.3% bid-ask spread · same ETF at €5bn trades at 0.01%
Index P/EBlended Index Valuation›
The weighted-average P/E ratio of all companies in the index the ETF tracks. More relevant than the ETF's own P/E from price feeds, which is often unreliable. A high index P/E means you're paying more for each unit of collective earnings. Compare to the index's own history rather than other indices — emerging markets always look "cheap" vs US on raw P/E due to structural differences.
S&P 500 long-run average P/E is ~16× · index P/E above 25× historically precedes below-average 10-year returns
Analyst & Market
ConsensusAnalyst Recommendations›
Aggregated Buy / Hold / Sell ratings from sell-side analysts at investment banks, plus a median 12-month price target. Consensus is a useful sentiment gauge but comes with serious limitations: analysts have commercial conflicts with corporate clients, rarely issue Sell ratings (less than 5% of all ratings), and tend to cluster near each other. Upgrades and downgrades are more informative than the standing rating itself.
More than 70% Buy with >15% upside = strong conviction · treat Sell ratings as especially significant when they appear
GDPGDP Growth Rate›
Annual percentage change in Gross Domestic Product — the total value of goods and services produced in a country. Positive growth means the economy is expanding; negative for two consecutive quarters is the classic definition of recession. GDP growth drives corporate revenue growth, employment, and consumer spending. Slowing GDP often precedes earnings disappointments.
Above 3% = healthy expansion · below 0% for 2 quarters = recession, historically a buying opportunity after the trough
CPIInflation (Consumer Price Index)›
Measures the average change in prices paid by consumers for a basket of goods and services. High inflation (above 4–5%) erodes purchasing power, forces central banks to raise interest rates, and compresses equity valuations by increasing the discount rate on future earnings. The sweet spot most central banks target is 2%. High or accelerating inflation is generally negative for long-duration growth stocks.
Every 1% rise in real interest rates reduces the "fair value" of a long-duration growth stock by roughly 20–30%