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Compustat

Compustat is a massive, incredibly detailed database of financial, statistical, and market information covering thousands of public companies globally. Think of it as the Fort Knox of financial data. Owned and operated by S&P Global Market Intelligence, the platform is the gold standard for institutional investors, academics, and financial analysts who need reliable, standardized data stretching back decades. Compustat meticulously collects information from company financial statements and other sources, cleaning it up and organizing it into a consistent format. This standardization is its superpower, allowing for apples-to-apples comparisons between different companies, industries, and time periods. Whether you want to analyze a company’s revenue growth over the last 40 years or compare the profitability of every company in the S&P 500, Compustat is the definitive tool for the job. It's the engine behind countless academic studies and sophisticated quantitative analysis strategies on Wall Street.

What's Inside the Treasure Chest?

Compustat is far more than just a list of stock prices. It’s a comprehensive library of corporate data, primarily broken down into two key areas.

Financial Statement Data

This is the heart of Compustat. It contains standardized data points pulled directly from a company's core financial reports: the income statement, the balance sheet, and the cash flow statement. This includes hundreds of variables, such as:

The beauty is that Compustat adjusts the data to account for different accounting practices, making it far easier to compare a company in the U.S. with one in Germany than by simply looking at their raw filings.

Market Data

Alongside the fundamental company data, Compustat includes extensive market information. This allows users to connect a company's operational performance to its stock market performance. Key data points include:

By combining this market data with financial statement data, analysts can calculate an endless array of valuation ratios, like the P/E ratio or dividend yield, for thousands of companies over many years.

Why Should a Value Investor Care?

For followers of value investing, Compustat is like a time machine and a metal detector rolled into one. While most individual investors will never get direct access to it (more on that below), understanding what it does reveals the power of data-driven investing.

The Power of Backtesting

Backtesting is the practice of using historical data to test how an investment strategy would have performed in the past. It’s a crucial way to see if an idea has merit before risking real money. Compustat's deep, clean historical data is the perfect playground for this. A value investor could, for example, test a strategy inspired by Benjamin Graham: “What if I had bought all the stocks trading at less than two-thirds of their net current asset value from 1980 to 2020 and held them for one year? What would my return have been?” Compustat makes answering such questions possible and is the reason we know that many fundamental value strategies have historically worked so well.

Uncovering Hidden Gems

Imagine trying to find a needle in a haystack. Now imagine you have a giant magnet. That's what Compustat is for stock screening. An investor can set very specific criteria to filter through tens of thousands of companies and find the handful that meet their exact requirements. For example, a follower of Warren Buffett might screen for companies with:

This process, which would take a lifetime to do manually, can be done in minutes, highlighting potentially undervalued, high-quality businesses for further research.

The Catch: Access and Alternatives

Here’s the reality check: a subscription to Compustat can cost tens of thousands of dollars per year. It's almost exclusively licensed by universities for academic research and by large financial institutions like hedge funds and investment banks. It is not designed for the “ordinary investor.” So, what can you do? Thankfully, the spirit of Compustat is more accessible than ever.