stock classification (GICS)
May 6, 2005 8:53 AM   Subscribe

Does anyone know of a website where I can lookup a stock's GICS classification? There is plenty of information out there about GICS itself, but I have't been able to find anywhere I could simply enter a stock's symbol, and find it's classification.
posted by jruckman to Work & Money (3 answers total)
 
I believe the actual classification of companies into GICS is done by MSCI/S&P and any kind of company-to-GICS tool is only available through one of the services they own, like GICS Direct, Compustat or other MSCI/S&P databases. Having heard some stories about MSCI's lawyers for other products - licensing it, I'm sure, is not cheap or particularly flexible.

If you have a brokerage account, you might have access to "S&P Stock Reports" in the research section (Scottrade has this) - they cover most companies and list the GICS sector and sub-industry. Lexis-Nexis has GICS information, too, I think.

If you just want companies in some kind of classification system, there's SIC codes at the SEC.
posted by milkrate at 11:12 AM on May 6, 2005


If you have access to S&P's website, they usually list it on there with their ratings. Also, if you have a Bloomberg terminal you can go to a company (TICKER Equity FPRP ) then click options and search for GICS.
posted by Frank Grimes at 12:55 PM on May 6, 2005


I think Yahoo uses GICS to classify stocks by Sector and Industry - though they don't say that. But I just checked a few names S&P puts in non-intuitive sectors and they matched up.

Its kinda the industry standard so whenever you see someone classifying stocks into sectors 9/10 that's what they are using
posted by JPD at 12:57 AM on May 7, 2005


« Older Conversation Skills 101   |   Why is Thunderbird messing up attachments? Newer »
This thread is closed to new comments.