P/E Ratio — AAPL
28.4x Current P/E
87th Percentile, 10yr
16–22x Fair range
Expensive Cheap 2015 2018 2020 2022 2024 Now
Historical P/E
80th+ percentile
40–60th percentile
20th− percentile

Track P/E, EV/EBITDA, EV/Sales, P/S and more — with percentile context against 5, 10, and 20-year ranges.

What you get

Five ways the market has priced a stock,
plotted over years, not traded in a snapshot.

P/E
Price-to-Earnings
The classic. How much investors pay per dollar of earnings. Best for profitable, stable businesses.
EV/EBITDA
Enterprise Value / EBITDA
Controls for capital structure. Compare companies with different debt levels on equal footing.
EV/Sales
Enterprise Value / Revenue
Works even when earnings are negative. Common for high-growth, pre-profitability companies.
P/S
Price-to-Sales
Revenue-based equivalent of P/E. Useful when comparing companies across sectors with different margin profiles.
PEG
Price/Earnings-to-Growth
Adjusts P/E for growth rate. 1x means fairly priced relative to growth; above 2x suggests the market is optimistic.
Why existing tools fail

Price charts tell you what happened.
Multives tells you what it means.

The problem with other tools
Bloomberg / CapitalIQ
Best data, but $25k+/year and built for institutional desks. Retail investors are locked out.
Yahoo Finance / Finviz
Show you current multiple or a scatter of peers. No historical context, no time-series.
TradingView
Incredible price charting, but you have to calculate multiples yourself and plot them manually.
TIKR / Koyfin
Better than average, but built for portfolio managers with complex dashboards. The data exists, the clarity doesn't.
What Multives does
Historical time-series, not snapshots
See the full arc — how many years has this stock sustained a premium multiple? When did it derate? With context, not just data.
Percentile context built in
"Currently at the 87th percentile of its 10-year range" is immediately actionable. Raw numbers without context are noise.
Forward and backward multiples
Trailing twelve months shows what actually happened. NTM estimates show what the market is pricing in. Both, on the same chart.
Peer comparison on the same canvas
Benchmark a stock's multiple trajectory against its sector — not as a static table, but as a living comparison.
"Every investor knows the current P/E. Almost no one knows the 10-year distribution behind it."

The difference between a value investor and someone holding a falling knife is historical context. When a stock trades at 40x earnings, the question isn't "is that expensive?" — it's "when has it been expensive before, and what happened next?"

Multives exists to make that context visible, accessible, and immediate. Not a terminal subscription. Not a spreadsheet you've been meaning to update. Just a clean chart that tells you where you are in a company's valuation history.

Because the best time to buy a great business is when the multiple says it's been expensive before — and the market is wrong this time.