S&P 100 Growth Dashboard
Analyze revenue and earnings growth for America's 100 largest companies. Compare year-over-year performance, identify sector trends, and discover which companies are leading or lagging in fundamental growth.
Open Source & Transparent
All data is open source and verifiable on GitHub. We believe in transparency and welcome contributions to improve our tools.
Companies Tracked
100
Data Source
SEC EDGAR
Update Frequency
Weekly
Understanding Growth Metrics
Learn how to interpret the key metrics used in fundamental growth analysis.
TTM Trailing Twelve Months
TTM represents the sum of a company's financial metrics over the last four quarters. Unlike fiscal year data, TTM provides a rolling, up-to-date view of performance. This is especially useful for companies with fiscal years that don't align with the calendar year.
CAGR Compound Annual Growth Rate
CAGR smooths out year-to-year volatility to show a company's sustained growth trajectory. A company with 10% revenue CAGR has doubled its revenue approximately every 7 years. Compare 3-year and 5-year CAGR to identify accelerating or decelerating growth.
YoY Year-over-Year Growth
YoY compares a metric to the same period one year ago. This eliminates seasonal effects and provides a clear view of whether a company is growing or shrinking. Positive YoY indicates growth; negative indicates contraction.
Revenue Growth
Revenue growth is the top-line indicator of business expansion. Companies can only grow earnings sustainably if they're also growing revenue. Watch for companies with strong revenue growth but declining EPS growth—this may indicate margin compression.
EPS Growth (Diluted)
Diluted EPS growth shows how quickly a company's earnings per share are growing, accounting for all potential shares from convertible securities. This is what ultimately drives stock prices over the long term and is watched closely by investors.
Sector Analysis
Different sectors have different growth characteristics. Technology companies typically show higher growth rates but more volatility. Utilities show steady but modest growth. Compare companies within their sector for the most meaningful analysis.
How to Use This Data
Growth Screening
Filter companies by growth rates to identify high-growth opportunities. Look for companies with strong TTM growth and consistent CAGR to find sustainable growers.
Momentum Analysis
Track acceleration or deceleration in fundamentals. Compare recent TTM growth to longer-term CAGR to identify companies whose growth is speeding up or slowing down.
Valuation Context
Use growth rates to contextualize P/E ratios. A company with 30% EPS growth may justify a higher P/E than one with 5% growth. The PEG ratio (P/E divided by growth) helps normalize valuations.
Sector Comparison
Identify growth leaders and laggards within each sector. This helps with sector rotation strategies and finding alpha by picking the best companies within outperforming sectors.