Learn: how to use bourva
New to market data? This guide explains what each bourva page shows and how to read it. For definitions of individual terms, see the glossary.
Reading a stock or ETF page
Each instrument page leads with the latest (delayed/sample) price and change, then key statistics — market cap, P/E ratio, EPS, dividend yield, 52-week range and volume. Below that you'll find the price chart, an about section, dividend history, financials and, for stocks, an analyst forecast. Missing values are shown as an em-dash (—) rather than guessed.
Dividends and distributions
The dividend table lists ex-dividend dates, payment dates and amounts. Dividend yield is the annual payout divided by the current price; forward yield estimates the next twelve months. To receive a dividend you must own the shares before the ex-date. ETF payouts are called distributions.
Comparing and screening
Use Compare to put two tickers side by side across price, valuation and dividends. Use the Screener to filter stocks and ETFs across markets by sector, yield, P/E and more. Market movers show the day's biggest gainers, losers and most-active names.
Sectors, indices and currencies
Browse companies by sector, see world indices and the largest companies on each exchange, and check currency exchange-rate pages with historical charts. Some markets also show a foreign-transaction (foreign flow) history.
About the data (important)
All figures on bourva today are delayed and/or illustrative sample data, shown for reference and education — never real-time quotes, and never investment advice. Every page labels its freshness and source. We are working to connect licensed feeds for full, real (still delayed) coverage.
Glossary
Unsure about a term? The financial glossary defines dividend yield, P/E ratio, market cap, ETF, ex-date, beta and more in plain English.
bourva provides delayed and sample market data and analysis for local and global exchanges. All figures are illustrative and may differ from official sources. Not investment advice.