Full filings list
Every form a US-listed company has filed, ordered by date. Click through to the EDGAR document; the metadata sits next to it (form type, accepted date, period of report).
//SEC · EDGAR · COMPANYFACTS
Type a ticker and read the filings. Finterm pulls submissions and us-gaap concept data straight from the SEC’s own EDGAR feed — annual reports, quarterly reports, material events, proxy statements — alongside a quarter-by-quarter view of revenue, net income, earnings per share, equity and cash flow. Free, in the browser, no account.
Every form a US-listed company has filed, ordered by date. Click through to the EDGAR document; the metadata sits next to it (form type, accepted date, period of report).
Pulled from companyfacts. Companies report under different us-gaap concept names; the pivoter picks the first available concept per metric so the trend is consistent across reporting changes.
Operating cash flow minus capital expenditure, computed on the wire. No GAAP-vs-adjusted ambiguity, no proprietary normalisation — just the company’s own numbers.
Companies don’t file a 10-Q for Q4. The pivoter back-solves Q4 flows from the 10-K and carries balance-sheet stocks forward from FY close, so every quarter is comparable.
Every request goes through a Cloudflare worker that caches at the edge with stale-while-revalidate, so a popular ticker comes back instantly on the second hit.
No proprietary ‘adjusted’ numbers. No analyst estimates. No transcripts. If you need those, a paid terminal is the right answer — we surface the source.
Where annual reports live, the sections worth your time, and how to read them in a browser tab.
The quarterly report: what's in it, how it differs from the annual 10-K, and why Q4 is never filed.
Pull a clean quarter-by-quarter revenue series across inconsistent us-gaap tags — and why Q4 is always missing.
Where capital expenditure sits in the cash flow statement, the line names companies use, and how to read it per quarter.
Where R&D sits on the income statement, which us-gaap tag to use, and how to read it as a share of revenue.
Free cash flow is operating cash flow minus CapEx — here’s how to pull both straight from a filing.
FCF divided by revenue: the formula, what counts as a good margin, and how to track it quarter by quarter.
//READ A FILING
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