CBRE

CBRE Group, Inc. Real Estate - Real Estate Services Investor Relations →

NO
19.0% ABOVE
↓ Approaching Was 20.9% last week
-15% -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15%+
Buy Threshold $110.55
14-Week RSI 48
Rel. Volume (14w) This week's trading vs. the 14-week average 1.1x
Buyers vs. Sellers (14w) Are up-weeks or down-weeks getting more volume? 0.77

CBRE Group, Inc. (CBRE) closed at $131.55 as of 2026-06-19, trading 19.0% above its 200-week moving average of $110.55. The stock is currently moving closer to the line, down from 20.9% last week. The 14-week RSI sits at 48, indicating neutral momentum.

Trading volume is running at 1.1x of its 14-week average, which is in the normal range. The balance between buying and selling volume (0.77 ratio) is neutral — neither side is clearly dominating.

Over the past 1101 weeks of data, CBRE has crossed below its 200-week moving average 16 times. On average, these episodes lasted 13 weeks. Historically, investors who bought CBRE at the start of these episodes saw an average one-year return of +32.1%.

With a market cap of $38.5 billion, CBRE is a large-cap stock. The company generates a free cash flow yield of 2.8%. Return on equity stands at 15.6%, a solid level. The stock trades at 4.5x book value.

Over the past 21.2 years, a hypothetical investment of $100 in CBRE would have grown to $1024, compared to $923 for the S&P 500. That represents an annualized return of 11.6% vs 11.1% for the index — confirming CBRE as a market-beating investment and the kind of quality company where buying during 200-week moving average touches has historically been rewarded.

Free cash flow has been declining at a -4.5% compound annual rate. A deteriorating cash flow trend warrants extra scrutiny — the stock may be cheap for a reason.

Business Health

Annual financials — how the underlying business has performed over the past several years.

Cash Flow Free cash flow & net income ($M)

Revenue Annual revenue ($M) — business growth proxy

Total Debt Balance sheet debt ($M)

ROIC Return on invested capital (%)

FCF Yield Free cash flow / market cap (%) — Yartseva signal

Gross Margin Pricing power & competitive moat (%)

Shares Outstanding Buybacks vs dilution (millions)

Growth of $100: CBRE vs S&P 500

Monthly data normalized to $100 at start. Vertical dashed lines mark 200-week MA touches.

What Happens After CBRE Crosses Below the Line?

Across 16 historical episodes, buying CBRE when it crossed below its 200-week moving average produced an average return of +32.5% after 12 months (median +35.0%), compared to +16.7% for the S&P 500 over the same periods. 81% of those episodes were profitable after one year. After 24 months, the average return was +58.1% vs +32.9% for the index.

Each line shows $100 invested at the moment CBRE crossed below its 200-week MA. Bold blue = stock average. Gray dashed = S&P 500 average over same periods.

Bean Score Experimental

The Bean Score measures how far a stock's free cash flow yield has deviated from its own quarterly baseline, normalized by the stock's historical behavior. Between earnings dates, FCF is constant — so the score is purely a function of stock price. The levels below show at what prices CBRE would reach each dislocation threshold.

Current Bean Score -0.04σ
Current FCF Yield 2.34%
Baseline Yield 2.24%
Historical σ 0.26pp

Dislocation Price Levels

Prices where CBRE's Bean Score would hit each σ threshold. Valid until next earnings report (date TBD — last report: 2026-03-31).

LevelσPriceSignal
Deep Value+2σ$106.89Unusually cheap — potential buy zone
Value+1σ$117.45Cheap vs. own history
Fair Value+0σ$130.33Historical mean behavior
Expensive-1σ$146.39Expensive vs. own history
Deep Expensive-2σ$166.96Unusually expensive — potential trim zone

Quarterly FCF & Yield Trailing twelve-month free cash flow and yield at each quarter end

Data depth: 2 quarterly baselines, 22 price observations — Limited history (4+ quarters preferred for reliability)

Signal Accuracy Collecting Data

The Bean Score system is accumulating weekly data to validate signal accuracy. After 13+ weeks of history, this section will display win rates and average returns for each σ threshold crossing — answering the question: "When this score says cheap or expensive, does the price subsequently move in the expected direction?"

11 / 13 weeks minimum

Theoretical framework — not backtested or forward-tested. The Bean Score uses trailing twelve-month free cash flow yield as a dislocation identifier. It measures whether the market has pushed a stock's yield unusually far from its own baseline behavior. These levels are reference points for identifying potential swing trade opportunities, not buy/sell signals. FCF values update quarterly with earnings; between reports, all movement is price-driven.

Dislocation Scores Experimental

Each score measures deviation from CBRE's own historical baseline — the same idea as the Bean Score, applied to different fundamentals. Positive means cheaper or more dislocated than this stock's norm. Scores marked σ are normalized by the stock's own variability; pp values are simple deltas from its recent baseline.

Yield Dislocation N/A Dividend yield vs own 10-yr norm
Drawdown Score +0.15σ Distance from line vs own history
Sector-Relative N/A Vs sector median this week
Buyback Acceleration -0.4pp YoY share change vs own 3-yr pace (− = accelerating)
Insider Intensity N/A TTM buys / market cap, percentile of buyers
FCF Yield vs History -0.2pp Vs own recent annual mean
Earnings Quality Stable Accrual gap trend (-0.6pp of revenue)

Theoretical framework — not backtested. These scores describe how unusual today's readings are for this specific company. They are starting points for research, not buy or sell signals. Annual-statement scores (buyback, accruals, FCF vs history) rest on only ~4 yearly data points and are deltas, not sigmas.

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Historical Touches

CBRE has crossed below its 200-week MA 16 times with an average 1-year return of +32.1% after recovery.

Crossed BelowRecoveredWeeksMax Depth1-Year ReturnReturn Since Touch
Nov 2007Nov 200737.8%-64.7%+553.5%
Dec 2007Apr 20081622.5%-76.9%+578.1%
May 2008Oct 201012489.1%-68.5%+512.4%
Aug 2011Oct 20111013.8%+31.5%+858.8%
Nov 2011Nov 201124.3%+15.8%+770.6%
Dec 2011Dec 201111.2%+27.7%+774.7%
Feb 2016Feb 2016411.3%+26.6%+429.0%
Jun 2016Aug 201679.3%+24.7%+368.0%
Aug 2016Aug 201611.4%+23.5%+361.1%
Sep 2016Nov 20161211.7%+30.0%+372.0%
Mar 2020Apr 2020319.8%+124.0%+284.0%
Apr 2020May 2020516.7%+107.3%+229.0%
Jun 2020Jun 202011.6%+102.7%+205.6%
Jul 2020Aug 202032.0%+103.3%+204.8%
Mar 2023Apr 202343.1%+40.3%+91.0%
Sep 2023Nov 2023711.6%+66.8%+78.1%
Average13+32.1%

Frequently Asked Questions

Is CBRE below its 200-week moving average?

No. CBRE Group, Inc. (CBRE) is currently 19.0% above its 200-week moving average of $110.55. It would need to fall to $110.55 to cross below the line.

What is CBRE's 200-week moving average price?

CBRE Group, Inc.'s 200-week moving average is $110.55 as of 2026-06-19. This is the average weekly closing price over roughly the last 4 years, and it acts as a long-term trend line. When a stock drops below this level, it can signal that the price has fallen far enough from the long-term trend to attract value-oriented investors.

What happens when CBRE drops below its 200-week moving average?

CBRE has crossed below its 200-week moving average 16 times in our data. On average, buying at that moment produced a one-year return of +32.1%. These dips have historically been decent entry points. These episodes lasted 13 weeks on average.

Is CBRE a good value right now?

Here's what our data says about CBRE as of 2026-06-19: The stock is above its 200-week moving average, so it doesn't currently meet our primary signal. The 14-week RSI is 48. Free cash flow yield is 2.8%. Return on equity is 15.6%. Price-to-book is 4.5x. This is not a buy or sell recommendation — always do your own research.

How does CBRE compare to the S&P 500?

Over the past 21.2 years, $100 invested in CBRE would have grown to $1024, compared to $923 for the S&P 500. That's 11.6% annualized vs 11.1% for the index. CBRE has outperformed the broader market over this period.

Not financial advice. This is an educational tool. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Do your own research before making investment decisions.

Data as of week of 2026-06-19