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Quick Summary: How to Find the 52-Week High and Low for PNC Financial Services Group Inc. Stock (PNC)

Curious about the PNC Financial Services Group Inc. ("PNC") stock's highest and lowest prices over the past year? You're not alone. Whether you’re an investor, researching for your own portfolio, or just a numbers nerd like me, knowing the 52-week high and low of a stock can really help you understand market sentiment and make smarter decisions. In this guide, I'll walk you through where to find this data, actual numbers from reputable sources, a few screenshots, practical advice, plus I’ll get a bit sidetracked sharing the odd mistake I made myself. For the curious, we’ll also compare how different countries handle "verified trade" standards in the context of stock data.

My Step-By-Step Process: How I Find PNC’s 52-Week High and Low

I know lots of people just want the number. But let's be real—having a repeatable process is gold, especially if you want to check prices for other stocks or compare sources. Here’s how I did it, screenshots and minor hiccups included.

Step 1: Choosing the Right Data Source

There are plenty of sites to pull this info from, like Yahoo Finance, NASDAQ.com, Morningstar, or even the New York Stock Exchange directly. My go-to is Yahoo Finance, but I always double-check with at least one other source, like NASDAQ’s official PNC page or Yahoo Finance.

During one of my earlier checks, I accidentally typed "PNC bank 52 week low" into Google instead of using the ticker. It gave me a mix of unrelated results, so lesson learned: always search by the stock symbol ("PNC") for best accuracy.

Step 2: Screenshot Walkthrough (Real Example)

Let’s walk through how I actually checked PNC’s 52-week high and low as of early June 2024.

  1. Head to Yahoo Finance for PNC.
  2. On the main summary page, the 52-week Range is shown under the current price. Here’s what you’ll see (I took this screenshot on June 8, 2024):
    PNC Yahoo Finance Screenshot
    The 52-week range: 52-Week Range: {$109.40 - $162.24}
  3. For cross-verification, I popped over to NASDAQ’s site (NASDAQ PNC page), scrolled down to "Key Data," and found the same info:
    NASDAQ Screenshot PNC
    Their numbers matched Yahoo: $109.40 (low) and $162.24 (high) for the past year.

Little aside: sometimes the sites have slight timing differences, especially just after a market close; in my experience, this is rarely more than a few cents, but always check the timestamp.

Step 3: Don’t Ignore Official Filings

If you ever need to absolutely verify the data, say for finance homework or if you're writing an article, check the SEC Edgar PNC filings. Occasionally, annual reports and 10-K filings mention high and low prices for each quarter, though I admit the numbers are less “hot off the press” than on market sites.

If pressed about data accuracy, I’d reference the SEC’s own guidance on stock price data for clarity.

What Does a 52-Week High/Low *Mean* (And Why It Matters)?

Honestly, before I got into investing, I thought "52-week high/low" was a weird, arbitrary stat. Turns out, it’s hugely telling. If a stock is trading near its high, people are usually optimistic. If it’s near the low, there might be negative sentiment — but sometimes, it’s just a misunderstood buying opportunity.

Industry expert and CFA charterholder, Lisa D. of AssetWalk, told me in a webinar last year: "For blue-chips like PNC, watching that range helps anchor expectations—it’s a sanity check before you commit serious money." I couldn’t agree more, especially after missing out on PNC when it traded closer to its 52-week low last autumn.

How Do Different Countries Standardize "Verified Trade" (Compare Table)

Since U.S. stock data is authoritative, but listing rules vary globally, here’s a direct compare of "verified trade" protocols by country—gathered from WTO and OECD materials (see references).

Country/Region Standard/Definition Legal Basis Enforcement Agency
USA SEC Reg SHO, "Last Sale Price" rule
(all trades must report timely, accurately)
Securities Exchange Act SEC, FINRA, NYSE
EU MiFID II, harmonized post-trade transparency MiFID II European Securities & Markets Authority (ESMA)
Japan TSE rules; all stock trades reported at end-of-day Financial Instruments and Exchange Act Japan Financial Services Agency (JFSA)
China CSRC Protocols, "Real-Time Trade Disclosure" Securities Law of PRC China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC)

Sources: SEC.gov, OECD Report on MiFID II, ESMA, CSRC

I was surprised how rigorously these standards are enforced, especially in the U.S. where the SEC has fined firms millions for late or inaccurate trade reports (see latest SEC enforcement news).

Case Study: PNC’s 52-Week High/Low and Cross-Border Data

Let me give you a quick (and real-ish) story. A friend of mine works for a U.K.-based fintech firm. They wanted to add U.S.-listed stocks, including PNC, to their platform. Regulatory headaches everywhere. Here’s what happened:

  • The U.K. team sourced “real-time” 52-week data from a German provider. The numbers showed a one-day lag compared to Yahoo and NASDAQ. When they dug in, it turned out the European data was pulled nightly due to MiFID II’s reporting rules.
  • Meanwhile, FINRA and the SEC require near-instantaneous reporting. That meant for clients who checked close-of-business numbers, there could be weird gaps (especially during earnings season).
  • They ended up licensing direct U.S. feeds, even if it cost more—accuracy mattered more than saving a few thousand euros.

When I asked a market data exec (let’s call him John H.) for advice, he basically told me: "Don't trust just any data aggregator, especially for critical period-ends—the official market or regulatory website always wins."

Why I Care (and Why You Should, Too)

Look, you can always grab 52-week highs/lows in a few seconds. But knowing where that data comes from, and why countries treat “verification” differently, gives you a leg up—especially if you’re managing real money, or just want to avoid embarrassing mistakes (I once quoted a 52-week low on PNC that was off by $5, thanks to copying a UK-based feed!).

If you ask people in the business, like Lisa D. or John H., their biggest advice: “Fish for the numbers at the source, and cross-check if anything looks off.” It saves you hours of back-pedaling and maybe a few blushes in front of your finance club buddies.

Final Takeaways & Next Steps

  1. The 52-week high and low for PNC Financial Services Group Inc., as of June 2024, is $109.40 (low) and $162.24 (high), verified by Yahoo Finance and NASDAQ. Always check the date and source—numbers shift daily.
  2. Most reliable: official market sites (NYSE, NASDAQ), Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg, annual filings. Avoid second-hand aggregator apps for critical decisions.
  3. Cross-country trading and data reporting rules vary, especially regarding how quickly “official” prices are published. For the U.S., the SEC’s transparency standards are particularly strict. Good for accuracy, occasionally annoying for nitpickers.
  4. If you really want to get into the weeds, check original filings on EDGAR; for retail investors, quick tools like Yahoo or NASDAQ are enough.

Hope that cleared things up for you—let me know if you find data that doesn’t match up (I love a good numbers mystery). For deeper legal standards, check out OECD’s MiFID II reviews, or direct sources via SEC.gov. Happy investing!

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