Link to TweetTrader.net

February 3, 2011

TweetTrader.net making waves in Brazil

TweetTrader.net was recently featured by Brasil Econômico, one of Brazil's leading business newspapers with a circulation of 50,000. It covers most editorial subjects from an economic and business point of view. The story illustrates that, while stock microblogging is certainly no money-making machine, it provides valuable signals to interested investors.

TweetTrader.net "meeting" Eric Schmidt

Next to Eric Schmidt (Google), Sean Parker (Facebook) and Lars Hinrichs (XING), TweetTrader.net was represented at DLD11.

DLD (Digital - Life - Design) is a global conference network on innovation, digital media, science and culture which connects business, creative and social leaders, opinion-formers and investors for crossover conversation and inspiration.

January 17, 2011

TweetTrader Sentiment Reflecting News on Steve Jobs' Leave from Apple

On January 17th, 2011, Apple CEO Steve Jobs is taking leave of absence from the company's day-to-day operations because of a medical condition, according to a letter Jobs sent to Apple employees. As a result, the stock has plummeted. The case is a good example of how TweetTrader.net instantly reflects market developments, often even before it hits major news wires. As you can see, TweetTrader.net Sentiment on $AAPL was down almost 30% and people were talking mostly about issues related to Corporate Governance (which, according to our research, is largely CEO-related) and Operations.

January 2, 2011

What Topics are Stock Microbloggers talking about?

We have investigated which topics are on the minds of stock microbloggers. We have classified thousands of tweets into the following news or event categories: Corporate Governance, Financial Issues, Operations, Restructuring Issues, Legal Issues, and Technical Trading. In addition, to allow for more granular analysis, we have defined subcategories for which we found a substantial number of messages among our data set (e.g., stock-related vs. market-related technical trading signals).
The table below provides an overview of the event categories and sample messages assigned to the respective class. It shows that technical trading signals are the most frequently mentioned event category with references in almost one third of all messages (34.0%), among which stock-related signals make up the vast majority (28.2%). Next are comments regarding company operations (20.3%), especially product development (9.4%), operational performance (4.2%) and marketing (4.2%). Financial issues come third as an event category (13.3%) with a majority of messages dedicated to the discussion of earnings results (6.9%). Restructuring issues (6.1%), Legal Issues (3.5%) and topics related to Corporate Governance (3.3%) are mentioned less frequently. The distribution of topics shows some interesting differences to professionally edited newspapers and confirms that stock microblogs provide information "off the beaten track".


You find the current share of topics for each stock in real-time on the TweetTrader Scoreboard:


December 6, 2010

TweetTrader research featured in the New York Times

The New York Times (online edition) Freakonomics blog has recently featured results from our research on stock microblogging.

November 17, 2010

The Winner is... - Ranking of the Best Investment Advisors on Twitter

In order to find our whether there are stock microbloggers who consistently provide better investment advice than others we have used our proprietary classification method to classify each tweet in a 6-month sample period as a recommendation to buy, hold, or sell a stock. We define the quality of a tweet as the accuracy of this recommendation relative to same-day returns of the stock in question (i.e., the tweet "$AAPL going up" gets a point if AAPL was up by the end of the day). The quality of a particular user is the average quality of all tweets posted by this individual. We find that even among users with hundreds of messages, we can identify some that seem to consistently provide higher quality investment advice than others. And the winner is...

November 10, 2010

Sentiment of Stock Microblogs

Our sentiment analysis of stock microblogs shows that users tend to be much more bullish than bearish. We manually classified 2,500 tweets as either buy, hold, or sell signals.  Roughly half of these messages were considered to be hold/neutral signals (49.6%). Among the remainder, buy signals were more than twice as likely (35.2%) as sell signals (15.2%). This indicates that stock microblogs appear to be more balanced in terms of bullishness than internet message boards where the ratio of buy vs. sell signals ranges from 7:1 (Dewally, 2003) to 5:1 (Antweiler & Frank, 2004).


The table below shows a few typical examples. Our analysis of the most common words per class draws a semantic profile of buy, hold and sell signals. Obviously, some features occur frequently in all classes (e.g., numbers and hyperlinks). However, beyond these universal features, the most common words reasonably reflect the linguistic bullishness of the three classes. Positive emotions, for example, are much more likely among buy signals. In addition, buy signals often contain bullish words with an origin in technical analysis (e.g., “moving average”, “resistance”, “up”, or “high”), operations (e.g., “acquire”), financials (e.g., “beat”, “earn”), or trading (e.g., “buy”, “long”, “call”). Sell signals contain many corresponding bearish words in the areas of technical analysis (e.g., “support” and “cross”), financials (e.g., “loss”) or trading (e.g., “short” and “put”). As a results of the frequent occurrence of negative adjectives (e.g., “weak”, “low”) and verbs (e.g., “decline”, “fall”), negative emotions are among the most common features in sell signals. Positive and negative emotions are much more equally balanced in hold messages, which also contain more neutral words such as product names (e.g., “ipad”, “iphone”) and make fewer references to specific price targets (i.e., dollar values).