The World's First Twitter-Based Hedge Fund Is Finally Open for Business |
Date: Thursday, May 19, 2011
Author: Derek Thompson, The Atlantic
This week, Derwent Capital Markets, a London investment firm, launched a $40
million hedge fund that will use Twitter to guide its investments. The
world's first
social media-based hedge fund will monitor a selection of tweets in
real-time to feel out market sentiment before placing its bets.
"For years, investors have widely accepted that financial markets are driven by
fear and greed but we've never before had the technology or data to be able to
quantify human emotion," Paul Hawtin, the founder of Derwent Capital Markets,
wrote The Atlantic in an email. With Twitter, he added, investors finally
had a window to the world's fear.
Why would experienced investors cede their expertise to something as crude as
Twitter for guiding tens of millions of dollars in bets? Hawtin won't share how
his algorithm works. But a team of professors from both sides of the pond have
already answered that question for us.
HOW TWITTER PREDICTS THE STOCK MARKET
If Twitter can predict the public's mood, and the public's mood can predict the
stock market, can Twitter predict the stock market?
That's the question researchers at Indiana University and the University of
Manchester asked when they set out to measure Twitter's forecast of stock
fluctuations. The professors harvested tweets for key words and plugged them
into an algorithm to determine the mood of the broader market. Using this mood
index, the professors predicted the Dow's daily fluctuations in 2008 with an
astounding 87 percent accuracy.
In particular, the professors found that changes in values of "calm" can predict
stock market fluctuations, as you'll see in the graph below. In red, the authors
produce the "score" of calm moods found in Tweets. In blue, they track Dow
changes delayed by three days. Where the two graphs overlap, the calm index
predicts the DJIA's closing value three days later.
The red and blue lines often trace each other, suggesting that Tweets can
predict the stock market. But there are some alarming divergences. Around the
"bank bailout" of October 13, 2008, Twitter calmness was at a year low, but the
stock market soared. The authors explain that "the deviation between Calm values
and the DJIA on that day illustrates that unexpected news [of a Federal Reserve
bank bailout plan] not anticipated by the public mood."
In other words, Twitter can't predict future events. But it just might be able
to predict how today's moods impact tomorrow's prices in the absence of
shocking, disruptive events.
THE BANK OF TWEETS
Using Twitter to follow the stock is, self-evidently, more than an academic
observation. Like following the needle of a barometer to predict rain and sun,
investors could theoretically follow moods of the masses to take their
portfolios long or short depending on the course they expect to see the markets
take, Hawtin said.
"We made the decision to set-up a quantitative Hedge Fund before we came across
the academic paper," Hawtin explained when I ask if his investment strategy was
inspired by the paper excerpted above. "As soon as I read the academic paper it
confirmed my thoughts so I arranged to meet up with Professor Johan Bollen, one
of the co-authors."
The $40 million hedge fund's doors have been open for only a few days, but the
firm is already targeting an annual return of 15% to 20% for its investors. "We
have been testing the system for some time and the results have been
outstanding," Hawtin said. If Twitter proves a trustworthy market guide, expect
the firm to rake in more social media data from Facebook, Google trends and
beyond.
"The greater the range and depth of social media data we can access the better,"
his email concluded.
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