About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

RavenPack Report Lists 12 Use-Cases for Alt-Data-Driven Analytics

Subscribe to our newsletter

Analytics provider RavenPack has identified a dozen use-cases for traders seeking to profit from alternative data. In a new report – ‘12 Validated New Ways to Capture Alpha with Alternative Data’ – the company demonstrate how news analytics provides original sources of alpha not already factored in by existing indicators and models.

The report – a compilation of research studies published by the company’s in-house data science team and independent researchers – covers a number of use cases. These include trading strategies based upon ESG-sensitive news headlines, changes to earnings release dates, company insider transaction news, and novel ways of using news analytics to forecast geopolitical events such as the Covid-19 pandemic and US election results.

According to Chief Data Scientist Peter Hafez, an increasing number of firms are now looking at how to apply natural language processing (NLP) to news content in order to uncover trading signals. “A lot of firms today are tapping into news content in a systematic way”, he says. “News moves markets. There is a fundamental link between whatever happens in the news and potential decision making.”

Although the most sophisticated quantitative hedge funds have been using these methods since the early 2000s, says Hafez, momentum is now building across a much wider user base. “In addition to quantitative asset managers, quantamental and fundamental investors are now looking at news content, sentiment data, and event data as well,” he says. “And it’s use is expanding from equities to multi-asset.”

Although the twelve studies in the report are wide-ranging, two of them deal specifically with the impact of the COVID pandemic. And in March last year the company launched a free Coronavirus News Monitor, to track news about the virus and monitor related sentiment indicators, including a Panic Index and a Media Hype Index.

“What Coronavirus has shown is how powerful it is to have alternative data available in front of you, as part of what we refer to as a Data Mosaic,” says Hafez. “For example, the Panic Index was a key driver of equities markets globally, beyond what could have been captured from confirmed cases.”

The company now plans to greatly extend its data coverage. “Today we track about 300,000 entities, but that will increase into millions of entities,” says Hafez.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Data platform modernisation: Best practice approaches for unifying data, real time data and automated processing

Financial institutions are evolving their data platform modernisation programmes, moving beyond data-for-cloud capabilities and increasingly towards artificial intelligence-readiness. This has shifted the data management focus in the direction of data unification, real-time delivery and automated governance. The drivers of this transition are improved operational efficiency as manual processes are replaced by faster, more accurate automated...

BLOG

Beyond the Benchmark: Bloomberg Extends BCOM for a Fragmented Commodity Market

When the Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) was launched in 1998, the architecture made sense for its time. Liquidity in commodity futures was concentrated in North American contracts denominated in US dollars, and the methodology was built accordingly. Twenty-eight years later the way global commodity markets operate and the way institutional investors want to access them...

EVENT

TradingTech Summit New York

Our TradingTech Summit in New York is aimed at senior-level decision makers in trading technology, electronic execution, trading architecture and offers a day packed with insight from practitioners and from innovative suppliers happy to share their experiences in dealing with the enterprise challenges facing our marketplace.

GUIDE

Managing Valuations Data for Optimal Risk Management

The US corporate actions market has long been characterised as paper-based and manually intensive, but it seems that much progress is being made of late to tackle the lack of automation due to the introduction of four little letters: XBRL. According to a survey by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA) and standards...