
![]()
- More Asset-Buying Depends on Economy: BOE
- Stocks Sputter as Investors Seek Next Catalyst
- Winners and Losers in Obama's Corporate Tax Plan
- Santorum Takes Heavy Fire in Arizona Republican Debate
- Volcker Rule Threatens Recovery: Finance Ministers
- Next Bank of England Governor: The Race is On
- HP, Dell Watch Rising China Labor Costs for Apple
- China Internet Firm Qihoo Says Citron Allegations False
- Romney Proposes Slashing Top Tax Rate to 28 Percent
- Wandering Through Toy Land
- Dell Is Done, But Don't Discount HP: Analysts
- Comcast Deal Could Spell Trouble for Netflix: Analyst
- Reading the Tea Leaves in RIM Shake-Up
- Sam Adams Brewer Crafts Beer for the Granddaddy of All Marathons
- Stocks to Give Up for Lent
- You Want Retail Customers? Give Them Deals: Analysts
- NJ Governor Chris Christie to Warren Buffett: 'Just Write a Check and Shut Up'
- 7 Undervalued IPO Stocks That Could Rebound in 2012
MOST SHARED
- More Asset-Buying Depends on Economy: Bank of England
- RBS to Pay Out $627 Million in Bonuses Despite Loss
- Japan Manufacturing Mood Dips to Levels After Quake
- Household Debt, Not Politics, Worry for Australia: Economist
- Japan's Sumo Belly Flops to $50 Million Debt
- 7 Undervalued IPO Stocks That Could Rebound in 2012
- Credit Agricole Posts $4.1 Billion Fourth Quarter Loss
- Break-Up, Greece Cause Huge 2011 Dexia Loss
- What if Mitt Romney Had Been President in 2009?
- The Rise and Fall of a Multibillion-Dollar Ponzi Scheme
MOST POPULAR
HOT ON FACEBOOK
Hedge Fund to Predict Markets Using Twitter
CNBC Reporter
Last fall, Indiana University informatics professor Johan Bollen stumbled upon an astonishing connection: The social network Twitter could predict swings in the Dow Jones Industrial Average with 87 percent accuracy.
![]() |
Loic Venance | AFP | Getty Images |
Six months, numerous inquiries, and one Caribbean brainstorming session later, Bollen is a consultant to a soon-to-be-opened U.K. hedge fund betting that 25 million sterling and one killer app will be enough to generate double-digit investment returns.
The fund, Derwent Capital, is scheduled to open for trading in early April. Run by a young entrepreneur with a background in foreign-exchange trading, the fund will use quantitative models to comb through millions of daily tweets and look for sentiment threads that could prove leading indicators of how stocks trade several days later.
Derwent's founder, Paul Hawtin, said in an interview he is “confident” Derwent can achieve 15- to- 20 percent returns, given how accurate the trading models have appeared so far.
Hawtin’s is one of the boldest attempts to crack human market psychology in recent memory, and it could well have disappointing results. How to predict the behavior of irrational human investors has been one of the most nettlesome dilemmas in market history—contributing, among many other examples, to the collapse of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998.
![]() |
Still, even some veteran traders acknowledge that if any information source can track emotion on a real-time basis, it may be Twitter, where the users of more than 200 million accounts publicly share their thoughts and feelings on a minute-to-minute basis—in no more than 140 characters.
The apparent connection between tweets and stocks was a revelation even to Bollen, who had been working with a doctoral student to find connections between Twitter and more scientific public sentiment polls for months. “We thought that changes in the markets would induce changes in the public mood state,” said Bollen, 39, in a recent interview. “We found the exact opposite.”
Bollen and his student, Huina Mao, published their findings on an academic site Oct. 14. Within days, the paper had received 70,000 hits from Internet users, and Bollen’s phone was ringing off the hook with interested entrepreneurs, investors and fellow academics.
One query came from Hawtin, a British entrepreneur who was looking to start a hedge fund. Hawtin, 28, had dropped out of college to work on a hair product business that he later sold. Since then, he had worked on and off as a trader in London. Now, he and his 23-year-old brother, Simon, had plans to open a quant fund.
Introduced by mutual contacts, Bollen and Hawtin met over the Christmas holidays in St. Lucia, near where both happened to be vacationing. There, they hammered out a plan: Bollen would sell his model for searching Twitter to Hawtin, and come on board the hedge fund, Derwent Capital, as a consultant.
Boiled down, their strategy is straightforward. Throughout the day, Derwent’s technology will scan Twitter and select about 10 percent of the available tweets at random. Those messages will then be sorted in to one of a dozen mood states: calm, alert, sure, vital, kind, and happy. (The other six states are their opposites.)
Based on how many users fall into each state, the software will make predictions about where stocks are headed three or four days later—and then make trades.
Hawtin acknowledged that in an online universe where the flamboyant actor Charlie Sheen is now one of the most popular contributors, not every tweet may appear to have market relevance. “But you’ve got to remember there’s 100 million tweets a day,” he said. “Compile them all together, they give a general [sense] of how people are feeling.” (On an average day, Twitter now posts more than 130 million tweets.)

Kate Kelly
CNBC Reporter
Twitter itself takes no position on the planned hedge fund. “We’ve got our hands full trying to make a business out of the ad side of the business,” said Matt Graves, a Twitter spokesman. “We have some guidelines for how we’d like people to work with Twitter, but we don’t really have thoughts on how to use it.”
The social media company, which is privately held, requires anyone who plans to use tweets for commercial purposes to secure a license, and Hawtin is in the process of trying to secure such an agreement. Negotiations with Gnip, the sole sublicensor of Twitter data, are ongoing, say both Hawtin and a spokeswoman for Gnip.
Watch Kate Kelly's "Trading on Twitter" reports on Tuesday, March 8, on Squawk Box, Squawk on the Street and Power Lunch and Wednesday, March 9, on Squawk Box, The Call, The Strategy Session and Fast Money.
- The economy is heating up but the Fed isn’t letting up. How do you play the fixed-income market?
- With its rich oil reserves and rampant corruption, Azerbaijan poses a dilemma for U.S. policy makers.
- Business owners should occasionally consider giving their work for free. Here are several reasons why.
- GOP Governor Chris Christie wants Warren Buffett to stop talking about higher taxes on the super-rich.
- There’s a shortage of hotel rooms in London for the Olympics, so many locals are renting out their opulent private homes.
- Boston Beer will be creating a special commemorative brew, the Samuel Adams Boston 26.2, to mark this year's Boston Marathon.












