Thursday, March 21, 2013

Social Media and the Future of Finance | Inside Investing

Editor?s Note: This is part of a series highlighting the role technology may play in bringing about the Future of Finance.

In markets, the way we communicate has changed significantly over the past 15 years as a result of the internet. New tools are evolving that affect information dissemination, media, education, and idea sharing. Meanwhile, traditional trading floors have receded as electronic trading becomes more and more dominant.

It is very exciting to think about where we might be headed and to contextualize social media platforms and how they relate to finance.

Evolving Tools of the Social Media Age

On a mechanical level, social media are creating and refining internet-based communication tools, which allow users to interact and share information and ideas globally with?considerably?less friction and lower latency than ever before. As such, it seems natural that market participants, financial journalists, and analysts would gravitate to these tools.

It has been only 14 years since the launch of Blogger, the first scaled blogging platform. Four years later (2003), Blogger was bought by Google, and in the same year, WordPress, now the largest and most robust electronic publishing platform, launched.?These blogging platforms allow any individual who is knowledgeable in a specific area to write on a consistent basis, publish content for close to nothing, and grow an audience.

In 2006, Twitter launched its microblogging platform, which allows users to share short tweets and links while simultaneously following the tweets of other users and to interact with them directly and publicly.?In 2009, StockTwits launched, providing a similarly organized platform but with features tailored to those interested in specific markets by using ?cashtags? (e.g., $AMZN), which allow members to organize and stream messages around specific tickers.?These newer social platforms have resulted in an explosion of real-time, crowd-sourced information and idea sharing around markets.

The emergence of blogging and microblogging platforms has fostered increased specialization (or verticalization) as experts in even the narrowest areas are able to inform and relate to others who are interested in similar subjects.

These new media platforms have also forced a hierarchical?shift in traditional financial news media.

The Hierarchical Shift in Financial News Media

Social publishing tools are profoundly changing financial news media in terms of how and where information and analysis are created and communicated.

The speed of?information?dissemination is accelerating. Microblogging platforms, such as StockTwits and Twitter, enable crowd-sourced, real-time sharing and amplification. Information spreads much faster than ever before and has spurred the shortening of news cycles.

Such?acceleration?has contributed to the disruption of traditional news media entities.?The rise of the individual?participant?communicator has furthered the disruption.

If we back up the lens,?we can think about it this way: The hierarchical structure of financial news media is shifting. Traditionally, news media organizations channeled communication primarily in one direction. They were also the primary publication source, which elevated their influence above those consuming the information.

With the emergence of social publishing tools, this hierarchy has broken down and the elevated status of traditional media has been diminished. Now, there is more of a level playing field. Today, individual publishers equipped with a blog and microblogging accounts are breaking stories and providing analysis across multiple subjects, including fundamental and technical analysis, earnings releases, product launches, global macro events, and more.

Individual publishers, as independent sources, are inherently more responsive to their audience given the structure of the media platforms they are utilizing. It is now a bidirectional interchange. In turn, individuals are now able to build their own personal brands based on the quality of the content they provide.

Social Finance Accelerates Learning

Social tools have the potential to spread knowledge and shorten the learning curve as information becomes relational, well organized, and highly accessible.

Take one simple example, the StockTwits $STUDY stream. This is a microblog stream through which all messages are?tagged ?$STUDY? flow. Members know to tag messages that are educational, and thus anyone who wants to learn more about markets has an easy-to-incorporate resource for scanning such content.

The beautiful thing about the stream is that the majority of those sharing their knowledge provide accessible links, so those who are interested in a topic can ask the content provider questions directly on the stream.

The Future of Social Finance

The great challenge presently relates to filtering and curation. How can consumers get only the information they want to see when they want to see it? Real-time social searching remains a difficult proposition, especially for the microblogging platforms previously discussed. Over the coming year, we will likely see considerable improvements in real-time searches and filtering.

Social media platforms are increasingly fostering real-world relationships as users share ideas with each other over time, whether they are trading stocks, building investment theses, vetting each others? ideas, mentoring, or even forming business partnerships. As these social platforms mature, these shifts will signal a more implicit understanding that these are viable communication and relational tools and much more than something merely virtual.

Source: http://blogs.cfainstitute.org/insideinvesting/2013/03/20/social-media-and-the-future-of-finance/

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