Seeking Alpha

Seeking Alpha is a stock market blog that provides free stock market analysis primarily from money managers, investment newsletter writers, and the general public. Alpha is a financial term referring to a stock's performance, relative to the market indexes used by fund managers. So, fund managers "seek alpha".

Seeking Alpha focuses on opinion and analysis rather than news. Although it has its own editorial staff, it is primarily written by investors who describe their personal approach to stock picking and portfolio management, rather than by journalists. Its readership includes money managers, research analysts, investment bankers, and individual investors.[1]

Seeking Alpha was started in 2004 by David Jackson,[2] who was ranked #2 on U.S. News & World Report's list of global 'Market Movers' gaining the most influence in 2009.[3] Seeking Alpha has 80 employees on three continents and has partnerships with Yahoo! Finance,[4] Dow Jones MarketWatch, E-Trade,[5] and CNET.[6] The company is backed by Benchmark Capital, a firm that funded eBay.[7]

Seeking Alpha offers summaries of Jim Cramer's comments. The company has also developed a widget that features stock quotes from the NYSE, NASDAQ, AMEX, Pink Sheets, and OTC Bulletin Boards.[8]

Seeking Alpha is the largest stock market blog, with over 4000 unpaid contributors, at a rate of about 250 articles per day.[9] Its material is also available via BlackBerry and RSS feed.[10] Also in 2007, Seeking Alpha was the recipient of Forbes' Best of the Web Award [11] and Kiplinger's Award for Most Informative Website.[12] It was also recommended on Fox News by Liz MacDonald as a top financial blog the same year.[13] According to Google Analytics, Seeking Alpha currently has 6.5 million unique monthly readers and 65 million monthly pageviews. Seeking Alpha has a large distribution network including Bloomberg, Yahoo Finance, Google Finance, Etrade, Nasdaq, Bing, MSN, CNet and others.[14] Seeking Alpha claims that combined with this distribution network, its contributors' articles have a total reach of over 50 million unique monthly readers. In January 2010, Seeking Alpha launched a premium program which promises to pay its contributors for exclusive content.[15]

According to Nielsen Analytics, Seeking Alpha has the leading audience of any financial website including Bloomberg, CNN Money, and The Wall Street Journal. Nielsen reported that Seeking Alpha has the highest percentage of C-level executives (17.6%), as well as the most educated (77.2% with graduate or post graduate degrees), the wealthiest (exact percentage undisclosed) and the most active investors (52%). [16]

References

  1. ^ Who Reads Seeking Alpha?
  2. ^ "David Jackson", Future of Business Media
  3. ^ "Market Movers", US News & World Report, March 2009.
  4. ^ "Blogs from Seeking Alpha", Yahoo! Finance.
  5. ^ "E*trade Financial Enhances Research Tools, Increases Efficiencies For Retail Investors, press release by E-Trade, February 20, 2008.
  6. ^ "About Us", Seeking Alpha.
  7. ^ "Benchmark invests in Seeking Alpha; deal struck with Yahoo", Venturebeat.com, September 11, 2006.
  8. ^ ""Seeking Alpha Launches Free Financial Content Powered Stock Quote Widget for Financial Bloggers", Marketwire, press release by Seeking Alpha. April 17, 2007.
  9. ^ "TechCrunch And Huffington: Who Will Buy The Big Blogs?", 247wallst.com, October 3, 2007.
  10. ^ "Time's 50 Best Websites of 2007", Time, November 2007.
  11. ^ "Best of the Web", Forbes.com
  12. ^ "The 2007 Best List", Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine, November 2007.
  13. ^ Seeking Alpha, Fox News, October 22, 2007.
  14. ^ Director of Contributor Relations", Seeking Alpha, January 17, 2011.
  15. ^ "CEO David Jackson", Seeking Alpha, January 16, 2011.
  16. ^ "Nielsen Analytics", January 18, 2010.

External links