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Prashant Bhuyan, Alpha Modus Research - World of Watson 2016 #ibmwow #theCUBE
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01. Prashant Bhuyan, Alpha Modus Research, Visits #theCUBE!. (00:20)
02. What's Happening With Your Company And What Are You Talking About Here. (00:45)
03. Describe What You Do And The Innovation. (02:22)
04. Do You Have A Predetermined Taxonomy That You Train Watson On. (04:03)
05. Is There A Sequence That You Go Through With The Data. (05:03)
06. What Is Your Secret Sauce. (06:15)
07. How Have You Changed Or Evolved Watson. (09:40)
08. Are You A Typical IBM Customer. (11:31)
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The future of investment banking is coming, and it doesn’t wear a suit and tie | #ibmwow
by R. Danes | Oct 25, 2016
The world of investment management is no stranger to predictive gimmicks. There is always some enterprising broker or analyst telling investors he or she has uncovered the way to predict tomorrow’s stock spikes tonight. It’s usually hot air — there are too many variables for a human’s mind to calculate. But what about a machine’s mind?
Prashant Bhuyan, co-founder, CEO and chairman of Alpha Modus Research LLC, said, “Many professional investment managers, many of whom are very, very smart people, are having a lot of difficulty generating alpha these days.” (Alpha is a fund’s excess return relative to a benchmark index’s return.)
Bhuyan spoke about the new “taxonomy” that his company developed: Curated imbalance indicators from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange together with unstructured data from thousands of sources.
“We apply the domain expertise to the ‘awareness cloud’ to create a point of view or perspective and then fuel our building blocks, which are APIs that we then sell to enterprises,” Bhuyan stated. “You can figure out what’s real and what’s driven by just sentiment. That relationship is very interesting.”
White matter, grey matter, blue matter
Bhuyan said they employ IBM Bluemix and Watson on the back-end as the brains for its APIs.
“They migrated Watson to the cloud, and they were offering it to developers as a service. And that was truly a paradigm shift, because suddenly we could ask more sophisticated questions than ever before,” he said.
Watch the complete video interview below, and be sure to check out more of SiliconANGLE and theCUBE’s coverage of IBM World of Watson 2016.
02. What's Happening With Your Company And What Are You Talking About Here. (00:45)
03. Describe What You Do And The Innovation. (02:22)
04. Do You Have A Predetermined Taxonomy That You Train Watson On. (04:03)
05. Is There A Sequence That You Go Through With The Data. (05:03)
06. What Is Your Secret Sauce. (06:15)
07. How Have You Changed Or Evolved Watson. (09:40)
08. Are You A Typical IBM Customer. (11:31)
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The future of investment banking is coming, and it doesn’t wear a suit and tie | #ibmwow
by R. Danes | Oct 25, 2016
The world of investment management is no stranger to predictive gimmicks. There is always some enterprising broker or analyst telling investors he or she has uncovered the way to predict tomorrow’s stock spikes tonight. It’s usually hot air — there are too many variables for a human’s mind to calculate. But what about a machine’s mind?
Prashant Bhuyan, co-founder, CEO and chairman of Alpha Modus Research LLC, said, “Many professional investment managers, many of whom are very, very smart people, are having a lot of difficulty generating alpha these days.” (Alpha is a fund’s excess return relative to a benchmark index’s return.)
Bhuyan spoke about the new “taxonomy” that his company developed: Curated imbalance indicators from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange together with unstructured data from thousands of sources.
“We apply the domain expertise to the ‘awareness cloud’ to create a point of view or perspective and then fuel our building blocks, which are APIs that we then sell to enterprises,” Bhuyan stated. “You can figure out what’s real and what’s driven by just sentiment. That relationship is very interesting.”
White matter, grey matter, blue matter
Bhuyan said they employ IBM Bluemix and Watson on the back-end as the brains for its APIs.
“They migrated Watson to the cloud, and they were offering it to developers as a service. And that was truly a paradigm shift, because suddenly we could ask more sophisticated questions than ever before,” he said.
Watch the complete video interview below, and be sure to check out more of SiliconANGLE and theCUBE’s coverage of IBM World of Watson 2016.