The Top 100 People to Follow Financial News on Twitter

It's been about a year since we posted our last list of people to follow on Twitter for financial news. Time for an update!
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It's been about a year since we posted our last list of people to follow on Twitter for financial news. Time for an update!

We start with this network centrality analysis, building a graph of who follows whom and finding the people with the largest number of most influential followers. Those are probably people who will play a big role in transmitting important news.

Then we trim the list to people who are good curators: they post links to a variety of good content in a frequent and timely manner.

Who do we cull?

  • Non-relevant accounts. @BarackObama is widely followed, but the stuff he posts is only occasionally relevant to financial markets.
  • People who don't curate, filter, and signal the most important things to read. @LHSummers and @AmbroseEP are good examples. They're brilliant, important guys to follow but mostly only tweet out their own stuff, they don't help people discover financial news.

We rank the quality of each person's curation on how much financial news they tweet, how much of it gets picked up and generates a lot of buzz, and how early they post it. It's a subjective, but hopefully sensible formula.

The map above shows the top ~500 Twitter accounts, using a force-directed network. Everyone who follows an account pulls it toward them, so we see Twitter accounts arranged into broad areas according to who follows them: Asia, Europe, US markets, tech, media, econ, politics. People who are in the center are pretty equally followed by folks in all parts of the map, whatever their varied interests. Bigger labels represent people with larger followings.

Below are the top 100 accounts to follow, ranked by our relevance score. You can follow the top 50, updated weekly, on the StreetEYE Twitter leaderboard.

(And of course, see the most shared financial stories updated continuously on the StreetEYE home page.)

Keep in mind that 1) I don't have full Twitter data and 2) it's just a (hopefully reasonable) simplistic formula. If you're on here then you're probably pretty widely followed and post a lot of timely and relevant financial news. Let's just say it's inherently a ranking with a lot of bias and variance and tilts mainstream by design. It does omit some great people, and possibly shouldn't include some accounts that post a lot of timely news but aren't purely finance-focused. I wouldn't read much into why X is higher than Y or Z isn't on here.

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