THE ONLINE
INVESTOR: LEVELLING THE INFORMATION PLAYING FIELD
PETER TEMPLE
This book aims to help private
investors to gain access to cheap tools that can
help their investment performance through better
information and, in so doing, perhaps even beat
the professionals at their own game. It provides
a guide for the online investor updated to 1996.
The first three chapters offer a basic
introduction to the principles of the Internet
and online investment. Temple makes a number of
points in respect of the informational needs of
the private investor when compared with the
information that is available to the
'professional' (city/institutional) investor.
Areas where the professional has the advantage,
according to the author, include the software
used for technical analysis, share prices,
fundamental data, especially company accounts,
economic and company news, and dealing.
Furthermore the professional investor has the
advantage of easy relationships with the
companies in which they invest.
The real content starts in chapter four (out
of eleven) with a review of 'Online investment
news and discussion'. It discusses aspects of
Bulletin Board and Usernet Newsgroups together
with email lists, the various online news
services that are available to the private
investor, such as Clarinet, and online newspapers
which can provide significant amounts of
information at no cost other than call time.
A short chapter explores the effective use of
the web including brief coverage of the major
search engines together with a number of
potential useful sites, for example, Moneyworld
and Sheila Webber's business information site.
In a review of online dealing, the author
notes that UK brokers are beginning to take the
Internet seriously but says that little online
dealing is currently available in the UK compared
to the United States. This in many ways reflects
the nature of the UK market where individual as
opposed to institutional share dealing is less
active than in the US.
Sophisticated investors will of course require
the ability to manipulate the data that they
obtain from whatever sources, and a short chapter
reviews the method for locating and downloading
software which can perform analysis. Additional
information sources to be found on the web are
also covered (exchanges, governments and
regulators online as well as corporate sector
online). Two chapters review a number of sites in
the applicable sectors - it is difficult here to
be over critical of gaps in the coverage of
useful sites currently available as developments
happen so rapidly in the field.
Another chapter covers internet information
that is available for other aspects of personal
finance, for instance insurance and banking.
The shortness of the abbreviation lists and
glossaries should be noted whilst the list of Useful
Internet Addresses runs to some 260 addresses
in categories from news and email lists via
software sources to lists of corporate web sites
in both the UK and the US. There is also a very
short bibliography.
Working in the information business and having
both personal and professional interests in the
financial world, it is difficult to judge the
value of a volume aimed at the 'lay' public. This
one provides a very basic level of introduction
to the Internet and a varying degree of depth to
its primary subject area, Investments-Computer
Network Resources (LCSH). The public may find it
useful although I feel that both the
sophisticated computer user and private investors
who read the professional press such as Investors
Chronicle and the Financial Times,
would probably only save little time following
the ideas presented in this and similar
publications.
DUNCAN J McKAY
Technical leader
(Information Management)
Amerada Hess
Limited.
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