Yahoo versus Google

Written by: Israel Investor Newsletter | November 9, 2008

As submitted by NewRulesofInvesting:

This is a side to side comparison of two of the best online financial sites: Yahoo Finance and Google Finance.  Yahoo is still the largest and most popular finance site by far but Google is serious about finance.  Let’s see how the two financial portals stack up against each other.

Speed

Google Finance: Typical fast-loading Google pages.  Google’s site is broad and doesn’t go deep.  Pages for individual stocks are only 1 page deep (Google links out for things like option chains, major holder, etc.)

Yahoo Finance: Yahoo Finance is fast.  As opposed to Google, Yahoo content resides primarily on Yahoo pages and Yahoo is responsible for page load speed throughout the site.  This can fluctuate as any large website can throughout the day.

Charting

Google Finance: Google primarily uses a simple javascript-loaded chart without any bling.  It loads fast and allows easy to manipulate x-axis (time period).  When you’re figuring out what a particular stocks has done over the past 17 days, the chart also calculates the return for a given time frame beyond the standard 1-day, 5-day, 3 month, etc. time period.  Google also plots news events onto their charts which is kind of cool (not necessarily tradeable).

Yahoo Finance: Yahoo Finance charts are much more robust.  Advanced charts have incorporated a similar charting function like Google’s and provides an overlay of numerous technical indicators (MACD, RSI).  Because these charts are so powerful, they also tend to be bulky and seize up.

Real Time Quotes

Google Finance: Google provides real time quotes both during market hours and pre- and post- market.  Google’s quotes on market indices tend to skew erratically during the transition to an open market as well as trails when the market makes large moves to the upside or downside.

Yahoo Finance: Yahoo also provides real time quotes both during market hours and off.  Yahoo’s premarket quotes are not as reliable as Google’s.  Yahoo occasionally doesn’t have a price premarket for a wide array of stocks.  Yahoo has a scrolling ticker as well for stocks that is personalized to the behavior of the user.

Breadth

Google Finance: Google gives basic info all on one page.  Anything more a user needs to link off.  News, financial info, blogs all included.  Very shallow, quick and dirty use.  Google does a good job bringing in blog content but lacks good, standardized PR content, still necessary in the research process.

Yahoo Finance: Yahoo provides an entire research environment.  All the content and data is supplied by Yahoo.  From major holders to options chains to blogs and PR, Yahoo is a virtual poor man’s Bloomberg.

Innovation

Google Finance: Google allows users to download data, making the site more portable than we’ve traditionally seen.  Google portrays the data environment well around a stock.  Beyond that, nothing particularly innovative about what Google’s done so far.
Yahoo Finance: Yahoo Finance is the 800lb gorilla and essentially helped to democratize financial information.  Yahoo has done a good job bringing in financial blogs in a controlled environment, using SeekingAlpha to help filter.  Charts are very powerful.  Not too much current innovation going on either on the surface.

 

Investor Insight: Chuck Goldblum, Hurley Capital

Written by: Zack Miller | March 11, 2008

The entire interview with Chuck Goldblum of Hurley Capital is part of our new subscription newsletter, Israel Opportunity Investor. You can find out more about the product and the opportunities we cover at www.israelnewsletter.com

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Hi, Chuck. Can you tell us a bit about yourself and your firm, Emancipation Capital?
Charles Goldblum: Emancipation Capital is a deep-value hedge fund with a focus on investing in technology companies. We’re primarily involved in software names. I was previously a sell-side analyst in the supply-chain sector. In addition to consulting for Emancipation, I run my own asset management firm.

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Special Report: Strong shekel’s impact on earnings

Written by: Zack Miller | March 10, 2008

This special report on the Israeli shekel appeared as part of our new subscription newsletter, Israel Opportunity Investor. You can find out more about the product and the opportunities we cover at www.israelnewsletter.com

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Throughout our research process at Israel Opportunity Investor, we get to spend a lot of time speaking with CEOs and CFOs of Israeli companies. What started as a whisper is now being echoed by industrialists, exporters, and investors. Israeli companies are beginning to feel the impact of a very strong currency. The Israeli shekel has been one of the world’s strongest currencies over the past 2 years and especially, over the last couple of months. Any Israeli exporter, from an orange distributor to high tech, is feeling the pinch of the strong shekel on their bottom line.

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Week in Review

Written by: Israel Investor Newsletter | January 20, 2008