Pre-Processed Tweets for Secure Capital Market Analysis Using Cloud

Author(s):  
Sangeeta Gupta ◽  
Rajanikanth Aluvalu

Huge crowds heading towards smart investment options need a secure and trustworthy environment to earn good profits. Twitter, a social networking platform, is a major source generating huge information on share market consortium. People get excited when they come across the tweets that specify the shares yielding huge profits within a short time. Due to this, they end up tweeting about their credentials and amount they are willing to invest. It paves a path for the intruders to access confidential data and leave the common man in danger by gaining access and misusing the information. Towards this end, the goal of this work is to address the challenge of providing better inputs to the customers interested to invest in the share market in a secure way to earn better returns on investment. In this work, as a first module, pre-processing techniques are used to remove the unwanted characters from tweets. In the second part, to enhance the security, encryption module is developed, and the data is then stored in Cassandra. It is observed from results that the time taken to encrypt 100,000 tweets after pre-processing is 500 msec, and the time taken to decrypt the same set of 100,000 tweets is 50 msec, respectively. This shows the effectiveness of the proposed work in terms of attaining better and fast outcomes for a huge set of tweets after filling the voids by pre-processing techniques.

Author(s):  
Dr. L. Senthilkumar

A Mutual Fund is a professionally-managed form of collective investments that pools money from many investors and invests it in stocks, bonds, short-term money market instruments, and/or other securities. Mutual Fund is a trust that pools the savings of a number of investors who share a common financial goal. This pool of money is invested in accordance with a stated objective. The joint ownership of the fund is thus “Mutual”, i.e. the fund belongs to all investors. The money thus collected is then invested in capital market instruments such as shares, debentures and other securities. The income earned through these investments and the capital appreciations realized are shared by its unit holders in proportion the number of units owned by them. Thus a Mutual Fund is the most suitable investment for the common man as it offers an opportunity to invest in a diversified, professionally managed basket of securities at a relatively low cost.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Indrani Sengupta

Mutual fund is a trust that pools the savings of a number of investors’ who share a common financial goal. Money collected from investors is invested in capital market instrument such as shares, debentures and other securities. Income earned through these investments and the capital appreciations realized are shared by its unit’s holder in proportion to the number of units owned by them. Thus a mutual fund is the most suitable investment to the common man as it offers an opportunity, to invest in a diversified, professionally managed basket of securities at relatively low cost. This paper attempts to discuss various types of sectorial mutual funds and its comparative analysis between two mutual funds from each category. Furthermore Sharpe’s, Treynor’s ratios are also being used along with hypothesis testing to substantiate the validity of the test.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dhrubajyoti Bhattacharjee ◽  
Pramod Kumar

2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 140-149
Author(s):  
Eric A. Posner

Empirical findings that common ownership is associated with anticompetitive outcomes including higher prices raise questions about possible policy responses. This comment evaluates the major proposals, including antitrust enforcement against common owners, regulation of corporate governance, regulation of compensation of management of portfolio firms, regulation of capital market structure, and greater antitrust enforcement against portfolio firms.


1995 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 567-570 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Shafique

At the time of independence (1947) Pakistan with a population of 40 million had three asylum-like hospitals with a total of less than 2000 beds. The hospitals were prison-like and they provided custody with little care. Patients were mostly brought in chains. Detention and reception orders were used for admission as provided in law and the law was and continues to be the Lunacy Act of 1912. The common man referred to them as pagal-khanas (mad houses) or jail hospitals. The doctors appointed were mostly general duty doctors with no training and often no interest in psychiatry and their average stay was two to three years. In place of nurses there was a cadre of attendant staff, most of them illiterate, untrained and acting more like police sepoy or jail warder than nurse.


1943 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-28
Author(s):  
T. R. McConnell
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Vol 9 (03) ◽  
pp. 491-506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin L. Einhorn

The history of slavery cannot be separated from the history of business in the United States, especially in the context of the relationship between public power and individual property rights. This essay suggests that the American devotion to “sacred” property rights stemsmore from the vulnerability of slaveholding elites than to a political heritage of protection for the “common man.”


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