Khaleej Times

The top Google biz searches in 2017

- Kana Nishizawa and Narae Kim

hong kong — It was a year for bitcoin, technology stocks and the power consolidat­ion of China’s Xi Jinping. Those were some of the most popular topics for people boning up on issues important to finance and business through Google searches in 2017.

While there was a spike of interest in the potential for Spain’s dissolutio­n, the Catalonia crisis packed none of the wattage of searches about Brexit last year, the results showed. The data appearing below come from Alphabet’s Google, which compiled rankings for key words and terms used in an economic or markets context. Search interest is indexed on a scale of zero to 100, with 100 representi­ng the peak popularity of a term. The findings also draw on Google Trends data.

Stock market

There was a worldwide rise in the level of interest in shares among Googlers. Searches for “stocks” or “equities” — coupled with words or terms such as “expensive,” “cheap” and “should I buy?” — rose this year compared with those for other assets such as bonds and commoditie­s. And no wonder: global equities have been breaking records. Users also ran more searches for stock bubbles and volatility, perhaps reflecting concern about the sustainabi­lity of the rally.

Booming Bitcoin

One of the hottest topics amid all the market chatter has been Bitcoin’s stratosphe­ric ascent, which has seen its price soar about 1,600 per cent this year. Many people used Google to try to figure out when would be a good time to buy. Others appeared cautious — the cryptocurr­ency made its debut on the top 25 list of keywords associated with “bubble”.

Less bubbly

With a few exceptions, some heat has come out of real estate in major cities, and that was seen in the number of searches for property bubbles. People were particular­ly interested in Toronto’s housing market — the Canadian city joined a list of the top 25 terms associated with the word “bubble”. UBS Group named Toronto as one of the cities most at risk of a housing bubble, and the city’s housing market has slumped over the past few months amid government rules and harsher mortgage guidelines aimed at curbing demand.

Xi on stage

Leadership changes in China, the world’s second-largest economy, have major implicatio­ns for global markets, and this may have been on the minds of Googlers who tapped out the words “China congress”. The National Congress of the Communist Party of China happens every five years, and many around the globe were curious to see how President Xi Jinping would reshuffle the leadership. The level of interest topped previous peaks in 2012 and 2007.

Referendum reaction

Brexit has been making headlines all year, though Web-search interest was muted compared with the spike during last year’s popular vote. Another independen­ce referendum, October’s crisis in Catalonia, triggered a spike in Web searches about the Spanish region — but it amounted to a fraction of the level of Brexit interest during last year’s peak.

Tech lure

You can’t talk about the 2017 stock market without mentioning tech fever, specifical­ly the FAANGs — Facebook, Amazon.com, Apple, Netflix and Google’s owner, Alphabet. They’re up about 50 per cent this year on average — more than double the gains of the recordbrea­king S&P 500 Index — leaving some investors wondering if or when they will pop. Web searches for “FAANG” and “tech stocks” spiked during sharp selloffs of the sector in June and late November. Top related queries included “FAANG ETF”.

Passive aggressive

Actively managed funds are losing the battle to passively managed, index-tracking style choices — in Google searches as elsewhere. The number of of people looking up “passive investment” exceeded the number searching for “active investment” by the biggest margin ever this year. It was a very different picture in 2004 — the earliest year for which figures are available — when active trumped passive in searches. Morgan Stanley says active managers could see revenue fall by 30 per cent by 2019. — Bloomberg

 ??  ??
 ?? AP ?? A Bitcoin ATM in Hong Kong on Thursday. With the cryptocurr­ency seeing its price soar at about 1,600 per cent, many people used Google to figure out when would be a good time to buy. —
AP A Bitcoin ATM in Hong Kong on Thursday. With the cryptocurr­ency seeing its price soar at about 1,600 per cent, many people used Google to figure out when would be a good time to buy. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates