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Graph database while computationally efficient filters out quickly the ESG integrated equities in investment management

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  • Partha Sen
  • Sumana Sen

Abstract

Design/methodology/approach This research evaluated the databases of SQL, No-SQL and graph databases to compare and contrast efficiency and performance. To perform this experiment the data were collected from multiple sources including stock price and financial news. Python is used as an interface to connect and query databases (to create database structures according to the feed file structure, to load data into tables, objects, to read data , to connect PostgreSQL, ElasticSearch, Neo4j. Purpose Modern applications of LLM (Large language model) including RAG (Retrieval Augmented Generation) with Machine Learning, deep learning, NLP (natural language processing) or Decision Analytics are computationally expensive. Finding a better option to consume less resources and time to get the result. Findings The Graph database of ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) is comparatively better and can be considered for extended analytics to integrate ESG in business and investment. Practical implications A graph ML with a RAG architecture model can be introduced as a new framework with less computationally expensive LLM application in the equity filtering process for portfolio management. Originality/value Filtering out selective stocks out of two thousand or more listed companies in any stock exchange for active investment, consuming less resource consumption especially memory and energy to integrate artificial intelligence and ESG in business and investment.

Suggested Citation

  • Partha Sen & Sumana Sen, 2024. "Graph database while computationally efficient filters out quickly the ESG integrated equities in investment management," Papers 2401.07483, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2401.07483
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Jain, Prem C, 1988. "Response of Hourly Stock Prices and Trading Volume to Economic News," The Journal of Business, University of Chicago Press, vol. 61(2), pages 219-231, April.
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