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Python for Finance Cookbook – Second Edition

You're reading from   Python for Finance Cookbook – Second Edition Over 80 powerful recipes for effective financial data analysis

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243191
Length 740 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Eryk Lewinson Eryk Lewinson
Author Profile Icon Eryk Lewinson
Eryk Lewinson
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Acquiring Financial Data FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Preprocessing 3. Visualizing Financial Time Series 4. Exploring Financial Time Series Data 5. Technical Analysis and Building Interactive Dashboards 6. Time Series Analysis and Forecasting 7. Machine Learning-Based Approaches to Time Series Forecasting 8. Multi-Factor Models 9. Modeling Volatility with GARCH Class Models 10. Monte Carlo Simulations in Finance 11. Asset Allocation 12. Backtesting Trading Strategies 13. Applied Machine Learning: Identifying Credit Default 14. Advanced Concepts for Machine Learning Projects 15. Deep Learning in Finance 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

Getting data from CoinGecko

The last data source we will cover is dedicated purely to cryptocurrencies. CoinGecko is a popular data vendor and crypto-tracking website, on which you can find real-time exchange rates, historical data, information about exchanges, upcoming events, trading volumes, and much more.

We can list a few of the advantages of CoinGecko:

  • Completely free, and no need to register for an API key
  • Aside from prices, it also provides updates and news about crypto
  • It covers many coins, not only the most popular ones

In this recipe, we download Bitcoin’s OHLC from the last 14 days.

How to do it…

Execute the following steps to download data from CoinGecko:

  1. Import the libraries:
    from pycoingecko import CoinGeckoAPI
    from datetime import datetime
    import pandas as pd
    
  2. Instantiate the CoinGecko API:
    cg = CoinGeckoAPI()
    
  3. Get Bitcoin’s OHLC prices from the last 14 days:
    ohlc = cg.get_coin_ohlc_by_id(
        id="bitcoin", vs_currency="usd", days="14"
    )
    ohlc_df = pd.DataFrame(ohlc)
    ohlc_df.columns = ["date", "open", "high", "low", "close"]
    ohlc_df["date"] = pd.to_datetime(ohlc_df["date"], unit="ms")
    ohlc_df
    

    Running the snippet above returns the following DataFrame:

Figure 1.14: Preview of the DataFrame containing the requested Bitcoin prices

In the preceding table, we can see that we have obtained the requested 14 days of data, sampled every 4 hours.

How it works…

After importing the libraries, we instantiated the CoinGeckoAPI object. Then, using its get_coin_ohlc_by_id method we downloaded the last 14 days’ worth of BTC/USD exchange rates. It is worth mentioning there are some limitations of the API:

  • We can only download data for a predefined number of days. We can select one of the following options: 1/7/14/30/90/180/365/max.
  • The OHLC candles are sampled with a varying frequency depending on the requested horizon. They are sampled every 30 minutes for requests of 1 or 2 days. Between 3 and 30 days they are sampled every 4 hours. Above 30 days, they are sampled every 4 days.

The output of the get_coin_ohlc_by_id is a list of lists, which we can convert into a pandas DataFrame. We had to manually create the column names, as they were not provided by the API.

There’s more...

We have seen that getting the OHLC prices can be a bit more difficult using the CoinGecko API as compared to the other vendors. However, CoinGecko has additional interesting information we can download using its API. In this section, we show a few possibilities.

Get the top 7 trending coins

We can use CoinGecko to acquire the top 7 trending coins—the ranking is based on the number of searches on CoinGecko within the last 24 hours. While downloading this information, we also get the coins’ symbols, their market capitalization ranking, and the latest price in BTC:

trending_coins = cg.get_search_trending()
(
    pd.DataFrame([coin["item"] for coin in trending_coins["coins"]])
    .drop(columns=["thumb", "small", "large"])
)

Using the snippet above, we obtain the following DataFrame:

Figure 1.15: Preview of the DataFrame containing the 7 trending coins and some information about them

Get Bitcoin’s current price in USD

We can also extract current crypto prices in various currencies:

cg.get_price(ids="bitcoin", vs_currencies="usd")

Running the snippet above returns Bitcoin’s real-time price:

{'bitcoin': {'usd': 47312}}

In the accompanying notebook, we present a few more functionalities of pycoingecko, such as getting the crypto price in different currencies than USD, downloading the entire list of coins supported on CoinGecko (over 9,000 coins), getting each coin’s detailed market data (market capitalization, 24h volume, the all-time high, and so on), and loading the list of the most popular exchanges.

See also

You can find the documentation of the pycoingecko library here: https://github.com/man-c/pycoingecko.

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Python for Finance Cookbook – Second Edition - Second Edition
Published in: Dec 2022
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781803243191
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