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Seeking Alpha 58-Point Lab Test, Audit & Review 2026

☆ Research You Can Trust ☆ IFTA Certified Technical Analyst ✔ 

Our 58-point scientific Seeking Alpha lab test, audit, and benchmarking include speed, accuracy, value, and feature depth with data-driven precision.

Seeking Alpha’s Composite Lab Performance Score lands at AA 4.35, meaning it’s a strong research tool with a few standout wins—but it’s not a full trading workstation.

Seeking Alpha is a fundamentals-first research platform, and this Lab Test grades it against benchmark medians across 17 categories—so you can see where it genuinely outperforms “average competitor” tools (signal quality, community, chart depth) and where it simply isn’t built to compete (scanning speed, backtesting, automation).

Lab Test Composite Score

Seeking Alpha scores AA 4.35, above the median. That tells you it’s broadly competitive across the full stack of criteria, plus it has two superpowers: Apha Picks stock selection and the Quant Analysis engine in Premium.

The practical takeaway: it’s a “research-and-decision” tool first, not an “execution-and-automation” tool.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Composite Lab Performance Score (CLPS)Average for all ratings + 5X Superpower boost for Top 5 killer features4.354.754.212.90
Composite Lab Performance Score (CLPS) Overall Test WinnersTradingView
4.75
TrendSpider
4.72
Trade Ideas
4.52

A median composite score is meaningful here: Seeking Alpha derives it from signal quality, community, and research depth, not from bots/backtesting.

In Context: If your workflow is “find ideas → validate with fundamentals → decide what to buy/sell,” Seeking Alpha can carry a big part of the load.

In my audit notes, the strongest contributions come from idea generation (ratings and picks), broad coverage of stocks, and a community that surfaces counter-arguments quickly. But if your workflow is “scan fast → backtest → automate,” this score won’t translate into trading-terminal power—the category scores below show why.

Benchmarked Lab Scores

TestTierScoreAverage
Lab Test Composite Score AA4.354.21
Pricing Index AAA$2.19/day$2.74/day
Value Score (VP) B3.562.82
Speed & Ease of Use AAA5.004.50
Chart Analysis Depth Index B3.953.24
Scanning Performance C1.673.50
Trading Bot & Auto-Trading Reliability C1.502.00
AI & Algo Index B3.002.00
Alert Speed B3.334.25
Trade Signal Quality AAA5.000.00
Broker Connectivity & Ecosystem Depth C2.002.00
Portfolio Tool Performance AA4.302.80
Financial News Speed & Depth B1.502.30
Community Utility Index (CUI) A4.253.00
Support Infrastructure & SLA Audit B3.504.00

Note: Backtesting & Pattern Recognition are excluded from testing, as functions do not exist.

Reasons to Consider

  • High-conviction idea selection: Trade Signal Quality “Alpha Picks” is a top-tier strength.
  • Decision support that stays usable: Strong speed/ease and above-median chart depth.
  • Community as a thesis stress-test: Community Utility Index CUI is a meaningful differentiator.

Reasons to Avoid / Pair With Another Tool

  • You need scanning speed and deep criteria libraries: Scanning Performance is well below benchmark median.
  • You require backtesting or automation: Treat backtesting/bots as “not the product.”
  • You need wire-speed news: Pair with a real-time news terminal if you trade headlines.

My Verdict

If you’re an investor (or swing trader) who wants better decisions—not a faster hotkey terminal—Seeking Alpha earns its place in a serious workflow. Use it for discovery, thesis validation, and disciplined signal consumption; pair it with a dedicated screener/charting platform if your edge depends on scans, patterns, or system testing.


Pricing Index

Pricing Index is not a 0–5 rating anymore—it’s dollars. Seeking Alpha’s $2.19/day (for Alpha Picks & Premium Bundle) is cheaper than the median $2.74/day, and the sub-metrics show why: the effective monthly cost isn’t extreme, and the price-per-feature is solid.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Cost-per-day$/day on an annual plan. Minimum viable plan with real-time exchange data$2.19/day$9.99/day$2.74/day$0.74/day
$ per featureEffective Monthly Cost /Total Features$6.64$23.37$6.64$1.94
Effective Monthly Cost (EMC)EMC = (Plan price + required real-time data fees + any required add-ons) / month$40.00/mo$303.87/mo$83.32/mo$22.50/mo

The key here is fit: you’re paying for quantitative research depth and high-performance idea flow, not pro-grade execution tooling.

In Context: Price only “wins” if it matches your use case. Seeking Alpha can be a strong value if you actively consume research, track holdings, and use ratings/picks to shape decisions—because that’s what you’re actually buying. In my audit notes, the risk is overpaying if you only want a screener or a chart tool; you’ll be paying for analysis and community you don’t use. If you’re cost-sensitive, the pricing metrics say Seeking Alpha is reasonable—but only if the workflow fit is right.


Value Score (VP)

Seeking Alpha’s Value Score is 3.56, above the median 2.82. That typically happens when a tool delivers high perceived utility per dollar, and the scores indicate it is good value for money.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Value Score (VP)30% Off/Best Plan Cost. Compared to the total features and ranking3.564.372.822.06
Value RankEffective Monthly Cost /Total Features Percentile Ranking2.005.002.001.00
Feature QualityTool Rating3.704.193.142.00
Feature BreadthTotal # of core features12.0017.0012.008.00
Feature DepthTotal # of Premium Features3.754.383.002.00
Device Support DepthCount of Devices supported (Web, PC, Mac, IOS, Android). 1 Point Each3.005.003.000.00
Value Score Test WinnersTradingView
4.37
TrendSpider
4.20
Trade Ideas
4.05

Value Score is the “will I actually use what I’m paying for?” test. Seeking Alpha scores well because it’s not trying to be everything; it concentrates value into research, ratings, and idea discovery, things many investors use weekly.

What I like here: Seeking Alpha’s value is usage-dependent. If you actually use the research engine, VP makes sense.

In my audit notes, that’s why Feature Depth stays competitive even without execution/backtesting: the platform’s utility comes from its decision-support capabilities. If you want charts + scans + bots, value drops fast because you’ll still need other tools.


Speed & Ease of Use

Seeking Alpha scores AAA 5.00, beating the median 4.50. That’s a “low friction” score: fast time-to-chart, low multimonitor latency, and minimal click depth. This is one of Seeking Alpha’s most visible wins: you feel the speed every day.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Speed & Use Index RatingAverage of Time to Chart Performance, Multimonitor Chart Speed & 3 Click5.005.004.503.25
Time to Chart Speed (Seconds)Seconds from clicking the icon to a fully loaded chart with 200 price bars & 2 indicators.1.9317.034.701.55
Time to Chart PerformanceSpeed to Chart Points5.005.004.503.00
Multi-Chart Latencymilliseconds198667.00209.0010.00
Multimonitor Chart SpeedMulti-Chart Sync Points5.005.004.002.00
3-Click Rule TestNumber of Clicks to place a trade or launch a scan26.003.002.00
3 Click Rule: Ease of Use5 Click Points. Each click > 3 = 1 minus point5.005.005.002.00
Speed & Ease of Use Test WinnersTradingView
5.00
Stock Rover
5.00
Seeking Alpha
5.00

Speed & ease isn’t about “cool features”—it’s about whether you keep using the tool after the honeymoon. Seeking Alpha’s score reflects a simple workflow: get to the chart quickly, scan key info, and move on.

Video Evidence: Benchmarking Seeking Alpha start-up time to chart speed performance test. A fast 193 milliseconds.
Video Evidence: Benchmarking the Seeking Alpha multiple chart sync speed performance test. Fast with 198 milliseconds.

In my audit notes, that matters because research tools can become time sinks; the faster the interface, the more likely you’ll actually follow your process (especially during volatile sessions). If you hate UI friction, this category is one of Seeking Alpha’s strongest comfort wins.


Chart Analysis Depth Index

Seeking Alpha’s chart depth score is 3.95, comfortably above the median 3.24. It’s not trying to beat a charting-native platform, but it does offer meaningful technical analysis depth for a research-first product.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Chart Analysis DepthTotal avg chart types, indicator counts, and custom indicators.3.955.003.242.01
Chart TypesTotal Count of Chart Types Available21.0038.0010.001.00
IndicatorsTotal Count of Built-In Indicators160.00400.00100.0040.00
Custom Code IndicatorsExists 5 points0.005.000.000.00
Chart Pattern Recognition & Accuracy Test WinnersTrendSpider
4.88
Trade Ideas
4.62
TradingView
3.98

The “depth” is real, but the ceiling is clear: no custom scripting means you’re limited to built-ins.

Chart depth matters when you want quick validation, not when you’re building bespoke indicator stacks. Seeking Alpha’s charts are strong enough for trend, momentum, and multi-indicator confirmation—without forcing you into a charting terminal mindset.

In Context: The win is speed-to-insight: you can sanity-check ideas (and avoid obvious technical traps) without leaving the research flow. The limitation is obvious, too: if you need custom indicator code or advanced layout engineering, pair Seeking Alpha with a chart-native platform.


Chart Pattern Depth & Accuracy

Pattern depth wasn’t scored for Seeking Alpha in this run (treated as excluded). That means the platform doesn’t provide systematic, testable, automated pattern detection at the level we benchmark here.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Pattern Depth & Accuracy RatingTotal Avg: Pattern Type and Accuracy.4.702.731.70
Total Pattern CountCount of candle patterns and chart patterns.226.0075.002.00
Pattern Recognition AccuracyPercent accurate based on backtested patterns95.0073.0042.00
Pattern Recognition Accuracy RatingTotal Avg: Pattern Type and Accuracy.5.003.002.00
Chart Pattern Recognition & Accuracy Test WinnersTrendSpider
4.88
Trade Ideas
4.62
TradingView
3.98

If you buy Seeking Alpha for “patterns,” you’ll be disappointed. If you buy it for research + signals, you’ll be aligned.

In Context: Automated pattern engines are a “trader tool” feature, not a “research platform” feature. Seeking Alpha’s strength lies in idea discovery and thesis validation, not in labeling wedges and flags with back-tested accuracy stats. In my audit notes, the right workflow is: use Seeking Alpha to find what to research and why it might move, then use a pattern-native platform if you specifically trade chart structures. This isn’t a weakness so much as an honest product boundary.


Scanning Performance

Seeking Alpha scores 1.68, well below the median 3.50. This may seem like a poor rating, but the scanner in Premium is actually very good if you want to screen for Seeking Alpha Quant metrics.

It has a solid 84 scannable metrics, and a lightning-fast 135 milliseconds to scan the S&P 500.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Scanning Performance PointsTotal avg: Scanner performance points, criteria points, custom code points1.685.003.502.00
Scanner Performance (ms)Milliseconds to search the entire S&P 500 across 5 different criteria.168.00100.00156.00500.00
Scanning Speed PointsRating4.005.0060.000.00
Scanning Criteria & DepthTotal Criteria Count84.00450.0080.0018.00
Scanning Criteria & Depth PointsScanning Criteria 0.0125 points per criterion1.045.001.000.23
Custom Code ScanningExists 5 Points0.005.000.000.00
Scanning Performance Test WinnersStock Rover
5.00
TradingView
4.83
TrendSpider
4.67

In practice, it means the platform isn’t optimized for multi-criteria market-wide scanning the way dedicated screeners are. This is the “don’t force it” category: Seeking Alpha is not the tool you use to grind thousands of technical scan variations.

In Context: Scanning performance is where research platforms get exposed. Traders who scan live markets want speed, refresh automation, and deep condition libraries; Seeking Alpha’s value comes earlier in the pipeline—idea generation, fundamentals, and conviction-building.

Video Evidence: Benchmarking Seeking Alpha scanning speed performance test. The result is a fast 168 milliseconds.

In my audit notes, the right pairing is simple: use a dedicated screener for discovery (especially for short-term setups), then bring the best candidates into Seeking Alpha to validate fundamentals, narrative, and risk. If you try to scan inside Seeking Alpha, you’re fighting the product design.


Backtesting Performance

Backtesting wasn’t scored as a primary capability here (treated as excluded) because it doesn’t have backtesting functionality. The sub-metrics show why: speed and fidelity aren’t benchmarked features, and report quality scores are missing.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Quantitative Backtesting FidelityTotal Avg: Strategy Depth, Speed, Report Quality5.003.382.00
Backtesting Speed (ms)Time required to run a strategy simulation over 10 years0.00400.006000.00
Strategy Simulation Depth5 Points5.005.000.00
Backtesting Report QualityPercent of Reports for Critical Metrics95.0040.005.00
Backtesting Report QualityTotal reports, graphs, and insights. 0-5 points based on percentile ranking.5.003.000.00
Backtesting Performance Test WinnersOptuma
4.94
TrendSpider
4.88
MetaStock
4.81

If your decision process requires quantified strategy validation, you’ll need a different tool.

In Context: Backtesting is about answering the question, “Does this edge survive data?” Seeking Alpha’s core promise is different: “Here are ideas, theses, and rating frameworks to support decisions.”

You can absolutely use Seeking Alpha to improve idea quality—but you can’t use it to validate a trading system with robust statistics, regime filters, slippage assumptions, and portfolio-level constraints. If you’re systematic, the right move is to pair backtesting elsewhere with Seeking Alpha as a research layer to understand why a setup may work (or fail).


Trading Bot & Auto-Trading Reliability

Seeking Alpha scores 1.50, below the median 2.00. That’s expected: it’s not an automation platform. Where it can still contribute is as a signal/research input layer feeding your decisions (or external automation). Treat this score as a “don’t buy it for bots” flag.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Auto-Trading & Bot Sophistication ScaleTotal avg: Automation Path, Sophistication, and Operational Assurance1.504.502.001.50
Automation PathConnectors and execution reliability 0-2 points.1.002.001.000.00
Strategy/Bot SophisticationTotal Weighted Sophistication Rating (L1 = 1 point, etc.) 0-2 points.2.002.000.00
Operational AssuranceLive trading support, monitoring, and failsafes. 0-1 points.0.000.500.000.00
Bot & Auto-Trading Reliability Test WinnersTrendSpider
4.50
Trade Ideas
4.00
Tickeron
4.00

In Context: Automation reliability is about whether tools save you time or blow up your process. Seeking Alpha sits outside that battlefield: it’s built for research and idea selection, not execution pipelines and bot monitoring.

In my audit notes, the productive way to use Seeking Alpha is upstream—improve your candidate selection, validate fundamentals, and pressure-test a thesis before you ever automate. If you want automation, use a bot-capable platform and treat Seeking Alpha as an intelligence feed, not the engine.


AI & Algo Index

Seeking Alpha scores 3.00, above the median 2.00. The nuance: it earns this via algorithmic depth + transparency, not an “AI layer.” It’s systematic in its quant ratings frameworks, but not AI-native.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Algorithmic Intelligence & AI Tier IndexSum of Algo Depth, AI Layer & Transparency Points3.005.002.001.00
Algo DepthAlgo Depth2.002.001.501.00
AI LayerAI Layer0.002.000.000.00
TransparencyTransparency1.001.001.000.00
AI & Algo Index Test WinnersTrendSpider
5.00
Trade Ideas
4.50
Tickeron
4.50

In Context: AI & Algo scores only matter if they change decisions. Seeking Alpha’s advantage is systematic evaluation: you’re not relying solely on vibes, headlines, or a single analyst’s conviction.

If you want explainable, model-driven ratings—this is a strength. If you want “AI copilots,” it’s not the point.

In my audit notes, the value is transparency—understanding why a stock grades the way it does, and being able to agree/disagree with the logic. The limitation is also clear: there’s no AI-native strategy synthesis layer here. Think “quant scoring framework,” not “agent that builds strategies for you.”


Alert Speed

Seeking Alpha scores 3.33, below the median 4.25. That’s typical: it’s not trying to be an ultra-low-latency market alerting engine. The value is relevance and analysis, not millisecond speed. Don’t interpret this as “bad alerts”—interpret it as “not an alert-first platform.”

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Alert SpeedTotal avg: Concurrent Alerts, Alert Stream Richness, and Alert Speed.3.335.004.253.25
Concurrent AlertsHow many concurrent alerts (1 point per 50, to a max of 5 points)2.005.002.000.00
Concurrent Alert CountHow many alerts can you set?20.002000.00100.0010.00
Alert Streams1 point per stream. Email, Webhook, SMS, and App alert. Multifactor/multi-condition alerts.3.005.004.002.00
Alert Speed Rating0-5 points based on latency and speed5.005.003.502.00
Alert latency (ms)Fast alerts under 50ms. Average alert latency.300.0060.00275.00300.00
Alert Speed Test WinnersTradingView
4.67
TrendSpider
4.33
Benzinga Pro
4.33

The best use is portfolio and thesis monitoring—news, rating changes, and research updates that affect conviction—not microsecond entries. If you want market-structure alerts, pair it with a real-time alert platform and let Seeking Alpha handle the why behind the move.

In Context: Alerting only matters if it matches your trading tempo. If you day trade or scalp, alert latency and concurrency are existential. Seeking Alpha is more “keep me informed and help me think” than “trigger an execution sequence.”


Trade Signal Quality

This is Seeking Alpha’s headline win: AAA 5.00, far above the median 0.00. In this framework, that means audited, structured signals/picks that go beyond generic “buy/sell” widgets.

Alpha Picks are high-conviction, market-outperforming stocks backed by the Quant team.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Signal Alpha & Predictive EfficacyAudited trade signals and performance over time.5.005.000.000.00
Trade Signal Quality Test WinnersTrade Ideas
5.00
Seeking Alpha
5.00
Tickeron
5.00
Motley Fool
5.00

This is the category that justifies paying for Seeking Alpha—if you actually use the signals/picks in your process.

That makes it especially valuable for investors who want a disciplined funnel: shortlist candidates, pressure-test the thesis, and act with higher confidence. If you want rapid-fire intraday signals, this isn’t that; it’s higher-level decision support.

In Context: “Signal quality” is not “more signals.” It’s whether signals are structured, evidence-backed, and usable without self-deception. Seeking Alpha’s edge is that it’s built around idea selection and conviction-building—ratings, research, and curated picks—rather than generating endless alerts.


Broker Connectivity & Ecosystem Depth

Seeking Alpha scores 2.00, right on the median. That may look surprising, but it reflects ecosystem utility (coverage + integration posture) rather than “click-to-execute trading.”

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Broker Integration Performance & DepthTotal avg: Broker Count and Asset Coverage2.005.002.001.00
Broker IntegrationTotal number of brokers integrated for direct, live trade execution.0.0030.005.000.00
Asset CoverageStocks, Options, FX, USA Exchanges, International Exchanges. 1 Point Each4.005.005.001.00
Total number of brokers integratedTotal count0.001200.005.000.00
Broker Connectivity & Ecosystem Test WinnersTradingView
5.00
MetaTrader
5.00
TrendSpider
4.43

Practically: Seeking Alpha is not where you execute. It’s where you decide.

In Context: Broker connectivity matters when your tool is the cockpit. Seeking Alpha is more like the intelligence desk: research, ratings, and decision support you can carry into your broker.

In my audit notes, most investors don’t need their research tool to place trades directly—especially if they already have a preferred broker interface. Where connectivity still matters is coverage: the broader the asset universe, the more often the tool stays useful as your portfolio evolves. Treat this category as “ecosystem fit,” not “execution power.”


Portfolio Tool Performance

Seeking Alpha lands a AA 4.30 above the median. It’s competent for portfolio tracking and monitoring, alerting, and innovative health checking. The portfolio layer is “useful,” not “elite.” It supports monitoring decisions more than engineering them.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Portfolio Health & Risk AnalysisTotal Avg: Portfolio Metrics Coverage and Feature Depth4.304.802.802.00
Portfolio Tool Performance Test WinnersStock Rover
4.80
Portfolio 123
4.80
Seeking Alpha
4.30

This category is about staying honest: understanding concentration, income exposure, and portfolio health without turning your process into a spreadsheet job. If you want correlation matrices, factor exposures, Monte Carlo, and rebalancing automation, pair with a portfolio-native tool. If you want “keep me aware and informed,” Seeking Alpha works well.

In Context: Portfolio tools matter most after you buy—because that’s when risk management begins. Seeking Alpha’s median score reflects practical tracking and monitoring, not deep optimization.


Financial News Speed & Depth

Seeking Alpha scores 3.50, above the median 2.30 for speed. This is a “news terminal vs analysis platform” distinction: you get depth and commentary, but not wire-speed delivery. However the depth of the news covered, through its own editors, and in the form of trending topics, rates it AA 4.50.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Financial News SpeedTotal avg: News Speed and Depth3.504.252.301.50
Depth of NewsTotal sources, journalists, and analysis reports. 0-5 points based on percentile ranking.4.504.503.502.00
Financial News Speed & Depth Test WinnersMetaStock
5.00
Benzinga Pro
5.00
Scanz
5.00

News speed only matters if you trade the first move. Most investors don’t—and they shouldn’t pretend they do. Seeking Alpha’s profile fits the second phase: understanding what matters, what’s noise, and what changes fundamentals. The real edge is depth: analysis that helps you decide whether a headline changes your thesis or is just volatility bait.

In Context: The “depth” sub-score is excellent, but the speed benchmark is where it loses. If you need wire-speed news, you want a terminal; if you need meaning and Context, Seeking Alpha is built for that.


Community Utility Index (CUI)

Seeking Alpha scores A 4.25, well above the median 3.00. This category concerns whether the community improves decision-making (quality, responsiveness, and structure), not raw social engagement.

This is a real differentiator if you benefit from counter-arguments and diverse theses.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Community Utility Index (CUI)Total Avg: Activity and Value4.254.253.001.00
Community ActivityTotal Active users, avg posts, avg response times. 0-5 points based on percentile ranking.4.005.002.001.00
Value of CommunityExpertise, moderation, and signal-to-noise. 0-5 points based on percentile ranking.4.504.504.002.00
Community Utility Index Test WinnersTradingView
5.00
MetaTrader
5.00
Trade Ideas
4.75

In Context: Community value shows up when it saves you from bad decisions. Seeking Alpha’s strength is not just volume, it’s that you can often find a smart opposing thesis quickly, plus detailed debate on valuation, catalysts, and risk.

That matters because investors are vulnerable to confirmation bias; a strong community can puncture weak narratives before you commit capital. The flip side: community doesn’t replace process. Use it as a stress test, not as permission to buy.


Support Infrastructure & SLA Audit

Seeking Alpha scores 3.50, just under the median of 4.00. The channel access is solid, but the “time-to-human” expectation falls short of the benchmark’s “instant chat in under 2 minutes” standard.

MetricCalculationSeeking AlphaHighMedianLow
Support SLA Audit: Time-to-Human BenchmarksAverage of Support Communication Channels & Support Response Time Scores3.505.004.003.00
Support Communication ChannelsCommunication Channels (The “Access” Scale)4.005.004.002.00
Support Response TimesResponse Times (The “SLA” Scale)3.005.004.003.00
Stated SLA & Tested Outcomes~24 Hours< 5 Minutes< 5 Minutes< 24 Hours
Support Infrastructure & SLA Audit WinnersTrendSpider
5.00
TC2000
5.00
ThinkorSwim
4.75

Support isn’t “bad”—it’s just not built like a trading terminal’s live ops desk.

In Context: Support quality matters most when downtime costs money. If you’re using Seeking Alpha for research, a next-day response is annoying but rarely catastrophic. In my audit notes, the bigger issue is expectation management: don’t evaluate Seeking Alpha like a broker’s execution desk or a real-time terminal with market-hours phone support.

Evaluate it like a subscription research product—where documentation quality and issue resolution consistency matter more than sub-minute chat SLAs. If you’re extremely time-sensitive, choose a tool category that’s built for live trading operations.


Barry D. Moore CFTe
Barry D. Moore CFTe
With a wealth of experience spanning 25 years in stock investing and trading, Barry D. Moore (CFTe) is an author and Certified Financial Technician (Market Analyst) recognized by the International Federation of Technical Analysts (IFTA). Notably, he has also held executive positions in leading Silicon Valley corporations IBM Corp. and Hewlett Packard Inc.