News FOLLOWS price, not the other way around. about the stock you are watching. Note that the stories occur AFTER the move, not before it.
Here's how that happens: Nobody got the news early.
1) The price moves.
2) Writers for news organizations see it.
3) The writers call the company and other sources.
4) The writers write their stories. They are very fast.
5) Stories hit the wires.
6) Schmucks who attempt to trade "the news" get in or out late, as always.
Bottom line: Trading the news doesn't work.
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1) The price moves.
2) Writers for news organizations see it.
3) The writers call the company and other sources.
4) The writers write their stories. They are very fast.
5) Stories hit the wires.
6) Schmucks who attempt to trade "the news" get in or out late, as always.
Bottom line: Trading the news doesn't work.
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^
I disagree.
The price moves because the companies release earnings reports that may agree or disagree with analyst expectations. Which is reported on the news wires. Then traders react to the news.
The price does not move by itself. It does not have consciousness.
Tesla stock dropped $11 +/- on Thursday when their rocket blew up on the launchpad. It blew up from static electricity or something else that ignited the fuel while it was being loaded. Then the stock moved...after the explosion was reported. The stock movement did not cause the explosion.
When WalMart and Best Buy released their earnings recently and their stock rose it was a reaction to the news release. The stock did not manifest a soul and motivate traders around the world to buy more WM and BBY and sell Target and MCD prior to the earnings report.
Stock prices move on news releases from the companies as well as remarks from independent journalists and analysts. And attentive traders make decisions based on those early remarks. If the swings are big, then the major networks report them.
Trading the news works, if you trade fast enough.