Close Menu
World Economist – Global Markets, Finance & Economic Insights
  • Home
  • Economist Impact
    • Economist Intelligence
    • Finance & Economics
  • Business
  • Asia
  • China
  • Europe
  • Economy
  • USA
    • Middle East & Africa
    • Highlights
  • This week
  • World Economy
    • World News
What's Hot

Chinese firms drive US$13 billion Asia-Pacific boom in convertible bonds

June 24, 2025

Congress weighs multibillion-dollar tax cut for private credit investors

June 24, 2025

Why global imbalances do matter

June 24, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Tuesday, June 24
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
World Economist – Global Markets, Finance & Economic Insights
  • Home
  • Economist Impact
    • Economist Intelligence
    • Finance & Economics
  • Business
  • Asia
  • China
  • Europe
  • Economy
  • USA
    • Middle East & Africa
    • Highlights
  • This week
  • World Economy
    • World News
World Economist – Global Markets, Finance & Economic Insights
Home » Did an anonymous X account send markets reeling today?
USA

Did an anonymous X account send markets reeling today?

adminBy adminApril 7, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link
Post Views: 35


Monday’s trading action was bizarre in many ways.

But one specific mystery — about a misleading headline that sent stocks ping-ponging all over the place — highlights just how fragmented and expensive access to breaking financial news can be, even at times when it really matters to retail investors.

The US stock market did indeed go bananas this morning, thanks to a headline that falsely* claimed White House adviser Kevin Hassett had said President Donald Trump was considering a 90-day pause in tariffs.

CNBC anchors read out the headline on air, as they tried to explain why markets had started to soar. In all, the S&P 500 rallied nearly 6 per cent from where it had been trading right before the mystery headline.

The White House said within the hour that no one knew about this supposed plan, a rare chance to properly use the term “Fake News”. Stocks sold off by the same amount they’d rallied, and then see-sawed around for a while. By mid-afternoon they were basically flat for the day.

Line chart of A rumour seesaw for stonks showing The Cool Zone

So where exactly did the headline come from? That’s a much tougher question to answer than you’d think.

The obvious point of contagion was the Walter Bloomberg account, using the X handle @DeItaone (with a capital I instead of an “L”) which says it’s based in Switzerland.

This is not a guy named Walter Bloomberg, nor does he write for Bloomberg. The account’s entire deal is just reposting financial newswire headlines.

Here’s the post via a screengrab (since the account has since deleted the post). As you can see, it came at 10:13am, and really made the rounds within the next 30 minutes or so, thanks to the account’s ~848,000 followers:

© Apologies, we cannot remember where we got this screengrab from. This reporter was on the phone until 10:45 and then had to catch up fast.

By the way, all the times we’ll mention are EDT since the action happened during the New York trading day.

So did someone posting as “Walter Bloomberg” make up a headline to save the market? To cash out? Or just to introduce some chaos into the day?

If so, it’d be strange for the account to keep posting! But it has.

When asked by followers, the Walter Bloomberg account cited both Reuters and CNBC as the sources of the headline. Remember, though, the CNBC anchors seemed to be reading his post! One of his screengrabbed sources shows a Reuters newswire headline. But that was from 10:23am, and cites CNBC:

pic.twitter.com/2Yy8DC9w8Z

— *Walter Bloomberg (@DeItaone) April 7, 2025

Now, it’s not great if CNBC flashed a headline because one of their anchors read a social-media post that turned out to be nonsense. In their defence, however, markets had already started to take off before they read it!

But is the lesson here really just that the @DeItaone account has massive influence?

Probably not! Things get weirder from here.

An account called Hammer Capital posted the same headline at 10:11am. That’s before the post from Walter Bloomberg, or CNBC, or any other sources we’ve found. Hammer Capital, who has been on X since March 2021, explained the headline thusly:

To be as abundantly clear as possible, trading desks started sending out this headline at 10:09.

I was regurgitating what the market was reacting to, to my 600 followers.

It was an incorrect interpretation of a Fox News interview. https://t.co/RpN6c5RqfW

— Hammer Capital (@yourfavorito) April 7, 2025

We’ve heard from few other sources now that trading desks started sending around that headline around at that time. We’ve contacted both accounts we’ve mentioned for additional comment.

Also, looking at the not-so-sophisticated trading data this writer has available at home, S&P 500 futures trading volume surged around then, before the Walter Bloomberg or Hammer Capital tweets were posted.

So . . . where did the banks get the headline?

As we said, the “Walter Bloomberg” account basically just copies financial breaking-news headlines from newswires. And the thing is, those wires often come with an extremely pricey subscription. If Hassett had done an exclusive interview about major US policy decisions — and he did not, probably* — only a major financial news service would’ve been able get that exclusive access.

The newswires don’t just offer one uniform news feed, either. While we aren’t 100% up to speed on the latest business models, some newswires have been known to deliver news feeds to different subscribers at different speeds. This is reasonable, to an extent, because not all professional subscribers can use the same level of access.

So it seems possible that some experimental headline-writing product (or a budget subscription) published a bad headline that was then picked up by the Walter Bloomberg account.

There’s one less-than-obvious analogue with reality, which could have been misinterpreted by an overzealous headline writer or (ahem) an LLM. In a Fox & Friends interview, National Economic Council director Kevin Hassett stalled by saying “yep” before saying “the President is going to decide what the President is going to decide.”

This was obviously not confirmation, because he then argued that observers are overreacting to the tariffs news.

Another problem with that explanation is that the interview happened nearly two hours before @DeItaone published the headline. And Hassett’s ‘Fox & Friends’ comments wouldn’t have explained the part about an exception for China. Reuters provided the following comment to FT Alphaville:

Reuters, drawing from a headline on CNBC, published a story on April 7 saying White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett had said that President Donald Trump was considering a 90-day tariff pause on all countries except China. The White House denied the report. Reuters has withdrawn the incorrect report and regrets its error.

So they’re pointing the finger at CNBC. But again, the network’s anchors seemed as confused as anyone else by the rally and the accompanying surge in trading volume when it first happened. (We’ve seen the video!)

And from CNBC:

As we were chasing the news of the market moves in real-time, we aired unconfirmed information in a banner. Our reporters quickly made a correction on air.

We’ll see what we can find out about where banks’ trading desks and broker chats saw the original headline.

Anyway, the market zigzagged all over the place after the morning ruckus, and closed basically flat. That’s presumably because some traders think the US President can be swayed by market reactions to fake news.

Or, as the @Quantian account puts it:

So we bounced 8% on a fake headline, sold off when people realized it was fake, and then bounced again when it occurred to people that if we bounced that much on a fake headline imagine how much we’d bounce on a hypothetical real one.

*The original headline’s accuracy could, of course, change entirely at any moment, at the whims of one man. How fun! Also an earlier version of this headline said Twitter instead of X. Whoops.





Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
admin
  • Website

Related Posts

USA

Congress weighs multibillion-dollar tax cut for private credit investors

June 24, 2025
USA

Why global imbalances do matter

June 24, 2025
USA

Federal Reserve official Michelle Bowman calls for rate cuts as soon as July

June 23, 2025
USA

Tariffs on household goods bring home costs of Trump’s trade wars

June 23, 2025
USA

Resilience to Donald Trump’s tariff blitz helps push Tampa to top of FT-Nikkei rankings

June 23, 2025
USA

China needs to take a long-term view and let the renminbi rise

June 23, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Oil falls 6pc – Markets

June 24, 2025

Proposed tariff changes perturb chemical, plastic manufacturers – Business & Finance

June 24, 2025

PAA urges reversal of WHT hike decision – Business & Finance

June 24, 2025

Ecopack approves 2.03MW solar power project – Business & Finance

June 24, 2025
Latest Posts

PSX hits all-time high as proposed ‘neutral-to-positive’ budget well-received by investors – Business

June 11, 2025

Sindh govt to allocate funds for EV taxis, scooters in provincial budget: minister – Pakistan

June 11, 2025

US, China reach deal to ease export curbs, keep tariff truce alive – World

June 11, 2025

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Recent Posts

  • Chinese firms drive US$13 billion Asia-Pacific boom in convertible bonds
  • Congress weighs multibillion-dollar tax cut for private credit investors
  • Why global imbalances do matter
  • Hong Kong stocks jump by most in 2 weeks on Iran-Israel truce as oil slides
  • Hong Kong stocks jump by most in 2 weeks on Iran-Israel truce as oil slides

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Welcome to World-Economist.com, your trusted source for in-depth analysis, expert insights, and the latest news on global finance and economics. Our mission is to provide readers with accurate, data-driven reports that shape the understanding of economic trends worldwide.

Latest Posts

Chinese firms drive US$13 billion Asia-Pacific boom in convertible bonds

June 24, 2025

Congress weighs multibillion-dollar tax cut for private credit investors

June 24, 2025

Why global imbalances do matter

June 24, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Archives

  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • June 2024
  • October 2022
  • March 2022
  • July 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • November 2019
  • April 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2007
  • July 2007

Categories

  • AI & Tech
  • Asia
  • Banking
  • Business
  • Business
  • China
  • Climate
  • Computing
  • Economist Impact
  • Economist Intelligence
  • Economy
  • Editor's Choice
  • Europe
  • Europe
  • Featured
  • Featured Business
  • Featured Climate
  • Featured Health
  • Featured Science & Tech
  • Featured Travel
  • Finance & Economics
  • Health
  • Highlights
  • Markets
  • Middle East
  • Middle East & Africa
  • Middle East News
  • Most Viewed News
  • News Highlights
  • Other News
  • Politics
  • Russia
  • Science
  • Science & Tech
  • Social
  • Space Science
  • Sports
  • Sports Roundup
  • Tech
  • This week
  • Top Featured
  • Travel
  • Trending Posts
  • Ukraine Conflict
  • Uncategorized
  • US Politics
  • USA
  • World
  • World & Politics
  • World Economy
  • World News
© 2025 world-economist. Designed by world-economist.
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.