Stock Exchange: Do You Trade Short-Term News Flow?

 | Aug 24, 2018 08:24AM ET

The Stock Exchange is all about trading. Each week we do the following:

  • Discuss an important issue for traders;
  • highlight several technical trading methods, including current ideas;
  • feature advice from top traders and writers; and,
  • provide a few (minority) reactions from fundamental analysts.

We also have some fun. We welcome comments, links, and ideas to help us improve this resource for traders. If you have some ideas, please join in!

h3 Review: Caught Leaning Into A China Trade? Now What?/h3

Our previous Stock Exchange asked the question: Caught Leaning into a China Trade, Now What? We noted that non-US markets in general, and China in particular, have been underperforming the US market significantly this year, but we recently saw signs of a potential violent snap back. And also as the persistence of certain market conditions grow, it’s not uncommon for traders to lean more heavily into their trades.

h3 This Week: Do You Trade Short-Term News Flow?/h3

Short-term news, whether accurate or false, can dramatically move the price of a stock; however, in the long-term, it is the underlying company’s worth that determines its value. According to Warren Buffett’s mentor, Benjamin Graham:

“In the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it is a weighing machine.”

Many investors interpret this to mean it is wise to ignore the short-term noise and to instead invest only for the long-term. To the contrary, many traders use short-term noise to generate profits. To which camp do you belong?

For example, whether entirely accurate or not, Tesla’s Elon Musk recently tweeted that he was considering taking the company private at a significant premium to its short-term market price. This resulted in a very swift and dramatic (short-term) increase in the share price of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA). Some market pundits have argued that Musk’s tweet was false, and intended only to burn the many Tesla short-sellers that the CEO loathes (and such behavior doesn’t seem implausible after Musk’s treatment of a popular Tesla bear, and Seeking Alpha contributor, Montana Skeptic ).