Symbol-locked news feed with sentiment chips and FLOW summary.
Symbol-locked chronological headlines with sentiment chip.
All headlines tagged with the current symbol, newest at top. Use this when you want to study ONE name in depth — the symbol-locked feed is cleaner than the cross-symbol firehose.
Each row carries its own BULL / NEUTRAL / BEAR chip based on text scoring. Cluster of bear chips before a price drop = thesis breaking; bull cluster before a rally = narrative solidifying.
Source publisher + minutes-ago timestamp. Filter to first-tier outlets (Reuters, AP, the company's own IR releases) for signal vs blog noise.
Top-right: window-aggregated sentiment (rolling, computed over visible headlines). Quick "what's the market saying about NVDA today?" read without scrolling every individual row.
“The ticker news panel locks to one symbol and shows its headlines in order, each tagged with a sentiment chip.”
Every news headline tagged with the active symbol, sorted newest first. Each card shows source, relative age, a sentiment-colored stripe on the left edge, and a priority badge for breaking-news escalation. The hero FLOW chip averages sentiment across the visible window: BULLISH / POSITIVE / NEUTRAL / NEGATIVE / BEARISH.
The pro daily-driver companion to the chart: when a name moves unexpectedly, this is the first screen to open. Locked to the active chart symbol — switch tickers, the feed swaps with you.
add tnews or add tickernews.NVDA TNEWS or SPY TICKERNEWS.Average sentiment score across all visible headlines with a non-null score. Five tiers:
Sentiment scores are vendor-supplied per article and range [−1.0, +1.0]. Stories without a sentiment score contribute zero weight to the average — only scored stories count.
Reads the global NEWS_ITEMS feed populated by /api/stocks/{symbol}/news on every symbol change + 5-minute interval refresh. Filter is exact uppercase match against each item's tagged symbols array — items mentioning multiple tickers (e.g. an SPY-vs-QQQ piece) appear in both symbols' ticker-news feeds.