Most market news is noise. This tells you which isn't.

When a print lands or a headline breaks, TRUE explains what changed, what it means, and — just as often — why it probably doesn't matter as much as the headline suggests.

For research and education. Not financial advice.

The problem with financial news

Every move gets a story. Most stories are made up after the fact.

Markets fall and someone writes 'stocks fall on rate fears'. Markets rise an hour later and the same outlet writes 'stocks rise on rate optimism'. TRUE checks whether a headline actually lines up with what the data did — and tells you when it doesn't.

How TRUE checks a story
T CPI came in at 2.6% — what does it actually mean?SOURCED
What happened
Headline inflation landed roughly in line with expectations; core came in a touch softer than the consensus estimate.
Why it matters
In-line prints rarely move rate expectations much on their own. The market reaction so far looks modest and consistent with that.
What's uncertain: one month is not a trend, and revisions are common. Watch the next two prints before drawing a conclusion.
Sources
BLS releaseRate futuresMarket reaction

What news intelligence gives you

The moment it lands

Macro prints, earnings and market-moving headlines, explained as they happen rather than after the fact.

Cross-checked

The story is compared against what the price and the data actually did. Where they disagree, you're told.

Signal from noise

An honest read on whether a headline genuinely matters — including when the answer is 'probably not'.

Frequently asked questions

Does TRUE tell me how to trade the news?

No. It explains what happened, what it plausibly means, and what remains uncertain. It does not tell you to buy or sell anything, and it does not predict the reaction.

Where does the news come from?

Official releases and established market news providers, cross-checked against price and volume data. See methodology for the sourcing and its limits.

How fast is it?

Macro prints and major headlines are picked up as they are released. The explanation follows within seconds.

Know what actually matters.

The story, the evidence, and an honest read on whether it counts.

For research and education. Not financial advice.