What the news feed includes
Every headline that lands in Lazy Trader AI ships with structure:
- Headline — the original publisher's line.
- Source — Reuters, Bloomberg, WSJ, FT, AP, etc.
- Time — both filing time and ingest time.
- Sentiment tag — bullish, bearish, or neutral, scored by AI.
- One-line AI summary — the punchline of the article in 12 words or fewer.
- Related ticker — auto-linked to the relevant ticker page.
Why sentiment matters
A bullish headline doesn't guarantee a green close. But it does shape how the market reads the day — and clusters of bullish or bearish headlines around a ticker tend to feed momentum.
News + flow is the real signal
This is where Lazy Trader AI is stronger than a normal news app:
- News + bullish options flow = much louder signal than either alone.
- News + congressional disclosure = a possible policy thread to pull on.
- News + insider buying = a clustered conviction pattern.
- News + dark pool prints = institutional reaction in real time.
Vs. doom-scrolling 12 apps
Without Lazy Trader AI
- 20 tabs of unranked headlines
- No sentiment tagging
- Ticker context buried in body copy
- No cross-reference to flow or insiders
- Same headline rephrased 6 times
With Lazy Trader AI
- AI-summarized one-liners
- Bullish / bearish / neutral tags
- Auto-linked tickers
- Stacked with options flow + insider data
- Deduplicated across sources
Frequently asked questions
AI classification of a headline as bullish, bearish, or neutral relative to the named ticker — based on language patterns, source, and historical impact.
Not on its own. Sentiment shifts how the market reads a day, but plenty of bullish news fails to move price (often because it's already priced in).
Yes — scope by ticker, sentiment, source, or AI confidence threshold.
Yes — every headline ships with a one-line AI summary so you can scan the feed in seconds.
Major business publications (Reuters, Bloomberg, WSJ, FT, AP, CNBC), regulatory filings, and select industry trade press.