TradingView Adds Acceswire Feed, Broadening Retail Access to Corporate Releases
TradingView on Tuesday integrated Acceswire press releases into its platform, bringing corporate announcements and PR directly to its charting and screener tools. The move accelerates the convergence of market data, regulatory filings and news for tens of millions of users, raising questions about information quality, market impact and regulatory oversight.
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TradingView’s decision to carry Acceswire press releases on its platform marks a notable step in the consolidation of market information for retail and institutional users. The integration, disclosed by TradingView on Sept. 30, 2025, places Acceswire’s corporate announcements alongside market data from ICE Data Services and reference data from FactSet, while SEC filings and other documents are surfaced via Quartr.
For everyday investors and active traders using TradingView’s Supercharts and the platform’s suite of screeners — covering stocks, ETFs, bonds and crypto pairs across centralized and decentralized exchanges — the change means earlier and easier access to company statements and regulatory disclosures without leaving the charting interface. TradingView, which serves tens of millions of monthly users worldwide, has increasingly positioned itself as a one-stop hub for price data, analytics and textual information used to make trading decisions.
A TradingView spokesperson said the Acceswire feed “broadens the news mix available to our community and brings systematic access to corporate communications directly into the workflows of traders and investors.” Acceswire, a press-distribution service, provides companies and public relations firms a channel to publish releases that now appear in TradingView’s news panel alongside content from established data partners. FactSet’s CUSIP database and the American Bankers Association licensing cited in TradingView’s notice signal the depth of reference data underpinning the platform.
Market structure implications are immediate. Retail trading accounted for roughly a fifth to a quarter of U.S. equity volume in recent years; the faster dissemination of corporate announcements to retail platforms can increase the speed at which information is reflected in prices. “When a press release lands in a place where millions watch live charts, price reactions can be sudden and amplified,” said Emily Ruiz, an independent market-data consultant. “The question becomes whether platforms and vendors apply adequate labeling and verification so users can separate paid PR from independent reporting.”
Regulators have taken a renewed interest in how information flows shape market behavior. Following episodes of social-media-driven volatility earlier in the decade, the Securities and Exchange Commission has signaled closer attention to dissemination channels that can be used to move markets. TradingView’s bundling of press releases, filing feeds and market data could prompt fresh scrutiny over timing, attribution and the potential for coordinated disclosures aimed at retail audiences.
From a business perspective, the integration underscores competition among data vendors and terminals. By combining charting, Pine scripting and now a broader news feed, TradingView is contesting aspects of the legacy-terminal model dominated by Bloomberg and Refinitiv, offering lower-cost access for both hobbyists and professionals. For issuers and IR shops, the platform represents an efficient route to reach capital-market participants.
TradingView’s legal notice accompanying the update reiterated standard copyright and licensing terms: market data from ICE Data Services, reference data from FactSet, SEC filings via Quartr, and CUSIP data licensed through FactSet and the American Bankers Association. As platforms converge information, investors and regulators will be watching how transparency, speed and source verification evolve, and whether new channels raise or lower the overall quality of market intelligence.