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TradingView Integrates Accesswire Feed, Accelerating Retail News Flow

TradingView announced integration of Accesswire press releases into its platform on Oct. 11, 2025, broadening real‑time news available to its global user base. The move tightens the pipeline between corporate disclosures and retail traders, with implications for intraday volatility, data costs and regulatory scrutiny.

Sarah Chen3 min read
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TradingView on Saturday expanded its on‑platform news ecosystem by adding Accesswire press releases to the suite of feeds displayed alongside charts, screener results and economic calendars. The addition, announced on Oct. 11, supplements existing reference and market data already drawn from ICE Data Services and FactSet and complements regulatory filings surfaced by Quartr and FactSet’s CUSIP database.

The company framed the expansion as part of a broader push to make the platform “more than a product,” highlighting tools such as Supercharts, Pine Script and integrated calendars for economic events and earnings. For users, the change translates into faster access to issuer statements, product announcements and other corporate disclosures directly in trading layouts that millions of retail and institutional users already rely on for technical analysis and order routing.

TradingView’s platform aggregates market data and news in real time, and the Accesswire integration narrows the latency gap between press‑release distribution and retail visibility. That narrowing matters in markets where information flows can trigger immediate price responses. Market structure experts caution that even small changes in news dissemination speed can compress reaction windows for high‑frequency traders and amplify intraday volatility in smaller‑capitalization names where liquidity is thin.

The technical integration also intersects with mounting costs and complexities around market data. TradingView’s use of feeds from ICE and FactSet—both noted in the platform’s disclosures—underscores a trend: comprehensive, low‑latency data environments require costly licensing, and those costs increasingly inform platform pricing and subscription tiers. For end users, that can mean higher monthly fees or paywalls for premium news and delayed content for free users, altering who receives information first.

Regulators are likely to watch the development. The Securities and Exchange Commission has in recent years signaled concern about fair access and market manipulation tied to information asymmetry. Faster, broader distribution of press releases to retail platforms could prompt questions about disclosure controls, the timing of issuer communications and whether aggregation services should be treated differently from traditional wire services under market rules.

Analysts see the move as part of a longer trend toward consolidation of market utilities and news aggregation inside trading interfaces. “Trading platforms increasingly seek to be the one‑stop shop for execution, data and narrative,” said an industry analyst. “That reduces friction for users but concentrates influence over what information traders see and when.”

For investors and market watchers, immediate metrics to monitor will include spikes in intraday volume and volatility around Accesswire‑distributed items, the pace of premium subscription uptake and any shifts in the distribution of small‑cap trading activity. Over the longer term, the development is another sign that platforms are monetizing curated news flows, a shift that could reshape how corporate news moves markets and how regulators think about equal access and market integrity.

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