News Trading Crypto: How to Trade Events and Announcements
News moves markets. Learn to trade around Fed decisions, ETF rulings, exchange hacks, and rumor cycles—without getting caught in the volatility.
- News trading profits from event-driven price moves. The edge is in reaction, not prediction.
- "Buy the rumor, sell the news" is real. Price often moves on anticipation and reverses on confirmation.
- Thrive aggregates crypto news and alerts you to market-moving events in real time.
Explore News Event Types
Click through different news scenarios:
Federal Reserve announces interest rate decisions 8 times per year.
Typical Reaction
Hawkish = risk-off = BTC drops. Dovish = risk-on = BTC rallies. Market prices in expectations—surprise is what moves price.
Trading Approach
Don't trade into the event—wait for initial reaction + confirmation. First move often fakeout. Real move comes after digestion. Size down around events.
Extreme volatility, slippage, stop hunts. Many traders lose trying to predict Fed. Better to react than predict.
What Is News Trading?
News trading profits from price moves caused by information events. Some events are scheduled (Fed decisions, earnings, ETF rulings). Some are breaking (hacks, partnerships, regulatory actions). Both create volatility—and opportunity.
The challenge: markets are efficient. By the time you hear news, it may already be priced in. The edge isn't in knowing news first—it's in reacting properly when everyone knows simultaneously.
Types of News Events
Scheduled Events
Fed meetings, ETF decision deadlines, protocol upgrades. You know they're coming. Markets price in expectations. Surprise moves price—expected outcomes often cause "sell the news."
Breaking News
Exchange hacks, regulatory actions, partnership announcements. Unexpected. First reaction often extreme and wrong. Fakeouts common. Wait for verification and dust to settle.
Rumors
Unconfirmed reports of partnerships, listings, developments. "Buy the rumor, sell the news." Price moves on speculation. If you're late to the rumor, you're exit liquidity.
| Event Type | Predictability | Strategy | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scheduled | High timing | Position or avoid | Medium |
| Breaking | Zero timing | React quickly | High |
| Rumor | Low | Early = good, late = bad | High |
Buy the Rumor, Sell the News
This pattern is everywhere in crypto. Here's why it works:
- Smart money hears rumor early, positions quietly
- As rumor spreads, more buyers pile in
- Price rises on anticipation
- News confirms → smart money sells into retail buying
- Price drops despite "good news"
Implication: if you hear about "upcoming announcement" after price has already moved, you're late. Don't buy. The move already happened.
How to Trade Events
Before Scheduled Events
- Option 1: Reduce exposure. Close leveraged positions. Sit out volatility.
- Option 2: Small position based on expectation. Accept you're gambling.
- Option 3: Straddle (options) to profit from move in either direction.
During Events
- First 15-30 minutes is noise and fakeouts
- Don't chase the first spike—wait for confirmation
- Watch for reversal signals after initial move
After Events
- Let dust settle. Assess real impact.
- Trade the continuation or reversal, not the initial chaos
- Bigger opportunity often comes in following days, not minutes
News Trading Risks
- Fakeouts: First move reverses. Algorithms and panic create false signals.
- Slippage: During volatility, your order may fill far from expected price.
- Stop hunts: Extreme wicks trigger stops on both sides before real move.
- Verification delay: First reports often wrong. Acting on bad info = losses.
- Overtrading: FOMO on news leads to impulsive decisions.
Common News Trading Mistakes
- Predicting outcomes: You don't have edge predicting Fed. React, don't predict.
- Chasing: Buying after 20% pump because of "good news" = buying top.
- Trusting single source: Verify news. Fake announcements are common.
- Over-leveraging: News volatility + leverage = liquidation.
- Ignoring context: Same news can be bullish or bearish depending on market context.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is news trading?
News trading profits from price moves caused by news events—scheduled announcements (Fed, ETF decisions) or breaking news (hacks, partnerships). You either position before events or react quickly after.
What does "buy the rumor, sell the news" mean?
Price often rises on rumor/anticipation of positive news, then sells off when news actually hits. Smart money positions early on rumor and exits into retail buying the news. Classic pattern.
Should I trade scheduled events like Fed meetings?
Risky. Markets price in expectations. Surprise is what moves price. If Fed does what's expected, price may not move—or fakeout both ways. Better to react after than predict before.
How do I trade breaking news?
Speed matters but so does verification. Wait for confirmation—first reports are often wrong. Let initial spike settle. Don't chase. If you missed it, wait for retest or next opportunity.
What news sources should I use?
Twitter/X for speed (but verify). Bloomberg, CoinDesk for reliability. On-chain data for whale movements. Telegram groups for alpha (careful of scams). Never trust single source.
Is news trading gambling?
Predicting news outcome is gambling. Reacting to news with proper risk management is trading. The edge is in reaction speed, position sizing, and not getting emotional—not predicting outcomes.
How do I handle volatility around news?
Size down. Widen stops (tighter = stopped on noise). Don't use high leverage. Expect fakeouts—first move often reverses. Protect capital over maximizing potential gain.
What is a fakeout in news trading?
Initial price spike in one direction that reverses. First reaction often wrong—algorithms and panic traders move price, then real flow takes over. Wait 15-30 minutes for dust to settle.