How to setup Twitter to stream the latest FX and Economic news in 2019 and 2020

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People often ask me questions like "what just happened to the pound?", "why did EUR/JPY just take a dive?", or "what made gold spike up?" and I thought I'd put together a little tutorial that might help traders stay atop of breaking economic news.

Before anything else, if you're not actively checking an economic calendar to see what's on the docket for the day, you're doing it wrong. Reviewing an economic calendar before each trade session where you start.

After that, we still need a feed of some sort that helps us get an idea what the market's actively doing or what ad-hoc news might be coming down the pipe. For that, let's use Twitter (and their TweetDeck tool.)

The first thing we will need is either a new twitter account dedicated just for FX news, or be comfortable with filtering down to specific followers should we already have an account we want to use registered.

If you don't have a twitter account, or want to make a new new one specifically for this (which I recommend,) create one now:

https://twitter.com/signup

Select "use email instead" when making this new account, and pick an email you are comfortable using that isn't already associated with another twitter account.

Skip making your bio, skip adding friends form your contacts, and [important] once twitter suggests who you should follow just skip this step too by clicking next. Do not follow anyone just yet, we want this to be a clean slate.

Now, follow these accounts by clicking each link and slapping that follow button:

ForexLive LiveSquawk https://twitter.com/RANsquawk NewsSquawk] https://twitter.com/FirstSquawk FirstSquawk]

ECB Federal Reserve Bank of England Bank of Canada Bank of Japan Swiss National Bank

(Why various countries feel their central bank needs a twitter account is beyond me, but hey...)

Finally, if you want a little more spice in your twitter feed, add Trump and the Central Bank of Jamaica: https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump https://twitter.com/CentralBankJA


Ok, now we have a decent list of news sources to populate our feed. The next step is to get them streaming, and that's where TweetDeck comes in.

TweetDeck used to be a 3rd party service until Twitter bought them out. Now it's an included (but highly underused and under appreciated) feature. On the same browser you've signed into Twitter, go to the following URL:

https://tweetdeck.twitter.com/

You'll be greeted with 4 columns by default.