> In statements to NPR, Reuters said it has withdrawn the incorrect report, blaming a headline published on CNBC.
-
In statements to NPR, Reuters said it has withdrawn the incorrect report, blaming a headline published on CNBC. When asked for comment, CNBC said it "aired unconfirmed information in a banner," which it "quickly" corrected.
What in the absolute fuck?
-
-
In statements to NPR, Reuters said it has withdrawn the incorrect report, blaming a headline published on CNBC. When asked for comment, CNBC said it "aired unconfirmed information in a banner," which it "quickly" corrected.
What in the absolute fuck?
Market manipulation
-
Market manipulation
Yeah. Money is not lost in finance markets, it is redistributed. Reading any of this as random and/or unintentional is beyond naive.
-
Yeah. Money is not lost in finance markets, it is redistributed. Reading any of this as random and/or unintentional is beyond naive.
IDK, it wouldn't be the first time a news org published some random shit as fact because they're too eager to be the first to report on something.
-
-
Yeah. Money is not lost in finance markets, it is redistributed. Reading any of this as random and/or unintentional is beyond naive.
Redistributed up.
-
-
Market manipulation
...by whom? A random Twitter user? CNBC? Reuters?