FAQ: News


The News section is a market news feed aggregated from multiple publishers.

Use it to stay aware of what’s happening across assets and to connect headlines with instruments and market moves.


This page explains:

  • how to choose a market category,
  • how to filter by sources,
  • how to read a news page correctly,
  • why times and content may differ from other websites.


Quick start: how to use News
  1. Open News.
  2. Choose a market category (e.g., Currencies, Metals, Indices).
  3. Select sources you trust (optional).
  4. Open a headline to view details (publisher, publication time, content).
  5. Use “Reset” to clear source filters.
What markets are available?

News can be browsed by major asset classes:

  • US Stock Market
  • Currencies
  • Cryptocurrencies
  • Metals
  • Indices
  • Commodities
Where do news stories come from?

The feed aggregates stories from multiple sources (publishers).

You can choose one or several sources to build your own feed.

How source filters work (Show More / Reset)
  • Show More expands the list of available sources.
  • Selecting a source narrows the feed to that publisher.
  • Reset clears the selection and returns to the full feed.

Tip: If your feed looks “empty”, you probably enabled too many filters at once — click Reset.

What you see in a news list item

In category pages, each item typically shows:

  • publisher name,
  • time,
  • headline link,
  • sometimes related tickers/labels (depending on category).
What you see on a full news page

When you open a headline, the page usually includes:

  • headline title,
  • publisher name,
  • publication date/time,
  • the article content,
  • links/mentions of related tickers,
  • “Other news” to continue reading.
Time zones: why the time may look different

Publication time is shown in the format displayed on the article page.

If you compare with another site, check the time zone and “published vs updated” differences.

“Is this financial advice?”

No. News is informational content. Any trading decision is yours.

“Why does this article look different from the original?”

Aggregated content may include formatting differences, additional blocks, or references.

The original publisher is credited on the page.


Important notes

  • News headlines can move markets, but also cause volatility and slippage.
  • Always consider risk management and your broker’s execution conditions.
  • MetaTrader.com is not a broker; account operations are handled by your broker.