I used to think markets moved on information. You know—earnings, cash flow, guidance, innovation, all that clean, spreadsheet-friendly stuff that makes you feel like investing is just math with a little caffeine. Then I started paying attention to what people were actually paying attention to. That’s when everything got weird. Because somewhere between the numbers and the narrative, there’s this invisible force that doesn’t show up in any financial model, doesn’t get discounted in a DCF, and doesn’t care about your valuation discipline. It’s attention. And attention, I’ve realized, doesn’t just influence prices—it distorts them, inflates them, and occasionally hijacks them entirely. Welcome to what I now call the attention premium —the part of a stock’s valuation that exists purely because people can’t stop talking about it. The Moment I Realized Something Was Off I remember the exact moment it clicked. I was watching a stock—nothing special fundamentally, nothing groundbrea...
When News Moves Billions: Event-Driven Investing in Mega Caps (And Why I’ve Learned to Respect the Chaos)
I used to think markets moved on logic. That’s cute, right? I had this neat, orderly vision in my head where earnings, fundamentals, and long-term strategy dictated price movements. Companies would perform well, stocks would go up. Companies would struggle, stocks would go down. It was clean. Predictable. Almost… respectable. Then one morning, I watched a trillion-dollar company lose tens of billions in market cap before I finished my coffee—because of a headline. Not earnings. Not guidance. A headline. That was the day I stopped thinking of the market as rational and started thinking of it as reactive, emotional, and deeply addicted to news . And once you see that, you can’t unsee it. The First Time I Saw Billions Vanish I remember the moment vividly. A notification popped up on my phone—one of those “breaking news” alerts that feels important even when it isn’t. Except this time, it was . Something about regulation. Or a lawsuit. Or a vague “concern” from a government of...