At the Money: Filtering Noisy News (September 17, 2025)
How can investors find usable signal amidst all of the outrageous, algorithm-driven, clickbait? Noisy headlines can be a distraction from your long-term goals.
Full transcript below.
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About this week’s guest:
Michael Hiltzik covers business for the Los Angeles Times, is a two-time winner of the Gerald Loeb Award and has authored numerous books on business.
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Transcript:
Intro: Cum on feel the noize, Girls rock your boys, We’ll get wild, wild, wild, Wild, wild, wild
Barry Ritholtz: Investors face a flood of noisy news, social media, tv, radio, and more. None of it is tailored to you in particular. Much of it appears to be outrageous, algorithm-driven, clickbait. What’s an investor supposed to do to help us navigate this?
Let’s bring in Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Michael Hiltzik. He covers business for the Los Angeles Times. He’s a two-time winner of the Gerald Loeb Award, as well as the author of numerous books on finance.
So Michael, let’s start with this endless sea of noise. How do you navigate this? How do you prioritize what’s important and what’s not?
Michael Hiltzik: It used to be said that newspaper readers know how to read their newspaper. They sort of assess what they see there, how it conforms to their own worldviews, how it conforms to what they see in the outside wideworld of reality.
And I think that’s probably more important now than it ever has been before newspaper reports of data are always second-order reports.
It’s a reporter who’s looked at the data and/or an editor has dropped a page or sent an email and said “Do something on this report from this, that, or the other.
And I think you always have to assess the source as we’ve talked about. If we’re talking about a trade organization, well, a trade organization is basically, a PR organization and it’s going to put its own spin on whatever number it is. It cooks up and sometimes it puts spin on numbers even before they’re cooked up.
If a trade organization is citing a study from a supposedly independent group, I want to know if they commissioned this study or who commissioned it. And, that’s a mixture part of my assessment. And, and I always ask, if I’m calling lobbyists and saying, you know, you just cited this supposedly third-party, analysis.
Is it yours? Did you commission this? And, you know, if they’re honest, they’ll. Don’t tell me.
I just got one into my email box, I think just the other day and, and I’ve asked, but haven’t gotten a reply yet. So that’s, that’s very important and, and I think readers have to understand that more than ever before.
Certainly, more than in my long career. Reporters are overworked, they don’t have the time to do their homework, so they will basically take a press release from some data source and regurgitate it. So I think it’s important for readers to do what I do, which is to check the source and if they can go to the raw material and make a judgment for themselves, and intelligent investors should be able to do that.
Barry Ritholtz: That raises an obvious question. How do you tell which sources are trustworthy? Who do you put on your all star list? Who do you eliminate?
Michael Hiltzik: Well, there are a few sources, economic sources who are on my All star list. You know and and your folks ’cause I quote you with some frequency. There are other organizations that have shown through the test of time to have integrity and how they interpret data.
Then there were some where you just want to factor in what you know about their ideology, their, their, their funders their history and that just, you know, those simple inquiries. We’ll tell you a lot about how you wanna assess information that, that comes at you from all these sources.
Barry Ritholtz: You mentioned reporters are pressed for time, so are investors. You’re kind of hinting at, hey, this requires some time, effort, and work in order to figure out what is a credible source of reliable news and what is a little more, let’s just call it unreliable.
Michael Hiltzik: I remember reading Andy Tobias’s book probably one of its earliest incarnations where he said, “What, what do you do if a broker comes to you, you know, cold call or someone pitches an investment for you?” and what his advice was to say don’t invest in that investment, but see how it does. And if it’s done well, then maybe you wanna listen to this guypay a little bit more closely the next time.
And I think that that’s sort of a good idea more generally.
You know, some reports will be refuted or debunked fairly quickly, and some of these sources will compile a record of inaccuracy or dishonesty and some will compile a record of reliability; it takes time, it takes attention and Investors, like readers and reporters need to do their homework, and we just see that be being more and more difficult or just happening a lot less than it, than it used to.
Barry Ritholtz: I’ve been noticing what, at least to me, it seems like more than ever anecdotes and one-off stories and narrative tells, they just seem to be increasingly popular. How do you navigate through what is a compelling story? My math friends always say. “N=1.” All right. So you have not a data series, but that’s one anecdote. How do you manage that?
Michael Hiltzik: That’s right. And sometimes the N one is oneself. Basically I’ve always been sort of averse to man-on-the-street stories because a man or a woman on the street that is an N = 1, and you can’t really always tell what questions have been asked, what this person knows.
We’ve certainly seen, you know, certainly during the inflation of the last few years, we saw a lot of interviews with families in which they talked about how much they’re spending on this or that commodity or produce and, and got it totally wrong. I think that people can sort of.
Compare what they’re reading to their own experience and if it’s really at odds that that’s important to keep in mind. I think. I mean, I’ve gone, you know, I’ve been assigned to do Man on the street, stories. But you know, when they work, it’s because you, you have a narrow subject and you are dealing with people who are in a position to know the answers to the questions you are talking about, but sort of throwing in.
You know, somebody who’s standing online or, you know, I used to say, I was always suspicious of stories that quoted the driver who brought the, the reporter from the airport to the first class hotel in town. And we used to see that when I was in Africa. You know, I could tell the chauffeur was he was labeled to, to hide.
So you wanna make sure that if there’s, if there are interviews with individuals or families or couples, that there’s more than one and they seem to actually know what they’re talking about and, and they’re talking about their own experiences and that they sound plausible.
These are wrong. You know, the sort of tests that we have to conduct in our in our daily lives.
Barry Ritholtz: What about social media? How do we avoid the worst aspects of algorithmic hype that seems to work its way into mainstream media as well?
Michael Hiltzik: Certainly mainstream media stories that rely on social media sourcing, very suspect.
Look, I was always a fan of Twitter. I still am a fan. I think Twitter for all its faults still has a critical mass that alternatives like Blue Sky just haven’t quite reached. You know with X. As we call it, I think you can sort of wean out the, the wild nonsense. I always liked X because I could curate my timeline rely on sources on that platform that, that I had come to know. (It’s more and more difficult now and it’s harder to get rid of some of the straws. But
You know, there are websites that I go back to over and over again.
They’re not all economic websites. Sometimes they’re writers who think the way I do. So I, you know, I get reinforcement where, where I need it. And then there are some that I just ignore. I’m, you know, I have more time to myself because I’m not paying any attention to a lot of this stuff.
Barry Ritholtz: I found on Twitter. Curating your own lists on different topics. For me, it’s the economy, it’s data and analytics. It’s behavioral finance. There are experts out there talking about subjects that I like, and at least there’s some filtering process by creating a list. It’s not gonna stop spam and other junk stuff from coming through.
So we’re talking about social media. I guess if we’re talking about news and problems, we have to discuss AI, not just the hallucination, but the risk that that news story you’re reading is literally fake news, just something created by AI cheaply.
How do we navigate a world where AI is cranking out a lot of artificial intelligence is cranking out a lot of news that isn’t exactly following the rules of journalism?
Michael Hiltzik: I should tell you that I am an AI skeptic. Some large percentage of AI claims by developers and by clients is marketing in the same way that, you know, dot com used to be the big marketing troop 25 years ago. So a lot of what is pitched as AI is not really AI, and none of it is intelligence.
I’m of two minds about whether people are gonna become better at detecting AI creation, or, or worse, I think at the moment. There are giveaways that anyone can see. Sometimes in the language that’s used, sometimes in the images that are created, we see this over and over again clearly AI, hallucinations.
Right now there’s an AI craze in industry and including in the news industry, and I think that’s going to be a problem.
I think it’s going to go bad. And, I think relying on AI is going to be something that when we look at it in the rear view mirror, we’re gonna say, what, what were we thinking? Why did we spend any money on this?
Barry Ritholtz: So, to wrap up, apply common sense to your consumption of news.
Figure out who’s trustworthy, what sources are accurate. Put the time and effort in to identifying who’s worthy of your time and trust. Be wary of social media. Be wary of ai, and don’t be afraid to follow people, who have bylines that you trust rather than just blindly paying attention to any particular media source.
It’s worth understanding what you’re consuming and why, and staying on the right side of accuracy. If I’m Barry Ritholtz, you are listening to Bloomberg’s at the Money.