What typically drives the price of a financial asset? Two broad forces are usually considered.
Fundamental factors reflect new information: macro developments, regulatory changes, disclosures, or events that shift market expectations.
Technical factors rely on price behavior itself. They use historical patterns and statistical models built on the assumption that markets exhibit recurring structures.
Cryptocurrencies being part of the broader financial market are supposed to obey these rules as well. Yet a recent research by Outset Media Index (OMI) analysts highlights an important nuance: by the time news is published, it is already factored in price. In fact, the claim is anecdotal: buy the rumor, sell the news, they say. And the OMI report supports it with large-scale data.
Why Is Bitcoin Rising Today?
Consider a recent example. On March 23, Bitcoin rose by roughly 5% within a single day. The dominant narrative pointed to easing geopolitical tensions after Donald Trump referenced “productive conversations” with Iran and a temporary pause in planned U.S. strikes.
As a result, the improved macro sentiment has increased risk appetite, and Bitcoin benefited. However, the move did not sustain. The following day, Bitcoin retraced by around 1%.
This raises a more precise question: Did the news move the price, or did the price move ahead of the news?
OMI Analysis Validates a Widely Assumed but Rarely Tested Idea
To answer this, OMI analysts examined whether news can systematically predict Bitcoin price movements.
The dataset included more than 64,000 news pieces published over a 12-year period and matched them with daily Bitcoin price data. The relationship was tested using multiple methods, including causality analysis, event studies, sentiment scoring, and topic classification.
The result is unambiguous:
News does not predict Bitcoin’s price.Across multiple time horizons, headline activity failed to provide any meaningful forecasting power.
Source: omindex.substack
If anything, price precedes news.Bitcoin tends to move before coverage spikes. Media output increases after significant price changes, not before.
Headline sentiment carries no usable signal.Whether coverage is positive or negative explains only a negligible share of future returns, and the relationship is unstable.
Most coverage is structurally irrelevant to price.On peak news days, the majority of headlines consist of general industry updates with no direct connection to market moves.
Even in cases where news appears highly significant—regulatory decisions, major collapses, institutional developments—the price response is inconsistent. The same type of event can be followed by a rally, a drop, or no meaningful movement at all.
The Timing Problem: Information Travels Faster Than Media
The key insight is not that information does not matter. It clearly does. The issue is timing.
By the time a headline appears on a major outlet, the underlying information has already propagated through faster channels:
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order flow and liquidity shifts
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on-chain data
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private networks and institutional positioning
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real-time sentiment on social platforms
Media coverage is part of the information ecosystem, but it sits at the end of the chain. It reflects what has already happened.
This explains why large news events often coincide with reversals or consolidation. The market moves during the uncertainty phase. The headline arrives at the point of confirmation.
What OMI Brings to the Analysis
Outset Media Index was developed to address a broader problem: the lack of structured understanding of how media actually performs within the information flow.
Instead of treating all coverage as equally impactful, OMI analyses media outlets across more than 37 metrics, including:
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audience reach and engagement
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citation and syndication patterns
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editorial dynamics
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visibility in LLM-driven environments
This multidimensional approach allows OMI to distinguish between volume of coverage and actual influence—a distinction that is central to interpreting the findings above.
A key extension of the platform, Outset Data Pulse, adds context by tracking how media signals evolve over time and how they relate to broader market dynamics.
In this framework, the role of media becomes clearer: it is not a primary driver of price at the daily level, but a structured reflection of market activity and narrative formation.
Conclusion
So, why is Bitcoin rising today? The honest answer is that no single headline can explain it with predictive precision. The price move is the result of information that has already been processed by the market before it becomes visible in mainstream coverage.
OMI data does not suggest that news has no role. It shows that news, at the level most market participants consume it, arrives too late to offer an edge. By the time the narrative is published, the signal has already played out.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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