It wasn't the tweet that caused the sell off, it was the poor Q1 numbers.
Well sort-of. The thing is wall street speculation is now highly automated. If a stock starts to slip before the numbers are supposed to be released, all the algorithms start to throw off warning bells and cause a sell-off run much more efficiently than humans reading twitter ever could.
If stock slips during an earnings announcement, it is expected, and bots don't emulate panic... if it happens BEFORE earnings announcements, bots latch on to the pattern in what is essentially insider trading, but with plausible deniability.
I would imagine it's more fun to just spend the next month watching week to week as nature intended
I don't think nature intended us to be sitting on our asses to watch stories happen on animated flat canvases.
Nature rewards us grandly for it. If "nature" didn't intend us to seek food and entertainment, our bodies wouldn't fill our junkie brains with dopamine when we do it.
Today is a good day for information-gathering. Read someone else's mail file.