Nikita Bier, X's head of product, announcedthata feature calledSmart Cashtagsis expected to roll out within a couple of weeks. It will display live stock and cryptocurrency prices directly in the timeline — right there between the memes and the arguments about whether a hot dog is a sandwich.
The idea is straightforward enough. Users already post about tickers, argue about meme stocks and live-react to earnings calls. X wants to close the gap between talking about the market and doing something about it, probably by linking out to third-party trading platforms rather than hosting trades directly. At least for now.
Whether that distinction lasts is another question entirely.
Musk has talked about turning X into a WeChat-style super-app since before he'd finished buying the company. Payments, banking, shopping, trading — all in one place, all on one screen. For a long time this sounded like the kind of thing a billionaire says at a conference and then quietly forgets about. It is starting to look less like that.
X Money, the payments arm, is apparently in closed beta. Musk claimed recently that a public beta could launch within one to two months. The pitch is peer-to-peer transfers, bill payments, and eventually something approaching a current account — or at least an alternative to one — all running through X. IfSmart Cashtagsarrive on schedule, they would be the first visible piece of this broader financial infrastructure that ordinary users actually encounter in their feed.
Mind you, Musk has missed his own deadlines before. Repeatedly. The man promised full self-driving Teslas by 2020 and a Mars colony by 2024, so timelines from his companies deserve a certain amount of scepticism. But X Money exists. It has beta testers. And Bier, who built the gas-station-viral app tbh before joining X, is not the sort of hire you make if you're bluffing about product launches.
Put live stock prices in a social media timeline and you have created a machine for emotional trading. That is not an exaggeration. It is a description of the product.
Right now, if you see a ticker trending on X and want to act on it, you have to open a separate app — Robinhood, eToro, your broker's platform, whatever. That pause, the friction of switching apps and logging in and finding the stock, is a small but real barrier. It gives you roughly 45 seconds to reconsider whether buying GameStop at 3am because someone posted a rocket emoji is genuinely a sound financial decision. Smart Cashtags removes that pause.
Retail investors already move markets. The GameStop saga in 2021 proved that. The meme-stock surges of 2024 proved it again. Adding frictionless access to real-time trading data inside the same feed where those manias are born and amplified is — well, it is bold, certainly. Whether it is wise depends on who you ask. If you ask Musk, the answer is that you are democratising finance. If you ask a behavioural economist, the answer involves phrases like 'impulse execution' and 'regret aversion' and a long sigh.
Regulators will have views. Financial technology is already heavily regulated in the US, and the SEC has been paying close attention to social media's influence on markets since 2021. A platform with 500 million monthly users showing live prices and potentially linking to trades is not something the commission is going to wave through without questions. Whether X has the compliance infrastructure to satisfy those questions is unknown. The company laid off roughly 80% of its workforce in 2023 and has not exactly been hiring regulators since.
Source: International Business Times UK