As you may have noticed from the article, the point of yield curves inverting is that it is a pretty reliable recession-coming indicator: "The curve inversion to this point is flagging a 55-to-60 percent chance of a U.S. recession over the next 12 months"
Also, if your timeframe is long-term, information in print is relevant, since a stock frequently trades in a region for months or years. In fact, there is a whole school of investing, value investing, that looks for companies the market is undervaluing. Generally they do this by looking at information in print but seeing it with more wisdom than the short-termers. (Problem is, wisdom is difficult to get.) But for short-term trading, I think Bloomberg would invite you to subscribe to the terminal. "Before it's here it's on the terminal" I think they say.
Also, if your timeframe is long-term, information in print is relevant, since a stock frequently trades in a region for months or years. In fact, there is a whole school of investing, value investing, that looks for companies the market is undervaluing. Generally they do this by looking at information in print but seeing it with more wisdom than the short-termers. (Problem is, wisdom is difficult to get.) But for short-term trading, I think Bloomberg would invite you to subscribe to the terminal. "Before it's here it's on the terminal" I think they say.