20,356 call contracts piled into PLUG.
Three days later, the stock ripped 56%.
Roughly 30,000 contracts loaded into Venture Global. It jumped 14%. Nike saw heavy put activity before earnings—the stock dropped and hit the exact strike price.
None of these moves showed up on charts beforehand. No MACD crossover. No RSI divergence. No breakout pattern. Brandon Chapman—the founder of Ghost Prints and a Chartered Market Technician for nearly two decades—put it bluntly yesterday:
"Most traders don't fail because they're wrong. They fail because they're baited."
He walked through a concept he calls "squeeze traps"—setups that look explosive on the surface but have already exhausted their pressure. The price moves just enough to trigger entries, then reverses hard. Late buyers become exit liquidity for the institutions who positioned quietly days earlier.
Brandon's framework boils down to one distinction: "Price is the effect. Pressure is the cause. Until you can see pressure forming, you're reacting to moves that have already happened."
The PLUG trade is a perfect example. Those 20,356 call contracts were the pressure—the footprint—that showed up before the 56% move. One Ghost Prints member who acted on that signal turned 50-cent options into $10, banking $47K on a single play.
That's not luck. That's reading the tape the way it was meant to be read—tracking where heavy capital commits before price confirms anything.
Every week, Brandon distills his analysis into one signal. Not a flood of alerts. Not a daily noise machine. One high-conviction setup where the pressure footprint is clear, the risk is defined, and the asymmetry favors the prepared.
See how Ghost Prints Weekly works—and get this week's signal.
Trade well,
Don Kaufman
Chief Market Strategist, TheoTRADE
P.S. Brandon's next signal identifies the single best pressure footprint he's tracking this week. The kind of setup that preceded a 56% move in PLUG and a 14% move in Venture Global. Get access before Friday's signal drops.
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