Hey traders,
I don’t care how good you are at reading charts… if you’re ignoring what the big-money traders are doing, you’re playing with one hand tied behind your back.
Here’s why:
Big institutional players — hedge funds, pension funds, even corporate insiders — can drop millions into a single trade without blinking. When they go heavy on call options, they’re making a directional bet that a stock’s going higher… and they’re doing it with leverage.
That’s information you and I can use.
The Tell: Unusual Call Buying
When I say “unusual,” I mean this isn’t the regular day-to-day flow you see in a liquid stock. It’s outsized. It’s fast. It sticks out like a sore thumb.
Here’s what I look for:
You can see daily call volume on just about any decent trading platform — even free sites like Yahoo Finance or Barchart list options activity. Although more advanced scanners (like the ones I use) make it easier to spot the big, out-of-the-ordinary trades in real time.
- Size Relative to Normal Volume
If a stock averages 2,000 call contracts a day and suddenly 20,000 trade hands before lunch — that’s worth a closer look. - Concentration in a Specific Strike & Expiration
When the bulk of those contracts are in one strike price and expiration, it usually means somebody’s got a strong opinion about timing and direction. - Near-the-Money or Slightly Out-of-the-Money
Deep out-of-the-money contracts can be lottery tickets — I’m more interested when the activity clusters where a real move could put them solidly in the money. - Sector & Market Context
Unusual call buying in a dead sector might be a fluke. In a hot sector — like semiconductors right now — it could be the start of a bigger push.
Why This Works
The people putting on these trades aren’t just guessing. They might have better research. They might be hedging a stock position they already own. Or they might know something you and I won’t hear about until it hits the news.
Either way, following this trail can lead you to opportunities before the rest of the market wakes up.
That’s why I keep a close eye on this data — and why, when I see it line up with my own trend filters, it becomes a high-probability setup.
It’s not magic or insider trading.
It’s just watching the whales move… and getting in the water ahead of the splash.
And here’s the thing — the same kind of big-player activity I’m talking about can be an early warning sign when the tide’s turning in a sector.
Right now, all the signals I track — from trend filters to sector strength — are flashing red on tech.
In this special presentation, I walk you through exactly what’s on my radar, and how I’m planning to trade it if this breakdown really takes hold.
Trade well,
Jack Carter






