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The market forgot how to price risk



So we stepped in - 58 trades later, it’s still happening
 
   
     
I want you to picture something strange for a moment.  

Imagine walking into a grocery store and seeing a crisp $100 bill lying in the produce section.

 
 
 

You pick it up and look around - no one else seems to notice. 

You come back next week and see another… Then another.  

After the third time, you stop wondering if it's real and start asking a different question… Why is nobody else seeing this?  

That's exactly what's happening with these $1 options trades.  

Take Nvidia last February. 

The stock was doing its usual dance - up a few percent, down a few percent, like it always does. 

Meanwhile, buried in the options chain was something that should have been impossible:  

A contract priced at $1.20 that would later pay out 108%. 
 

No hype… No special catalyst… Just the market temporarily forgetting how to price risk.  

What's wild isn't that it happened once - it's that we've now seen this same scenario play out 58 different times across multiple stocks.  

Google at $0.46 per contract turning into 117%.  
Apple at $1.11, delivering 100%.  
 
 
 

While there were some smaller gains and some that did not work out… 

Each time, the pattern holds, what happens is…  

The market briefly misjudges the probability, sometimes by 80% or more, and we step in before it corrects itself.  

There's a name for this in poker - it's called finding "the fish at the table." 

Except here, the fish is the market itself.  

I'll be honest - when I first saw this, I assumed it wouldn't last. 

Surely, hedge funds with their supercomputers would spot and eliminate these inefficiencies. 

But after 18 months and nearly 60 trades, the opportunities haven't dried up - they've gotten more frequent.  

Turns out Wall Street's obsession with complex strategies is exactly what lets these simple, obvious opportunities slip through. 

While they're busy overengineering solutions, we were getting daily shots at picking up $100 bills from the floor.  

The key isn't some brilliant insight - it's noticing what everyone else is ignoring. 

Looking where others don't and making the same straightforward trade that most "smart" money considers beneath them.  

While I cannot promise future returns or against losses… 

I've put together a simple walkthrough showing exactly how I scan for these setups - not the complex algorithms, but the simple visual cues I've learned to spot, including a list of the next few setups I’m watching…   

If you’re interested… Tap this link right here.

We're in this together,

Graham Lindman


The profits and performance shown are not typical, we make no future earnings claims, and you may lose money. From 10/05/23-06/25/25 the average return per trade winners and losers was 32% with an average winner of 93% and a 66% win rate over a four day hold time.
   
 

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