Corey Rosenbloom saw the perfect bearish setup yesterday. Then he watched the market completely ignore it.
"The condition of the trade setup exists to go short, which is play bearishly... but the market didn't really, I mean, it kind of did, it kind of went oof, oof." That hesitation you hear? That's the sound of a seasoned trader recognizing when the market is lying to him.
The Fed announcement had everyone scrambling to interpret rate signals. But Corey was reading something far more valuable: the market's internal conflict between what should happen and what institutions were actually doing with their money.
Here's what separated his approach from the reactive crowd. Despite perfect bearish conditions staring him in the face, Corey made a disciplined choice: "I didn't take a single trade on the short side, didn't do it, but the trades were off the long side."
This isn't contrarian trading for the sake of being different. It's methodical psychology reading: "You do have to learn it, but once you learn it, you can then start to apply things to it, such as short above target, the mid long beneath target, the mid, and that is a standalone methodology."
That "oof, oof" moment Corey described—when the market stutters instead of following through—is exactly what Brandon Chapman has spent nearly two decades learning to decode in institutional order flow. The hesitation, the false starts, the internal conflict between surface setups and actual capital commitment.
Chapman's Ghost Prints Weekly captures these psychological disconnects before they become obvious to everyone else. When serious money is positioning against the obvious setup, it leaves traces in the order flow that reveal where institutions are actually committing capital—not where textbook analysis suggests they should.
The difference between reading institutional psychology and following surface patterns determines whether you catch the real move or get trapped in the chop. Chapman's weekly signals help you follow the money trails that matter, filtering out the false signals that fool reactive traders every time.
Get Brandon's weekly institutional positioning signal here.
Trade well,
Don Kaufman
Chief Market Strategist, TheoTrade
P.S. The market's psychological conflict this week left clear capital commitment patterns in the order flow. Chapman's analysis shows exactly where the serious money positioned itself during the confusion. See this week's institutional positioning signal.
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