The market gets prices wrong.
We show you where.
Overpriced
$634 Call
Market Price: $0.25
Fair Price: $0.20
Fair Price
Market Price
Price is $0.05 too high
Underpriced
$634 Call
Market Price: $0.15
Fair Price: $0.20
Fair Price
Market Price
Price is $0.05 too low
Every option has a fair value.
Sometimes the market is off.
That's a mispricing.
What is a mispricing?
Normal
$634 Call
Market Price: $0.20
Fair Price: $0.20
Fair Price
Market Price
No opportunity here
Mispriced
$634 Call
Market Price: $0.25
Fair Price: $0.20
Fair Price
Market Price
Price is wrong by $0.05
This is a mispricingThe market is paying more than it should
When the market price doesn't match the fair price, that's a mispricing.
Imagine you walk into a store and see a gallon of milk for $1.
You know it should be $5.
That's a mispricing.
The price is wrong — and that creates an opportunity.
The same thing happens in the market
Options have prices too.
We calculate what they should be worth.
Then we compare:
- Market price
- Fair price
When they don't match, that's a mispricing.
Real example
$634 Call
Trading at $0.25
Should be $0.20
→ $0.05 overpriced
The market was paying more than it should.
Why this matters
Most traders:
- Guess direction
- Follow hype
- Chase moves
Mispricing is different.
You're not guessing.
You're spotting when the price is wrong.
How it works
We scan the market in real time.
When something is mispriced, we show you:
- What it is
- What it should be
- How far off it is
No noise. Only real opportunities.
Why we don't show signals all the time
Most of the time, nothing is mispriced.
That's why we don't show constant signals.
When something appears, it matters.
You're not chasing trades.
You're waiting for mistakes.
And when they happen — you're ready.
Frequently asked questions
How much money do I need to start?
You don't need a lot. Each opportunity is shown on a 1-contract basis so you can scale up or down. Some people start small to learn. Others go bigger. It's up to you.
Do I need a special brokerage account?
No. You can use platforms like Robinhood, E*TRADE, TD Ameritrade, or Interactive Brokers. As long as you can trade options, you can use this.
Is this automatic or do I place the trades myself?
You place the trades yourself. We show you where the mispricing is. You decide if and how you want to act.
Is this risky?
All options trading involves risk. Nothing is guaranteed. What we do is help you avoid guessing by showing when prices are clearly off.
Does this only work when the market is going up?
No. Mispricing has nothing to do with direction. It works when the market is going up, going down, or moving sideways. We're not predicting direction. We're finding when the price is wrong.
Can this work in a market crash?
Yes. In fact, extreme moves can create more mispricings. When markets get emotional, prices can drift further from fair value. That's where opportunities can appear.
Why aren't there signals all the time?
Because the market is usually efficient. Real mispricings don't happen constantly. That's a good thing. When you see one, it matters.
What does "overpriced" mean?
It means the option is trading higher than it should be. If something is trading at $0.25 but should be $0.20, it's overpriced by $0.05. That gap is the opportunity.
Can beginners use this?
Yes. This is built to be simple. You don't need to understand complex math. You just need to understand when something is priced wrong.
How often should I check this?
Check during market hours. Mispricings can appear and disappear quickly. The more often you check, the better your chances of seeing them.