Guy Cohen and Alan Knuckman would trade the stock market like a precision-engineered options machine—Guy bringing the institutional radar, Alan bringing the floor-trader fire.
Guy Cohen
Cohen would start by scanning for “Big Money Footprints” using his proprietary OVI (Options Volatility Indicator), which detects unusual options activity that signals institutional positioning. He’d filter for stocks showing strong OVI signals, clean chart patterns, and bullish setups backed by data. His style is methodical, rules-based, and emotionally neutral—focused on repeatable edge and risk-defined entries.
Big money leaves footprints. Follow them.
Guy Cohen
Alan Knuckman
Alan Knuckman, on the other hand, would swoop in with a trader’s instinct for urgency and leverage. He’d look for short-term catalysts—earnings, news, technical breakouts—and pair them with low-cost, high-upside options trades. His philosophy is simple: capped risk, uncapped reward. He trades like a battlefield commander—fast, focused, and fearless—but always with a plan.
Traders have a plan. Investors hope.
Alan Knuckman
Volatility is opportunity.
Summary
Together, they’d fuse Cohen’s institutional tracking with Knuckman’s tactical aggression, deploying options trades with both strategic depth and explosive potential. It’s the perfect blend of radar and rocket fuel.
In a Tweet
Cohen tracks the institutions. Knuckman strikes with options. Together? Radar meets rocket fuel.