Oh, no. It's about the options markets. Nothing to do with the company at all, really.
Max Pain | Maximum-Pain.com
Here's the theory. Options market makers are *imbalanced*. They sell more options than they buy. So they're net options sellers. This means that when options expire "in the money", the options market makers typically lose money. You can add up all the outstanding options and figure out, *if the market makers only sold options and didn't buy any*, what price they'd be happiest with at expiration.
Now, this is going to be wrong, because it doesn't tell you how many people other than market makers are selling options -- for instance, anyone who sells covered calls or cash-secured equity puts. (Also more complicated spreads.) But it gives a rough approximation. And *particularly* when there are a whole lot of options outstanding and they amount to a whole lot of money and the expiration date is coming up really soon, the market makers can have an incentive to keep the stock price near a particular price to make more options expire.
(This incentive is obviously strongest on Fridays, when options expire at market close, and weakest on Mondays.)