Forgive me if I’m misinterpreting your posts, but I am curious as to why you appear to look at the call walls above current stock price as a positive? Historically, big call walls above the current stock price are a large negative - not a positive. Whereas large put walls below the current stock price are positive for the stock price.
No offense taken. If you're right, I'm missing out of even more money! But, now I'm puzzled.
To me, a bunch of Puts below the stock price on the Open Interest chart tell me some shorting is going that tends to pull the SP down for that week.
Recently, I was showing the Volume Chart at times, but together with the Open Interest to determine if those options were being bought or sold. For yesterday (I believe it was), I used this method to determine they were buying Calls above the SP which seems like a bullish move that should also move the Max Pain in the same upward direction.
Maybe there's a 3rd scenario where the churn of both buying and selling Options within one day causes the Volume to spike without actually moving the Open Interest wall next day. Is that what you meant? Seems less common to me if so.
Just in case it's semantics... this is a call wall right?