Buying the dip sounds simple. The market drops, prices look cheaper, and it feels like an opportunity.
But in todayโs market โ driven by algorithmic trading, options positioning, and institutional flows โ not every dip is an opportunity.ย Sometimes, theyโre traps.
Thatโs why professional traders donโt just blindly โbuy the dip.โ They run a simple process that helps determine whether a dip is actually worth buying, or if youโre about to become exit liquidity for someone elseโs trade.
Hereโs the exact workflow.
The first step is understanding who is actually buying.
There are thousands of reasons insiders sell stock โ taxes, diversification, compensation, or liquidity needs. But there is only one reason they consistently buy: They believe the price will go higher.
Thatโs whyย insider buying andย politician trades are some of the most overlooked signals in the market. When executives or well-connected individuals start buying into weakness, it often signals confidence that the downside is limited and that future catalysts exist.
What you want to look for:
Cluster buying: multiple executives purchasing shares at the same time
Large individual buys: meaningful capital being deployed
Politician trades: especially in sectors tied to policy or funding
If no one with inside knowledge is stepping in during a dip, you have to ask yourself: Why should you?
This is where tools likeย Barchartโs Insider Trading Activity give you an edge, by allowing you to see where real money is positioning โ not just what retail sentiment is saying.
Most traders misunderstand whatโs actually happening during a dip. They assume that falling prices mean bearish sentiment.
But the options market often tells a completely different story. The key metric here is theย Put/Call Open Interest Ratio.
This shows how many puts versus calls are being held, essentially revealing how traders are positioned.
If the stock is dropping and the put/call open interest ratio is also dropping, it means traders are becoming bullish, with the higher amount of calls relative to puts suggesting theyโre expecting a bounce.
But sometimes thatโs not a confirmation. It could be a warning.
If traders are still stubbornly optimistic during a decline, thereโs a strong chance the move isnโt finished. This is how many traders get trapped: buying too early, before the real bottom forms.
Using theย options put/call open interest ratio indicator, you can track speculative positioning on the chart and avoid stepping in before the market has capitulated.
This is the detail most traders never look at, but itโs where the real edge lives.
Options positioning creates price levels that the market reacts to, and thatโs whereย gamma exposure can move stock prices โ almost invisibly.
Two levels matter most during a dip:
This refers to the strike with the largest concentration of put open interest. Think of it as a support level controlled by options positioning.
Because once that level fails, hedging flows push the market lower.
This is the level where market makersโ activity switches from stabilizing price (positive gamma) to amplifying moves (negative gamma).
Above theย gamma flip:
Below the gamma flip:
Before entering any trade, you need to understand the environment youโre trading in. Theย Barchart Options Dashboard gives you critical pieces of information that can make or break your setup:
Implied volatility directly impacts option pricing:
If volatility is elevated, premiums are expensive.
If itโs falling, premiums are shrinking.
Buying options at the wrong volatility level can hurt your trade, even if youโre right on direction.
This shows how much the market expects the stock to move over a given time period.
If a stock has an expected move of $8 this week and your stop is only $2 away, youโre not trading โ youโre gambling. Youโre likely to get stopped out by normal price movement, not because your idea was wrong.
Is the stock stabilizing, or is it still in a clear downtrend? Many traders try to catch falling knives without realizing the trend hasnโt actually shifted. A โdipโ in a downtrend is often just a continuation move.
When all of these align โ volatility, expected move, and trend โ you finally have a trade with context. Not just a guess.
Most traders approach dips emotionally. They see red and assume opportunity. But the market doesnโt reward impulse; it rewards positioning.
Before you buy your next dip, run this simple audit:
Because if youโre not using this information, youโre simply guessing.
Watch this clip to check out the workflow:
See the Options Dashboard in action
Learn more aboutย Insider Trading Activity
Discoverย Gamma Exposure on Barchart
On the date of publication, Barchart Insights did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originallyย published on Barchart.com