Weekly Commitment of Traders breakdowns, plain-English guides to reading CFTC data, and case studies on what speculator extremes actually mean.
A raw net number tells you little on its own. A percentile tells you whether positioning is at a historical extreme. Here's how percentiles work and why they beat the net figure.
Read →The COT report drops every Friday at 3:30pm ET, but the positions are as of Tuesday. The full release schedule, the 3-day delay explained, and how to use it.
Read →Speculators cut euro exposure by 34.9k, the largest move on the board, while S&P 500 and Nasdaq shorts were quietly covered. Currencies sold, index shorts covered: the full weekly breakdown.
Read →Speculators were stacking gold longs into the highs as of Tuesday's CFTC snapshot, then Friday's hot jobs report erased gold's entire 2026 gain. A textbook crowded-trade unwind, read through the positioning data.
Read →The Commitment of Traders report is one of the most powerful free datasets in markets, and one of the most misread. Here's what net positioning actually tells you, and the one mistake almost everyone makes.
Read →"Specs are net short the S&P" sounds bearish, but is it actually an extreme, or just noise? A real walkthrough of reading net positioning, percentile, and weekly flow together to reach the right conclusion.
Read →Every week I pulled raw CFTC data, dumped it into a spreadsheet, and tried to figure out whether positioning was actually extreme. It worked, but it was painfully slow. So I built the tool I wished existed.
Read →Live CFTC data, percentile context, and multi-year history. Three instruments free, no signup.
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