@GeniusOfficial made me think about a trading experience that's surprisingly common.

A position can look perfect right up until you start building it. The thesis is the same, the conviction is the same, and the target is the same. Yet somehow the trade gets harder the moment execution begins.

Buying $500 and buying $500,000 are technically the same decision, but the market rarely treats them that way.

That's what made Ghost Orders inside @GeniusOfficial Terminal interesting to me. Not because execution can be distributed across up to 500 wallets, but because building something that complex only makes sense if a simpler approach eventually stops working.

The larger the order gets, the harder it becomes to separate execution from information. The position is still being built, yet the market can already start learning from the process.

Which raises a practical question in my mind :

If getting into a position starts revealing the position itself, when does execution stop being execution and start becoming part of the trade?

A trader wants exposure. The market receives a preview. Those two things are not always aligned.

That's why Ghost Orders stayed in my head longer than I expected—not because of what they do, but because of what they assume.

Sometimes the hardest part of a trade isn't finding it. It's reaching it before too much of it arrives ahead of you.

And Ghost Orders only make sense if that has become a meaningful problem.

$GENIUS #GeniusTerminal #genius

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