Comanche Feats of Horsemanship, George Catlin, 1834
Behavioral intelligence · Prediction markets

The few who know
always leave a trail.

Puha Analytics traces and fingerprints informed activity across prediction markets — dynamically, as it moves, before the rest of the field catches the scent.

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A market is a herd. The sharp ones ride differently — and the difference can be seen.

Puha · the power to perceive what moves beneath the surface

Puha is a Comanche word for medicine — the unseen power that lets a rider read the field before the field knows it is being read.

We built Puha Analytics on the same instinct: the few who truly know always move first, and always leave a trail for those trained to follow it.

War on the Plains: Comanche vs Osage, George Catlin, 1834

Long before any market, the field belonged to those who could read it at speed.

George Catlin · War on the Plains · 1834 · Smithsonian American Art Museum

The approach

From raw motion to decisive signal.

01

Observe

Continuous, real-time view of activity across the markets that matter.

02

Infer

Dynamic behavioral fingerprinting stacks the signals every actor leaves behind — by pattern, not by name. It evolves; it does not degrade.

03

Propose

Validated, tier-eligible proposals surfaced the moment they emerge.

The move looks sudden to everyone else. To us, it was visible hours earlier — in the behavior, before the price.

24/7continuous market observation
sub‑minutefrom behavior to surfaced signal
multi‑signalfingerprints, never a single tell
What the field sees
.42 .46 .50
What Puha sees — and when
.42 .46 .50 early accumulation corroborating signal conviction threshold PROPOSAL ISSUED move ↑

Illustrative. Timing and detail vary by market — the pattern does not: behavior leads the price.

Comanche War Party, Mounted on Wild Horses — George Catlin, 1834

The first to move is the one who saw it first.

George Catlin · Comanche War Party, Mounted on Wild Horses · 1834 · Smithsonian American Art Museum

CLUSTER IDENTIFIED behavioral fingerprint · live

Dynamic tracing & fingerprinting

Static detection degrades almost instantly.

A fixed rule is obsolete the moment an actor adapts to it. Our proprietary fingerprinting methodology stacks the numerous signals every market actor must leave behind — woven together, not read in isolation. Because it is dynamic, it is constantly evolving. It never degrades.

  • Static detection — a single rule, a single tell. Adapts once and it's blind.
  • Dynamic fingerprinting — many signals stacked, continuously re-learned. The more they move, the clearer they become.

Lineage

Reading the field has always been the discipline.

The Comanche were studied for the same reason markets are: the few who truly know move first, and the trail they leave is the lesson.

Comanche Giving Arrows to the Medicine Rock
Giving Arrows to the Medicine Rock · 1834
Comanche Meeting the Dragoons
Meeting the Dragoons · 1834
Comanche Indians Chasing Buffalo
Chasing Buffalo · 1846
Comanche Moving Camp
Moving Camp · 1834
Comanche Lodge of Buffalo Skins
Lodge of Buffalo Skins · 1834
Comanche Village, Women Dressing Robes
The Village · 1834

George Catlin, painted on the southern Plains, 1834–1848. Smithsonian American Art Museum · public domain.

A grey thoroughbred at full stride

Speed is visible. Conviction is what you learn to read.

Fig. II — the grey, in motion

The offerings

Three thoroughbreds. Three depths of edge.

Named for the ones who ran when it counted. Choose the stable that fits how you trade.

His-oo-sán-chees, Little Spaniard, a Warrior — George Catlin, 1834
His-oo-sán-cheesLittle Spaniard · Comanche warrior · 1834

Every market move begins with a small number of people who understand something the rest do not.

— and the trail they leave is, for those trained to follow it, almost always legible.

Two Comanche Girls — George Catlin, 1834
Two Comanche GirlsGeorge Catlin · 1834

Built for the few who watch closely.

Puha Analytics works with a limited set of partners. Pricing is by conversation.

Contact for pricing