EZIM Demand–Supply Projections (M1440)

EZIM Demand–Supply Projections (M1440)

Re-Entry, Confirmation, Corridor Width, Compression & Energy — with MACD (15,25,8) governance and ATR-aware execution.

1) Model Context

EZIM (EMA Zones Interactions Model) extends our color-coded EMA zones by focusing on how price interacts with structure. Here, we pair the EZIM lens with classical demand and supply lines on the M1440 (Daily) timeframe, tracked with a Yellow Price Line (YPL).

  • Demand line: downward sloping (buyers supporting at progressively lower levels).
  • Supply line: upward sloping (sellers offering at progressively higher levels).
  • YPL: current price guide for structural interaction.

When price trades below both lines, we define two vertical projections: Re-Entry (to Demand) and Confirmation (to Supply). Their difference is the Uncertainty Corridor (Gap), which we normalize by ATR to quantify compression and stored energy.

2) Notation & Setup (M1440)

  • Daily index: t = 0,1,2,... with current bar t0.
  • Close price: Pt.
  • Demand (downward): Dt = αD + βD·t, with βD < 0.
  • Supply (upward): St = αS + βS·t, with βS > 0.
  • Assume the current state: Pt0 < Dt0 and Pt0 < St0.

Fit each line from your chosen swing anchors (2+ pivots, OLS/regression).

3) Vertical Projections at the Current Bar

Re-Entry (to Demand):

Rt0 = Dt0 = αD + βD·t0

Confirmation (to Supply):

Ct0 = St0 = αS + βS·t0

Uncertainty Corridor (Gap):

Wt0 = Ct0 − Rt0 = St0 − Dt0

Interpretation:
• Crossing Re-Entry means buyers have re-admitted price into the battlefield.
• Crossing Confirmation with buffer validates a bullish regime shift (sellers overwhelmed).

4) Apex, Compression & Energy

Intersection (Apex) time of demand and supply lines:

t* = (αD − αS) / (βS − βD)
Days-to-Apex: Δ* = t* − t0

ATR-normalized compression (use Daily ATR period n, e.g., 50):

CRt = Wt / ATRt

Energy score (inverse compression):

Et = 1 / (CRt + ε),  with ε ≈ 1e−6

Smaller CR and shrinking Δ* imply stronger squeeze and higher stored energy for a decisive move.

5) Momentum Governor (Daily MACD 15,25,8)

  • MACD line: Mt = EMA15(P)t − EMA25(P)t
  • Signal: Sgt = EMA8(M)t
  • Histogram: Ht = Mt − Sgt

Bias rules: Ht0 > 0 and rising → bullish impulse strengthening. Ht0 < 0 and falling → bearish impulse strengthening.

6) EZIM State Logic (below both lines)

  1. Stage A — Submerged (Bear Control): Close < Dt. Avoid longs unless strong reversal confluence (divergence + ultra-tight CR).
  2. Stage B — Re-Entry (Neutral/Compression): Close ≥ Dt + k1·ATRt, with k1 ∈ [0.10, 0.30].
  3. Stage C — Confirmation (Bullish Regime Shift): Close ≥ St + k2·ATRt, with k2 ∈ [0.20, 0.50].

Adaptive buffers: tighten k1, k2 when CR is very small (high compression), and widen when CR is large (choppy battlefield).

7) Probabilistic Breakout Score (Logistic)

Standardized inputs (clip to stable ranges):

  • z1 = clip( (Close − Dt) / ATRt, −3, 3 )  — distance above Demand (ATR-scaled)
  • z2 = clip( (Close − St) / ATRt, −3, 3 )  — distance vs Supply
  • z3 = clip( Ht / std(H), −3, 3 )  — MACD hist standardized
  • z4 = clip( 1 / (CRt + ε), 0, 10 )  — energy

Score:

Πt = sigmoid( w0 + w1·z1 + w2·z2 + w3·z3 + w4·z4 )

Starter weights: w0=−0.5, w1=0.8, w2=1.0, w3=0.6, w4=0.4 (calibrate on your book).

Reading: Π ≥ 0.70 = high-quality bullish resolution; 0.55 ≤ Π < 0.70 = constructive; otherwise stand down.

8) Execution: Entries, DS/BE & Profit Banking

  • Entry: Stage C close + retest of broken Supply as support; or scale 50/50 (close + retest).
  • Stops: System DS (e.g., 12× or 16× ATR-50). Optional structural stop: 1.0–1.5× ATR below reclaimed line.
  • Break-Even: If DS=16× ATR, BE ≈ 6.25% of DS. Corridor-aware BE: max(0.5·Wt, 1.0·ATRt) after a clean retest hold.
  • Profit Banking: Use GATS structural wells (x3/x6/x9) for staged profit while a core rides under DAATS.

9) Recommended Defaults

ParameterDefaultNotes
ATR Period50Aligns with your current baselines.
MACD15, 25, 8Daily governor.
k1 (Re-Entry buffer)0.20 × ATRAdaptive 0.10–0.30 via CR.
k2 (Confirmation buffer)0.30 × ATRAdaptive 0.20–0.50 via CR.
Weights (w0..4)−0.5, 0.8, 1.0, 0.6, 0.4Calibrate empirically.
DS (system)12×–16× ATR-50DAATS auto-adapts expansion/compression.
BE (fractional)≈ 6.25% of DSIf DS = 16× ATR.

10) Diagram (Inline SVG): Vertical Projections & Corridor

Supply St Demand Dt t₀ Yellow Price (Pt₀) R = Dt₀ (Re-Entry) C = St₀ (Confirmation) Gap W = C − R Yellow Price Demand (down) Supply (up) At t₀, vertical projections define R (Re-Entry) and C (Confirmation). Their difference W is the corridor.

11) Coding Hooks (GATS-Ready)

// Inputs: OHLC daily, current index t0
// Fit lines: D_t = αD + βD*t (βD<0); S_t = αS + βS*t (βS>0)

// Projections:
R = D[t0];
C = S[t0];
W = C - R;

ATR = ATR50[t0];
CR = W / ATR;
Energy = 1.0 / (CR + 1e-6);

// MACD (15,25,8): M, Sg, H; also deltaH if needed

// Stage flags:
stageA = (Close < D[t0]);
stageB = (Close >= D[t0] + k1*ATR) && (Close < S[t0] + k2*ATR);
stageC = (Close >= S[t0] + k2*ATR);

// Probability score Π:
z1 = clip((Close - D[t0]) / ATR, -3, 3);
z2 = clip((Close - S[t0]) / ATR, -3, 3);
z3 = clip(H / rollingStd(H, L), -3, 3);
z4 = clip(1.0 / (CR + 1e-6), 0, 10);

Pi = sigmoid(w0 + w1*z1 + w2*z2 + w3*z3 + w4*z4);

// Actions:
if (stageC && Pi >= 0.70) {
  // enter long on close or retest of C
  // DS: 12x–16x ATR50 (system); optional structural stop ~1.0–1.5x ATR below reclaimed line
  // BE: 6.25% of DS (if DS=16x ATR) or max(0.5*W, 1.0*ATR) post clean retest
} else if (stageB && Pi >= 0.55 && deltaH > 0) {
  // watchlist or partial probe with tight structure
} else {
  // no long
}

About the Author

Dr. Glen Brown is President & CEO of Global Accountancy Institute, Inc. and Global Financial Engineering, Inc., the architect of GATS, EZIM, and the Nine-Laws Volatility Framework.

General Disclaimer

This material is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any instrument. Trading involves substantial risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. You are solely responsible for your decisions.



Leave a Reply