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Atlas.

The cartographer of market structure.

It watches the market and draws lines where it matters. That is the whole job. Doing it well took years.

This is the engine behind Sentinel and the ≈700-point Jurassic case study. See the evidence

First, the simple version

What is a level?

Price moves like water. In some places it stops, turns, or rushes through. Atlas finds those places before price gets there, and draws a line. That line is a level.

Simple to say. Brutally hard to do well.

Now the formal version

For the quants in the room.

Atlas is a proprietary quantitative market-level generation and lifecycle engine that transforms market data into deterministic price coordinates representing areas of elevated structural significance.

Rather than issuing standalone buy or sell signals, Atlas produces a continuously maintained map of quantitative reference levels that can be used to study how price approaches, reacts to, accepts, rejects, breaks, reclaims, or changes polarity around specific areas. Each level is generated from a fixed mathematical process and carries structured metadata. Given the same approved inputs and parameters, the engine produces the same output.

each level carries structured metadata

  • Origin
  • Age
  • Directional role
  • Interaction history
  • Current market state

behaviours studied around each level

  • Approach
  • Reaction
  • Acceptance
  • Rejection
  • Break
  • Reclaim
  • Polarity change

and what it does not do

Atlas does not issue standalone buy or sell signals. It does not predict every move, and no level guarantees a reaction. Its formulas, parameters, and methodology stay private: the engine is proven through the strategies, records, and market reactions built around its output, not by exposing how it works.

Atlas identifies where market behaviour may become meaningful. The strategy defines what conditions must occur before any action is taken.

How it finds them

Heavy math.
Heavier standards.

  1. 01

    It runs the math

    Quant predictive formulas work through how price behaved, where pressure builds, and how sessions breathe. The math proposes candidate levels. Lots of them.

  2. 02

    Then it filters, hard

    Extreme filtration. Most candidates are discarded: weak ones, crowded ones, stale ones. Atlas would rather hold three lines that matter than thirty that don't.

  3. 03

    What survives are magnets

    The survivors are the strongest levels, the places price gets pulled toward and reacts to on arrival. Traders call them magnets. Atlas maps them every session.

These levels are not a hypothesis. They proved themselves across years of research, and they are proving themselves in live fire today: Sentinel trades qualified Atlas levels with real execution, and every action posts to a public log. The work now is leveraging them well.

And still, in the same breath: a magnet is a tendency, not a promise, and no level guarantees a reaction. That is why nothing here asks for faith. Everything built on Atlas shows its receipts in public.

The map it keeps

Curated by hand. Read by machine.

Every surviving level lands on one map, refreshed as structure changes. The map is deterministic: same inputs, same lines. And it is the same map for everyone. Atlas does not draw a special version for anybody.

And it holds up across styles. Full-session swings, day trades, even micro scalps: same lines, different horizons.

markets on the map

  • NQAvailable now
  • MNQAvailable now
  • ESComing soon
  • GCComing soon

Who reads the map

One map. Many hands.

Sentinel

The autonomous algo. It only trades Atlas levels that survive a full qualification cascade.

Meet Sentinel

Creators

The no-code platform in development lets traders build their own logic on the same map.

See access

Meridian

Our first verified partner pairs its own level feed with Atlas levels.

View the roster

speaks in levels, never opinions · zero bias, the same map for everyone · locations, not outcomes