Defying the Odds: How We Turn a One-in-Ten-Million Shot into an +85% Certainty
Imagine standing at the edge of a probability cliff.
Identifying the exact low of the trading day is a one-in-ten-million shot if you’re just guessing. Now imagine doing that not once, not twice, but 85 times out of every 100 trades.
Sounds impossible, right?
Welcome to authorship.
In our trading practice, we’re not simply predicting market moves — we’re aligning so precisely with market structure that we author the day’s most critical turning points. We set what we call “authored base lows” — price levels that end up just a point or two away from the actual low of the day — and do it with 85% consistency.
Let’s put that in perspective:
A one-in-ten-million event, turned into a regular occurrence. The statistical probability of doing this 85 times out of 100 by chance is essentially zero. It’s not luck — it’s an engineered edge.
Each trade is time-stamped and verifiable. This isn’t about making a good call here and there — it’s about redefining the possible. It’s about turning the “impossible” into a repeatable, measurable process.
That is the real power of authorship.
From One-in-Ten-Million to Impossible-to-Deny: Sequencing the Unlikely
Calling the exact low of the day by chance is like winning a one-in-ten-million lottery.
Doing it once in a session is impressive.
Doing it 85% of the time turns it into a repeatable skill.
But what happens when you chain these calls together in the same day?
The Triple Chain
Authored Day’s Low — Exact or within a point of the low, nailed in real-time.
Market Open as Base — Declaring the 9:30 open print will act as the session’s structural low.
Projected Continuation — Stating before it happens that price will drive higher from that base into the close.
By random chance, if each call has a one-in-ten-million probability:
Two calls in sequence:
1 in 100 trillion (10,000,000 × 10,000,000)Three calls in sequence:
1 in 10 sextillion (10,000,000³) — that’s a one followed by 21 zeros.
In real terms:
It’s effectively impossible without an engineered, repeatable edge.
Why Sequencing Matters
Market Perception: Anyone can have a good trade. Almost nobody can stack them in perfect sequence.
Structural Influence: Each authored level reinforces the next — creating a self-reinforcing market rhythm.
Authorship Proof: Chaining multiple improbable calls removes doubt. This isn’t prediction — it’s orchestration.
In authorship terms, it’s the difference between hitting a single home run and calling every pitch, swing, and outcome before stepping to the plate — then doing it again the next inning, and again in the ninth.
At that point, the market isn’t just reacting — it’s moving in your authored sequence.