TSZONES: where price fights
TSZONES automatically identifies and draws—at 08:30 (USA time)—the trading and contract auction zones: areas where the market often concentrates real order flow, absorbs liquidity, and makes it clear who’s in control.
These zones are not a “nice-looking line.” They are the price block where the most aggressive activity usually shows up. And here’s the key part: when price pushes through those zones, it often means that block has been bought or sold by strong hands (liquidity gets consumed) and the market shifts from auctioning to displacing, which frequently triggers a fast expansion move.
What TSZONES gives you
TSZONES is built to give you a clear execution framework in sessions when price “gets serious”. The goal is simple: mark the area where real trading happens and help you spot the moment the market stops “working” and starts moving.
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Trading and auction zones
Detects the area where price tends to concentrate contract exchange. This is where the real “fight” happens: absorption, defense, and control transfer.
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Aggressiveness read
These zones highlight where trading is more likely to turn aggressive: where large orders step in and where price often reacts with force.
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Expansion after the zone is breached
When the zone is breached, it often means the block has been consumed (bought/sold), and the market enters displacement: cleaner, faster moves.
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Context for entries and management
TSZONES works as a context map: it helps you avoid chasing price and understand where it makes sense to look for decision, continuation, or rejection.
Important: TSZONES is a context and reading tool. It does not promise results. Markets change, there are news days and “messy” sessions. Use it to understand where institutional action is more likely and to trade with controlled risk.
Real TSZONES example
Real screenshot of the indicator with the zones drawn. Click to zoom.
Recent performance
In the session shown, these are the zones drawn as of today 26/01/2026, and the module is reporting a win rate above 80% (based on the system’s defined expansion criteria).
