Tagline: “Know the price of panic before it happens.” 1. Executive Summary The Virtual Crash Price (VCP) is a predictive risk metric that calculates the theoretical price level at which a specific asset (stock, crypto, commodity, or index) would trigger a cascading sell-off—driven by automated stop-losses, margin calls, and deleveraging events. Unlike standard support levels, VCP models the second-order effects of panic selling. 2. Core Problem Solved Traditional risk metrics (Value at Risk, max drawdown) are backward-looking or assume orderly markets. They fail to answer: “At what exact price would the market structure break?” VCP fills this gap by simulating a "virtual crash" in real time. 3. How It Works (Methodology) VCP is calculated using a 5-layer model:
| Layer | Input Data | Purpose | |-------|------------|---------| | 1. Stop-Loss Density | Exchange limit order book + retail stop clusters | Locates price zones with concentrated resting sell stops | | 2. Margin Call Pressure | Leverage ratios, funding rates, open interest | Estimates forced liquidation prices for leveraged positions | | 3. Dealer Gamma Exposure | Options chain (put/call wall levels) | Identifies where market makers must short more as price falls | | 4. Sentiment Velocity | Social media, news sentiment, volatility index (VIX) | Adds a behavioral feedback loop (fear accelerates selling) | | 5. Liquidity Elasticity | Historical slippage at market depth levels | Adjusts for how much price moves per unit of sell order | virtual crash price