NEW YORK, NY — In a major stride for financial intelligence, a consortium of leading market analysts today unveiled the “Liquidity Cartography System” (LCS), a proprietary methodology that reportedly offers unprecedented insight into the flow of capital. After years of intensive research and billions in computational power, the LCS has confirmed what researchers are calling a “paradigm-shifting insight”: money moves from one place to another, particularly around significant price fluctuations.

“Our state-of-the-art spatio-temporal fluid dynamics models, combined with advanced transient capital vectoring algorithms, have conclusively demonstrated that when an asset’s price changes, capital tends to shift,” announced Dr. Aris Thorne, head of Quantum Financial Topology at SynthCorp Global Analytics, a key partner in the project. “It’s a revolutionary finding. We’ve discovered that liquidity often aggregates in areas of high transactional interest and disperses from areas of waning interest. We’ve termed this 'gravitational economic flow,' and it’s a concept that promises to redefine our understanding of market mechanics.”

The LCS employs an intricate network of real-time data feeds, satellite imagery of server farms, and proprietary algorithms to generate detailed “liquidity maps.” These maps, visually striking in their complexity, illustrate the path of capital as it navigates the global financial landscape. Early simulations show capital moving into a stock when many people are buying it, and out of a stock when many people are selling. “The clarity this offers is simply unprecedented,” stated a spokesperson for Stock Traders Daily, a publication that has championed the LCS’s development. “For too long, traders have had to contend with the nebulous concept that money… just sort of existed. Now, we know it moves.”

Industry leaders are already hailing the LCS as a game-changer for predictive analytics. “Before this, we had hunches, anecdotal evidence, and frankly, a lot of guesswork,” said Brenda Chen, a veteran equities trader at Obsidian Peak Capital. “But now, with precise liquidity cartography, we finally have a scientifically validated framework to understand that when a stock price goes up, it’s usually because more money is moving into it, and vice-versa. It’s like discovering water flows downhill.”

Analysts are now developing “Volume Velocity Mapping” to determine if more money tends to move faster than less money.