Adaptive Volume‐Demand‐Index (AVDI)Demand Index (according to James Sibbet) – Short Description 
The Demand Index (DI) was developed by James Sibbet to measure real “buying” vs. “selling” strength (Demand vs. Supply) using price and volume data. It is not a standalone trading signal, but rather a filter and trend confirmer that should always be used together with chart structure and additional indicators.
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\ 1. Calculation Basis\ 
 1. Volume Normalization 
   $$
   \text{normVol}_t 
   = \frac{\text{Volume}_t}{\mathrm{EMA}(\text{Volume},\,n_{\text{Vol}})_t}
   \quad(\text{e.g., }n_{\text{Vol}} = 13)
   $$
This smooths out extremely high volume spikes and compares them to the average (≈ 1 means “average volume”).
 2. Price Factor 
   $$
   \text{priceFactor}_t 
   = \frac{\text{Close}_t - \text{Open}_t}{\text{Open}_t}.
   $$
Positive values for bullish bars, negative for bearish bars.
 3. Component per Bar 
   $$
   \text{component}_t 
   = \text{normVol}_t \times \text{priceFactor}_t.
   $$
If volume is above average (> 1) and the price rises slightly, this yields a noticeably positive value; conversely if the price falls.
 4. Raw DI (Rolling Sum) 
   Over a window of \$w\$ bars (e.g., 20):
   $$
   \text{RawDI}_t 
   = \sum_{i=0}^{w-1} \text{component}_{\,t-i}.
   $$
   Alternatively, recursively for \$t \ge w\$:
   $$
   \text{RawDI}_t 
   = \text{RawDI}_{t-1} 
   + \text{component}_t 
   - \text{component}_{\,t-w}.
   $$
 5.  Optional EMA Smoothing 
An EMA over RawDI (e.g., \$n\_{\text{DI}} = 50\$) reduces short-term fluctuations and highlights medium-term trends:
   $$
   \text{EMA\_DI}_t 
   = \mathrm{EMA}(\text{RawDI},\,n_{\text{DI}})_t.
   $$
 6.Zero Line 
Handy guideline:
 
 RawDI > 0: Accumulated buying power dominates.
 RawDI < 0: Accumulated selling power dominates.
 
 2. Interpretation & Application 
 Crossing Zero 
 RawDI above zero  → Indication of increasing buying pressure (potential long signal).
 RawDI below zero  → Indication of increasing selling pressure (potential short signal).
 Not to be used alone for entry—always confirm with price action.
 RawDI vs. EMA_DI 
 RawDI > EMA\_DI  → Acceleration of demand.
 RawDI < EMA\_DI  → Weakening of demand.
 Divergences 
 
 Price makes a new high, RawDI does not make a higher high → potential weakness in the uptrend.
 Price makes a new low, RawDI does not make a lower low → potential exhaustion of the downtrend.
 
 3. Typical Signals (for Beginners) 
\ 1. Long Setup\ 
 
 RawDI crosses zero from below,
 RawDI > EMA\_DI (acceleration),
 Price closes above a short-term swing high or resistance.
 Stop-Loss: just below the last swing low, Take-Profit/Trailing: on reversal signals or fixed R\:R.
 
 2. Short Setup 
 
 RawDI crosses zero from above,
 RawDI < EMA\_DI (increased selling pressure),
 Price closes below a short-term swing low or support.
 Stop-Loss: just above the last swing high.
 
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 4. Notes and Parameters 
Recommended Values (Beginners):
 
 Volume EMA (n₍Vol₎) = 13
 RawDI window (w) = 20
 EMA over DI (n₍DI₎) = 50 (medium-term) or 1 (no smoothing)
 
 Attention:\ 
 
 NEVER use in isolation. Always in combination with price action analysis (trendlines, support/resistance, candlestick patterns).
 Especially during volatile news phases, RawDI can fluctuate strongly → EMA\_DI helps to avoid false signals.
 
 
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 Conclusion  The Demand Index by James Sibbet is a powerful filter to assess price movements by their volume backing. It shows whether a rally is truly driven by demand or merely a short-term volume anomaly. In combination with classic chart analysis and risk management, it helps to identify robust entry points and potential trend reversals earlier.
