
Responsible for decision discipline and the integrity of the escalation process.
Risk managers value the framework not only for what it tells them to do, but for the standard it sets before escalation is justified. When the framework says stand down, that output can anchor an internal review process without requiring a discretionary judgment call.
Most relevant tier:
Operator Brief ($149/mo) or Institutional Edition ($649/mo)

Operating inside the physical soybean system with exposure to reflexivity and positioning cascades.
Commercial context means accountability for physical exposure — not speculative positioning disconnected from physical transmission. Governance separates structural regime change from temporary positioning-driven moves and identifies when crowding is distorting the execution signal.
Most relevant tier:
Institutional Edition ($649/mo)

Operating across physical nodes with fragmented, often contradictory signals.
Localized basis strength can feel like a systemic signal. It often is not. Governance provides a consistent framework for evaluating whether physical tightening is validating across the full commercial chain — or whether the move is localized and should not be treated as a system-wide call.
Most relevant tier:
Operator Brief ($149/mo) or Institutional Edition ($649/mo)

AgFlow is designed for a specific kind of operator — and it is not the right fit for everyone.
The framework is not built for users who need daily price targets, directional trade ideas, or a continuous narrative to inform speculative positioning. It requires a buyer who already accepts that restraint is a legitimate outcome — and who is looking for a more disciplined standard for when action is warranted, not more information pointing toward action.
If that describes the discipline you need, it might be exactly right.
This product is designed for accountability — not curiosity.

A premature hedge. An unnecessary liquidation. An escalation based on misread tightness.
Most errors occur inside balanced regimes — not extremes.
Most losses occur from acting too early — not too late.