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What is SBFF?
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The Structural-Behavioral Footprint Framework (SBFF) is a unified analytical framework for understanding how assets actually behave in markets — not just what they are worth. Developed by Ali Reza Javadi (ARJ), SBFF bridges fundamental analysis, behavioral finance, and quantitative methods by decomposing every asset into three primitives: Identity (I), State (S), and Footprint (F), expressed as: Ft = F(I, St, Mt). Traditional analysis asks "What is the fair value?" SBFF asks "How does this asset behave, and why?"
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The SBFF Footprint Formula: Ft = F(I, St, Mt)
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The core SBFF equation describes how asset behavior is generated:
Ft = F(I, St, Mt)
Where:
• Ft = Footprint at time t (observable behavior: price action, volatility, correlations)
• I = Identity (stable structural features — does not change with price)
• St = State at time t (dynamic conditions — changes continuously)
• Mt = Modifiers at time t (external shocks and events)
The formula implies that the same asset (same Identity) can exhibit radically different behavior (different Footprint) when State or Modifiers change. This explains why fundamental analysis alone is insufficient — an asset's Identity only sets the envelope of possible behaviors; State and Modifiers determine which behavior is active.
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The Three Primitives: I, S, F
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Identity (I) — Stable structural features that don't change with price: supply chain design, business model, market structure, protocol architecture. Identity sets the envelope of possible behaviors.
State (S) — Time-varying dynamic conditions: inventory levels, sentiment, policy environment, capital flows, positioning. State determines which behavior within the identity envelope is currently active.
Footprint (F) — Observable behavioral signature: the combined output of Identity and State. Ft = F(I, St, Mt). This is what you actually see in price action, volatility patterns, and correlation behavior.
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SBFF Modifiers: The Mt Factor
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Modifiers (Mt) are forces that reshape State and change Footprint. They include:
• Supply shocks: mine closures, sanctions, weather events, export restrictions
• Demand shifts: technology substitution, regulatory change, EV adoption
• Logistics disruptions: port congestion, shipping lane closures, transit route changes
• Policy changes: interest rate decisions, capacity policies, export tariffs
• Geopolitical events: wars, elections, trade agreements, sanctions
Not all modifiers affect all assets equally. A sanctions modifier applied to LME Aluminium has a very different impact than the same modifier applied to Bitcoin. Understanding how Identity filters Modifiers is a key SBFF skill.