About

The name, the builders, and the word no.

ميزان

mīzān · Arabic — the balance. The scale.

The name is an old Arabic word. In the Qur'an, the mīzān is the balance set into creation itself, with a command that follows it: do not transgress the balance. The Hebrew Bible weighs with the sister word, moznayim — "a false balance is an abomination; a just weight is His delight" — and in scripture Jews and Christians share, the verdict on the wall reads: weighed on the scales, and found wanting. Every tradition that took justice seriously reached for the same instrument.

So does every market. Each price is a weighing of buyers against sellers, and every extreme is a scale tipped too far. MIZAN is named for that scale. It reads where the weight truly sits, scores what a setup actually carries, and when it doesn't carry enough, it refuses the trade.

A scale that only tips your way is a broken scale. MIZAN is built to weigh honestly — and honest weighing includes the word no.

Who builds this

One engineer. One operator. No sales team.

MIZAN is engineered by Qasim Chowdhry and driven by Saeid Motesharrei.

Qasim has spent fifteen years being paid to enforce one discipline: don't ship what hasn't passed validation. He currently leads delivery on a federal SaaS platform where a bad release isn't an inconvenience, stood up program governance adopted as the enterprise standard at a major California utility, and shipped enterprise deployments for top-tier investment banks. His day job is quality gates — the checks that stop weak work from reaching production. MIZAN is that same instinct pointed at a chart: six years trading his own account taught him the expensive lesson the engine now automates — the hardest edge in markets is the discipline to not take the trade. He is pursuing his MBA at UCLA Anderson.

Saeid is the operator: a Master's-trained COO with formal consulting training, an active investor, and the reason the engineering gets to stay engineering. He came up in healthcare, where failure costs more than money, and in music production, where the whole craft is knowing what to cut. If that sounds like this product's philosophy, it isn't a coincidence.

Both are fathers with day jobs. They build for longevity, not a launch week: every signal passes seven independent checks — fail one, and you never see it.

No win-rate screenshots. No profit promises. The proof section on the main page shows a losing trade on purpose — a track record with no losses isn't a record, it's a trap.

Verify: Qasim on LinkedIn →

The philosophy

The edge is subtraction.

Most trading tools are built to produce more: more signals, more alerts, more reasons to click. MIZAN is built to produce less. It reads the regime first, weighs every setup against seven layers of evidence, and surfaces only what earns a score. Everything else gets a gray tag on the chart that says exactly what happened: BLOCKED.

If the engine keeps you out of a handful of bad trades a month, it has done its job. That is the whole pitch, and it's why the free trial exists — so you can check it against your own tape before paying anything.

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