Last updated: May 28, 2026
Capital Sight aims to publish accurate, thoughtful, and well-structured market analysis. This Corrections Policy explains how we review, correct, and update content when factual errors, outdated information, or material issues are identified.
1. Our Commitment to Accuracy
Capital Sight covers companies, industries, macroeconomic trends, financial markets, and valuation topics that may change quickly. We aim to use reliable sources, clearly separate facts from interpretation, and review key data before publication.
Because financial information, market prices, company guidance, regulatory developments, and economic conditions can change over time, some articles may become outdated after publication. When appropriate, Capital Sight may update or clarify content to reflect new information.
2. What We Correct
Capital Sight may correct or update content in the following situations:
- Incorrect financial figures, dates, names, tickers, or company information
- Broken or incorrect links
- Outdated data that materially affects the article's interpretation
- Misstated source references
- Typographical errors that could change the meaning of a sentence
- Incorrect descriptions of a company, industry, regulation, or market event
- Material errors in valuation assumptions, tables, charts, or scenario analysis
3. What May Not Require a Formal Correction
Minor style changes, formatting improvements, grammar edits, headline adjustments, readability improvements, or non-material wording changes may be made without a formal correction note.
Market views, valuation opinions, scenario interpretations, or investment theses may also change over time as new information becomes available. A change in interpretation does not necessarily mean the original article contained a factual error.
4. How Corrections Are Handled
When a material factual error is confirmed, Capital Sight may take one or more of the following actions:
- Correct the relevant sentence, figure, table, chart, or section
- Add a clarification note to the article
- Update the article to reflect new information
- Add an update note with the date of revision
- Remove or revise information that is inaccurate, unsupported, or outdated
Where appropriate, material corrections may be disclosed within the article so readers can understand what changed.
5. Article Updates
Capital Sight may update articles when new earnings results, corporate actions, regulatory decisions, macroeconomic data, market events, or material developments affect the original analysis.
Updated articles may include a note such as “Updated on [date]” or “Correction: [brief description]” when the change is material to the reader's understanding.
6. Reader Error Reports
Readers can report potential errors, outdated information, or broken links by contacting Capital Sight. To help us review the issue efficiently, please include:
- The article title
- The page URL
- A short description of the potential error
- The relevant section, figure, or sentence
- A source or reference, if available
Contact: Contact Analyst J
7. Review Process
When a correction request is received, Capital Sight may review the relevant article, source material, public filings, market data, or other reliable references. If the issue is confirmed, we aim to correct or clarify the content in a reasonable manner.
Not every reader disagreement will result in a correction. Differences in interpretation, valuation assumptions, scenario probabilities, or market opinion may be handled as analytical judgment rather than factual error.
8. Transparency
Capital Sight values transparency and reader trust. Corrections and updates are intended to improve the accuracy, usefulness, and clarity of the site’s research.
The existence of a correction does not necessarily invalidate the full article. It means that a specific item has been revised to better reflect available information.
9. Contact
For corrections, updates, or factual error reports, please contact us through the Contact page.
Contact: Contact Analyst J
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