About Sawse
Sawse publishes financial research on public companies and ETF wrappers where filings, ownership records, market data, and BTC exposure change the story.
What Sawse covers
Sawse follows selected US-listed operating companies, foreign private issuers with US-traded securities, and spot Bitcoin ETF wrappers. The current universe includes BTC treasury holders such as MSTR, crypto exchanges and trading platforms such as COIN and HOOD, Bitcoin miners such as MARA, RIOT, and CLSK, spot Bitcoin ETFs such as IBIT, FBTC, and ARKB, and large technology, software, AI infrastructure, and cybersecurity names such as MSFT, NVDA, AMD, TSM, ASML, PANW, SHOP, ORCL, NOW, META, and GOOG.
What readers get
Sawse is built for readers who want the important public-record context without sorting through every filing line themselves. Pages and articles aim to answer what changed, which record supports it, why it matters for the company or wrapper, and what still remains uncertain.
How Sawse works
Sawse starts with primary records: SEC filings, issuer disclosures, Form 4 insider reports, 13F ownership records, fund documents, tagged financial facts, and market data when display rights and freshness checks allow. If a record cannot support a claim or a data display is stale, restricted, or incomplete, Sawse labels it, omits it, or leaves the reader with a clear limit instead of filling the gap.
Publisher identity
Sawse is an independent research and educational publication. Editorial questions, source questions, and correction requests can be sent through the Contact page.
What Sawse is not
Sawse is not an investment adviser, broker, dealer, exchange, ratings agency, accounting firm, law firm, or personalized recommendation service. Sawse does not tell readers whether to buy, sell, hold, or trade any security, ETF, digital asset, or financial instrument.