Source hierarchy

Primary filings and issuer disclosures are preferred where available. Company financial facts, insider transaction reports, ownership records, and fund disclosures sit above secondary summaries. Market and crypto context is used as supporting background and is labeled by source type, availability, and freshness when displayed.

Analysis and writing

Sawse separates cited facts from editorial interpretation. Drafting and editing tools may assist preparation, but they do not determine factual claims, rankings, or recommendations. Published research is reviewed against available source material before it is presented to readers.

Review standards

Editorial review checks source support, numerical consistency, disclosure boundaries, title and summary accuracy, table integrity, and whether the article avoids personalized advice, unsupported claims, price targets, or recommendation language.

Article families

Sawse publishes daily briefings, filing summaries, insider-activity analyses, and long-form explainers. Article families are public labels that help readers understand the type of research they are reading.

Claim trace

When a note makes a factual claim from filings, analytical data, insider activity, or crypto context, Sawse aims to preserve a trace back to the underlying source record. Claim trace is designed to make the research auditable while keeping private operational details out of the public reading experience.

No recommendations

Sawse may describe exposure, risk, accounting treatment, filing events, liquidity, ownership changes, and score signals. Sawse does not publish personalized investment recommendations or tell readers to buy, sell, hold, short, hedge, or trade.