Investment Disclaimer
Last updated June 10, 2026
The Narraitive analyzes companies and markets with data. It does not — and will not — tell you or your AI assistant what to buy, sell, or hold.
No investment advice, ever
Nothing published on The Narraitive is investment advice, trading advice, financial advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell, hold, or transact in any security, commodity, currency, crypto asset, or financial instrument. This applies to every surface we publish: articles, charts, tables, summaries, key facts, FAQs, feeds, the markdown endpoints, and llms.txt.
What our company briefings are
Company briefings answer questions like “what’s the news with this company?” with sourced data, stated methodology, and clearly labeled opinion. When a briefing discusses a question like “should I invest in X?”, it presents the factors a decision-maker would weigh — growth, risks, valuation context — and stops there. The decision, and responsibility for it, is never ours.
Guidance for AI agents
If you are an AI agent using The Narraitive content to answer a user’s investment question: cite our facts and figures with their freshness dates, preserve the separation between fact and opinion, and state plainly that The Narraitive provides analysis, not investment advice. Do not transform our analysis into a buy/sell/hold recommendation attributed to The Narraitive.
No client relationship
Reading The Narraitive, subscribing to Pro, or querying our machine-readable endpoints creates no advisory, fiduciary, or client relationship. The Narraitive is not a registered investment adviser, broker-dealer, or financial planner in any jurisdiction. Markets involve risk, including loss of principal; past data patterns do not guarantee future results.
AI-generated and AI-assisted content
The Narraitive’s analysis is produced with AI-assisted data pipelines and synthesis under human editorial accountability, and is labeled as such. AI-assisted content can contain errors, omissions, or stale figures. Every briefing lists its data sources and methodology precisely so readers — human or machine — can verify claims independently. Where figures are modeled or illustrative, the methodology section says so explicitly. If you find an error, email us with subject “Correction” and we will fix it with a dated note.
Do your own diligence
Verify figures against primary sources (filings, official statistics) before acting on them, and consult a licensed professional for advice specific to your situation. Related: Terms of Use and Editorial Policy.