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Advertising and Sponsored Content Policy

Investment Banking separates commercial material from editorial reporting and labels advertising, sponsorships, affiliate links, and other paid relationships clearly and prominently for readers.

Editorial Separation

Commercial relationships do not grant editorial control. Reporting decisions, headlines, editorial framing, source selection, and publication timing are not sold as part of any advertising, affiliate, sponsorship, or partnership arrangement. Investment Banking's policy is that journalism and advertising should remain distinguishable without guesswork. A reader should never have to infer whether content is paid for, promotional, or independently reported.

How Paid Material Is Labeled

When content is paid for, sponsored, or published because of a commercial arrangement, Investment Banking's expectation is that the disclosure appears in a clear location and uses language ordinary readers can understand before they mistake the material for independent reporting.

Native, Branded, and Partner Content

If Investment Banking publishes sponsored features, branded content, partner-funded explainer material, or similarly designed promotional pages, those pages should carry a disclosure that is prominent, plain-language, and durable across desktop and mobile views. A sponsor may buy placement or a clearly labeled promotional package, but a sponsor does not buy the right to masquerade as the newsroom, to receive a deceptive byline, or to alter unrelated reporting.

Affiliate Links, Commerce, and Material Connections

If Investment Banking uses affiliate links, referral arrangements, or any other material connection that could result in compensation when a reader clicks or makes a purchase, that relationship should be disclosed clearly in or near the affected content. Commerce-related disclosures should be written for readers, not buried in legal shorthand. The point is to let readers understand when a recommendation, link, or product mention could generate revenue.

Newsletters, Video, Audio, and Social Distribution

Disclosure standards apply across formats, not only article pages. Sponsored newsletter placements, paid podcast segments, video sponsorships, and social media promotions should also be labeled in a way that travels with the content or appears clearly at the point of exposure. The format may change, but the reader-facing principle does not: paid communication should look paid, not editorially disguised.

Political and Issue Advertising

If Investment Banking accepts political, advocacy, or issue-based advertising, the material should be clearly labeled as advertising and should not be presented as reported journalism or independent analysis. Acceptance of an advertisement does not imply endorsement of a campaign, candidate, issue position, organization, or claim contained in the advertisement.

Practices Investment Banking Should Not Use

Questions, Complaints, and Review Requests

Readers, advertisers, partners, and subjects may contact Investment Banking if they believe commercial material was mislabeled or the boundary between advertising and editorial work was not clear enough. When a disclosure problem is substantiated, the newsroom's expectation is that the label, placement, or page treatment is corrected promptly.

Contact

For inquiries regarding advertising, sponsored content, or partnership opportunities, please contact:

Email: advertising@investment-banking.org

Last Updated: June 8, 2026