Accuracy is the foundation of Investment Banking's journalism. While we verify every story carefully before publication, mistakes can still occur. When they do, we correct them openly, quickly, and visibly.
Different types of errors require distinct responses:
Spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, or typographical issues that do not affect the article's meaning are fixed immediately without a separate correction notice.
Mistakes involving names, statistics, dates, or verifiable facts are corrected directly within the article. A clearly marked editor's note is added to explain what was changed and why the correction was necessary.
As news events unfold, articles may be updated to incorporate newly confirmed information. All updates include time stamps so readers can clearly see when changes were made to the story.
All corrections are made directly on the affected article page. We do not hide corrections or move them to separate locations. If a reader finds an error in any story, the correction will appear in that same article.
Depending on the nature of the issue, Investment Banking may use a correction note, a clarification note, an update note, or a combination of these tools to ensure full transparency.
To help us review your request as quickly as possible, please include:
Readers play an essential role in maintaining accuracy. If you notice an error, please contact our editorial team with the article headline, direct link, and a brief explanation. Our editorial team reviews all correction requests promptly and carefully.
Corrections Email: corrections@investment-banking.org
We never remove errors without acknowledgment. Significant changes are always disclosed clearly to readers. All correction requests are reviewed respectfully and thoroughly. We do not silently alter the substance of a published article when a correction note or update note is warranted.
Trust is built through accountability. By acknowledging our mistakes openly and correcting them clearly, we aim to provide journalism that readers can rely on — even when we fall short.