Kerly Finance is an independent market-intelligence publication. These standards explain how Kerly Finance Research selects evidence, distinguishes verified facts from market scenarios, corrects material errors, and publishes educational analysis without presenting it as personalized investment advice.
Purpose and editorial scope
Kerly Finance covers macroeconomic data, central-bank policy, company earnings, market structure, and cross-asset signals. Each article is intended to help readers understand the catalysts that can influence financial markets. It is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold a security, cryptocurrency, commodity, fund, or currency. Market outcomes remain uncertain, so readers should combine any educational research with their own goals, risk tolerance, time horizon, and independent due diligence.
How we select and cite sources
Research starts with primary sources whenever they are available: official statistical releases, central-bank communications, public company filings, and regulator publications. We use secondary commentary to understand context, not to replace the original record. A source link is included when it helps a reader verify a claim, locate a data release, or understand the mechanism discussed in the article.
- Federal Reserve for monetary-policy materials and interest-rate data.
- Bureau of Labor Statistics for US inflation and labor-market releases.
- U.S. Treasury for yield and public-finance data.
- Securities and Exchange Commission for company and fund filings.
- Bureau of Economic Analysis for US economic activity data.
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission for futures-market reports.
Facts, scenarios, and market commentary
Kerly Finance separates reported facts from interpretation. A data release, a policy decision, or a filing is presented as a verifiable event. The potential effect on yields, currencies, equities, crypto, or commodities is presented as a scenario that depends on market pricing, positioning, liquidity, and new information. Scenario language is deliberately conditional: it explains what to watch, what could invalidate a view, and why different assets may react differently to the same event.
Updates and corrections
When material information on a published page changes, Kerly Finance updates the content and revised date. We correct factual errors as soon as practical after verification. Minor edits for clarity, formatting, or links may not materially change an article's conclusion. For a correction or source concern, contact the research team with the page URL and the supporting primary source so the issue can be reviewed.
Contact and feedback
Research questions, correction requests, and source suggestions can be sent to [email protected]. The article library is available at Kerly Finance Articles.
Kerly Finance Research provides educational market commentary. It does not provide personal investment, legal, accounting, or tax advice.