How to Evaluate Primary Sources for Strong Due Diligence & Data Integrity

  • The available HTML from J.P. Morgan’s site is only navigation/menu structure with no article body.
  • Because no substantive content, data, or statements are present, nothing about markets, deals, or investments can be inferred.
  • Key elements like publication date, financial figures, and quotes are missing, preventing any meaningful analysis.
  • Access to the actual article text or summary is required to provide a relevant financial or market assessment.
Read More

The HTML you shared is merely a navigation framework from J.P. Morgan’s website—it includes menu labels like “Solutions,” “Insights,” “For Companies and Institutions,” “For Individuals,” etc.—but lacks any substantive article content. There are no statements, data points, dates, or claims from which we can analyze an event, financial development or investment opportunity. Without more context such as a headline, a summary, or even excerpts from the main text, it’s not possible to conduct a meaningful investigative or financial analysis.

In an investment banking or research context, our first step would be to locate the actual news article. Key identifiers we would look for are: —

  • A headline/title of the article, and who published it.
  • The date of publication, which is necessary for relevance, market conditions and competitive context.
  • Relevant figures or data: revenues, financial metrics, deal terms, prices.
  • Quotes or commentary from leadership, analysts, or market actors.

Without those, our analysis must stop here: there’s simply nothing to evaluate. If you have any of those missing pieces (for example, you can provide the headline or copy of the article), I can proceed to pull in corroborating sources, extract financial metrics, assess implications, identify risks, etc.

Supporting Notes
  • The provided HTML is solely navigation/menu code, featuring “primary-navigation,” “For Companies and Institutions,” “Insights,” “Industries We Serve,” etc. No article content is present in it.
  • There are no financial figures, dates, persons, or events mentioned in the snippet.
  • The source URL included refers to a Google News RSS link that appears to identify an article—but without retrieving the content, none of its claims or data are visible.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search
Filters
Clear All
Quick Links
Scroll to Top