No. A capital-reader review does not mean investor interest.
A capital reader may identify information gaps, diligence questions, governance issues, risk-to-capital framing problems, or proof-pack weaknesses. That does not mean the capital reader is investing, recommending investment, expressing interest, committing capital, completing due diligence, or endorsing the project.
A Capital-Reader Room is not a fundraising room, investment committee, securities forum, lending room, deal room, or capital commitment process.
Safe language is:
The matter was reviewed in a capital-readability context to identify readiness questions. This does not imply investor interest, investment advice, capital commitment, securities recommendation, or endorsement.
This distinction protects capital readers, investors, project proponents, and GRA.