A capital-readable summary is a concise, structured explanation of a matter in language that financial-services and institutional reviewers can understand without turning the summary into an investment pitch.
It may describe the problem, public-good rationale, risk context, evidence base, governance status, readiness stage, diligence gaps, insurance-readiness questions, public authority boundaries, possible SPV-readiness issues, and next-step routing.
A capital-readable summary should avoid promotional language. It should not claim that the matter is bankable, investable, financeable, de-risked, approved, insured, guaranteed, or investor-ready unless a competent external process has separately established that status and the language is permitted.
Capital-readable does not mean investment-ready. It means understandable.
The best capital-readable summaries help reviewers quickly distinguish between facts, assumptions, evidence, gaps, and prohibited claims.
A capital-readable summary is a readiness tool, not a fundraising document.