Sponsorship and Capital-Reader Room participation are completely different pathways.
A sponsor supports approved activities or infrastructure under a defined sponsorship arrangement. Sponsorship may involve recognition, visibility, or program support where permitted. It does not create financial-services review authority.
A Capital-Reader Room participant is reviewed for a controlled finance-readiness role. Capital-Reader Rooms may examine capital readability, proof-pack sufficiency, risk-to-capital framing, diligence gaps, public finance boundaries, Project SPV-readiness, National Nexus Consortium Company readiness, or lawful downstream review questions.
A sponsor is not automatically a capital reader. A sponsor’s financial support does not create access to Capital-Reader Rooms. A sponsor cannot use sponsorship to obtain investor-style visibility into projects, influence readiness records, shape diligence outputs, receive privileged capital information, or signal investment endorsement.
Capital-Reader Room participation requires separate eligibility, role review, conflict disclosure, confidentiality controls, safe-meeting rules, and purpose alignment.
The boundary is essential:
Sponsorship supports the system.
Capital-Reader Room participation reviews readiness questions.
Neither creates investment advice, investor commitment, capital allocation, securities promotion, or endorsement.