Cookie Policy
This page explains how cookies and similar technologies may be used on Vextor Capital, what the main categories mean and how readers can manage their preferences in practice.
Cookie Policy and consent
This page explains, in plain language, what cookies and similar technologies may do on Vextor Capital, which categories are commonly involved and how readers can manage their preferences.
What cookies are
Cookies are small data files that may be placed on a device when someone visits a website. Similar technologies can also be used to remember preferences, improve performance, measure activity or support embedded content and advertising controls.
Why this page exists
A cookie policy should help readers understand categories, not bury them under unreadable lists. This page explains the practical logic of cookie use and points readers to the live consent controls that matter most.
Key principles
This page is written in plain language and is meant to explain how the site approaches this topic in practice.
Necessary first
Some cookies or local storage entries may be needed to load the site correctly, preserve security or remember core settings.
Consent for non-essential use
Analytics, personalisation or advertising-related tools should depend on the legal consent standard that applies in the visitor’s context.
Choice should stay practical
Readers should be able to revisit or change cookie choices without friction.
Main cookie categories
The site may rely on categories like the ones below, depending on the tools that are actually active.
Strictly necessary cookies
These may help the site function, keep sessions stable, maintain security, remember language or consent choices and support essential technical operations.
- Without them, some parts of the site may not work as intended.
- These are usually the least optional category.
Analytics and performance cookies
These may help measure traffic, understand how readers move through pages, detect technical issues and improve the reading experience over time.
- They are generally used in aggregate rather than to give personal financial recommendations.
- Whether they require consent depends on the setup and the law that applies.
Functional or preference cookies
These may remember choices such as language, interface preferences or other convenience settings so the site behaves more consistently for returning visitors.
- They are often less intrusive than advertising cookies.
- They still involve storing a preference on the device or browser.
Advertising or third-party support technologies
If the site uses advertising, affiliate tools, embedded media or external scripts, some technologies may help with frequency control, measurement, attribution or embedded functionality.
- This is one reason readers should review the live consent interface.
- Third-party tools may have their own documentation and controls.
How readers can manage choices
A cookie policy should always point back to practical controls.
Consent banner or preferences panel
If the site uses a consent tool, readers should be able to accept, reject or customise categories there. That tool remains the most direct way to manage consent on the site itself.
- Use it first when you want to review categories.
- Revisit it if you want to change a previous choice.
Browser controls
Browsers usually allow users to block, restrict or delete cookies. Those controls can be broader than the site-level controls and may affect how some websites function.
- Deleting cookies can remove saved preferences.
- Blocking all cookies may make some services less convenient or unusable.
Third-party opt-out tools
Where third-party providers are involved, readers may also find additional controls in the documentation or privacy settings of those providers.
- This is common for analytics, advertising and embedded services.
- The site cannot control settings that belong to external platforms.
Important practical point
The exact cookie names, providers and retention periods can change as site tools change. The most reliable live source for active categories is the site’s consent interface together with the documentation of the third-party providers actually in use.
Frequently asked questions
Short answers to common cookie questions.
