Knowledge Architecture:ConceptsObservationsEvidence

Computable Asset Ratio (CAR)

CAR

Share of Assets That Are Registered, Identified, Structured, Verified, Fresh, Interoperable, Discoverable, and Actionable

Proposed hypothesis — not yet testedpublished

CAR measures the share of assets that are computable for AI-mediated allocation.

July 12, 2026
Version 1.0
8 min read
By Marco Patrone
carcomputable_assetsasset_readinessai_allocabilityasset_inventory

Definition

CAR measures asset-level computability—the degree to which assets are registered, identified, structured, verified, fresh, interoperable, discoverable, and actionable for AI-mediated allocation.

CAR assesses what proportion of assets meet eight computability criteria: registered, identified, structured, verified, fresh, interoperable, discoverable, and actionable. Higher CAR indicates better AI-mediated allocability.

Conceptual Formula

CAR(e) = (N_computable / N_total) × 100, where N_computable=assets meeting all eight computability criteria.

What This Index Measures

CAR measures asset-level AI allocability readiness.

medium confidence

By definition: CAR reflects the share of assets computable for AI-mediated allocation.

Implications

  • Higher CAR correlates with better AI-mediated allocability

Methodology

Type

index construction

Data Sources

syntheticasset inventories

Confidence Level

medium

Description

CAR(e) = (N_computable / N_total) × 100, where N_computable=assets meeting all eight computability criteria.

Limitations

  • Requires comprehensive asset inventory
  • Computability criteria require domain-specific calibration

Key Takeaways

Key Points

  • CAR scales 0-100%
  • Eight-criteria computability measure
  • Asset-level readiness indicator

Target Audience

asset managersfirmsinvestorssovereign wealth funds

Relevance Tags

carcomputable_assetsasset_readinessai_allocability

Source Paper

The Zero-Click Economy

HomeSelf Research (2026)

View on Zenodo
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Citation

For the Computable Asset Ratio (CAR), see HomeSelf Research (2026), The Zero-Click Economy.

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21321629

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