I made no assessment as to what "financially sound" means.
"Someone stating that a company is not as financially sound as another implies and in fact says it is not so good financially!"
Sorry, but no. You may choose to
infer that, but that is not what was stated. It may very well have been implied, I don't know, it's not an assumption I'm willing to make, as only the author can speak to that (which he has done, and has said specifically that he wasn't implying anything of the sort). But since the language was specific and clear, there is no reason or need to create an implication that is not there in order to infer something that is likewise not there. Too many people want to read between the lines, make assumptions, create illusory corollaries, and then draw conclusions based on that, where they try and figure out what someone is
really, really, really trying to say, instead of simply reading what they said.
Stating that a company is not
as financially sound as another means nothing beyond that, and it certain does not mean that the company who isn't as financially sound is somehow not good financially. In order to come to that conclusion, you have to assume facts not in evidence, assume things beyond what was stated, assume the author's thoughts and intent, all in all you have to assume too much. Here's an example using your logic:
Apple isn't
as big as Microsoft.
From that, using your logic, Apple is little.
See? It's not a matter of either/or, it's a matter of gradation. Just because Apple isn't AS BIG as Microsoft, it doesn't mean Apple isn't big. They just aren't AS BIG.
The average NBA Forward isn't as tall as the average NBA Center. Therefore, NBA Forwards are Oompa Loompas.
The same logic can be applied to the statement,
"You couldn't be more wrong." Someone will inevitably state that "wrong" is an absolute state and is therefore not subject to gradation.
Yet, there ya go, it's a
little wrong to call a tomato a vegetable, but it's very
wrong to call it a suspension bridge.
Both statements are wrong, it's merely a matter of gradation, as one is
more wrong than the other. Or, conversely, one statement isn't
as wrong as the other. So while one company may be
more financially sound than another, it doesn't mean both of them are not financially sound.