People often referred to as spending scolds have never really appealed to me. Although their core message of living within your financial limits and prioritizing savings is valid, they tend to exaggerate these principles to the point of absurdity. For example, they often claim that buying a coffee prevents you from building a retirement fund.
Because of this annoyance, I never felt the need to read The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy. This decision proved to be lucky. On the podcast If Books Could Kill, hosts Michael Hobbes and Peter Shamshiri provided a comprehensive critique that effectively dismantled the book. I highly recommend giving their episode a listen.
Here are your reading highlights for Tuesday morning, the 10th. The Dow Index is shedding its unstylish reputation to enjoy a moment in the spotlight. We also feature the ultimate case study demonstrating that artificial intelligence will not take the place of human workers. In other news, you can say goodbye to office perks like free snacks and cold brew. We further observe the massive divergence in vibes regarding AI that exists between the tech and finance industries. Finally, the selection explores how ADHD evolved into a condition recognized in adults.
We begin with a look at record Super Bowl betting and a warning about the coming crypto apocalypse. You can also read about the largest landowners in America and analyze the question: Is it good when execs buy their own stock?
Furthermore, discover how AI slop is transforming social media and delve into the argument of how the capitalists broke capitalism. The list rounds out with an assessment of the economic costs of Brexit on the UK.
Here are ten selected articles to engage with this Sunday morning. This collection explores the unprecedented nature of current Super Bowl betting markets and claims that we are enduring the most severe crypto winter in history. We also examine privacy breaches concerning license plate data, the growing trend of advertisements within vehicle cabins, and the emergence of the Slopagandist. Furthermore, the reading list covers the methodology regarding tear gas and children, as well as the Great Lux Ticket Crisis.
You can find the complete list at the following link: https://ritholtz.com/2026/02/10-sunday-morning-reads-7/
Here is a compilation of ten reads for the weekend.
The articles discuss what transpires when we confess a lack of knowledge and analyze why economic bubbles are actually a feature rather than a system bug. Another piece makes the case that interstellar space travel is an impossibility that will never be realized.
Also included is a basic guide to the Federal Reserve, an explanation of why computers are unable to surprise us, and a look at the historic $1.6 billion transaction between Fox and the NFL that shifted the entire landscape.
https://ritholtz.com/2026/02/10-weekend-reads-77/
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