Skip to content
Chimera readability score 61 out of 100, Academic reading level.

My morning train WFH reads:
• Will AI Make Companies Outsource More, or Less?: Noah Smith on how AI might redraw the boundaries of the firm — Coase for the model era. A genuinely interesting question most coverage skips. (Noahpinion)
• We Crunched the Data: There’s a Grocery Price Emergency in America: A data-driven case that the supermarket squeeze is worse than the headline CPI suggests. More grist for the sentiment-versus-numbers debate. (New York Times)
• Reverse Engineering the Met’s Bobby Bonilla Deal: My own July 1 tradition: the math behind baseball’s most famous deferred-payment contract. A cautionary tale about hubris, fraud, misunderstanding risk, and all sorts of other amusing and fun BeFi issues. I went deep down the rabbit hole on this one, and it led to some astonishing findings… (The Big Picture)
• UBS Global Wealth Report 2026: nearly 1 million new millionaires. Global personal wealth rose 10.8% last year, the fastest pace in years, yet median wealth fell in most markets (Quartz)
• Mega takeovers drive record $2.8tn in dealmaking: Companies and investors turn to M&A as they adjust to economic shifts driven by the rise of AI. (Financial Times)
• Remote Work Is Making It Harder for Grads to Find (and Keep) Jobs: New research argues that frustration among employers over remote work may be leading them to cut back on hiring young workers (Wall Street Journal)
• Decision Fatigue: Why You Feel Exhausted Without Having “Done” Anything Physically: The brain is just like any other muscle. It gets tired. On why choosing all day drains you as much as labor. A tidy explainer with practical implications for how you structure a workday. (Facile Things)
• Even the Internet’s Favorite Pool Guy Doesn’t Know How to Fix the Reflecting Pool: Algae blooms, peeling paint, and a host of fixes from hydrogen peroxide to nanobubblers have made it hard to diagnose what’s wrong with the Reflecting Pool—let alone how to clean up the mess. A funny, telling sidebar to a story that refuses to drain. (Wired)
• Trump’s second-term windfall: $1.4B in crypto earnings: The president’s latest financial disclosure underscores how central the cryptocurrency industry has become to his business empire. Disclosures reveal a staggering crypto haul. The through-line of this week’s reads: the presidency as a revenue center. (Politico) see also Trump’s Moneymaking Run: Unrivaled in Presidential History: The Times tallies the scale of presidential self-enrichment against the historical record. Read it with this week’s crypto and mining-deal stories. (New York Times)
• European Soccer Fans Marvel at the Splendor of America’s Suburbs: World Cup visitors discover the cul-de-sac, the strip mall, and the enormous parking lot. A charming outsider’s-eye view of American sprawl. Dutch fans in Missouri see a nation that is risky and expensive, but vast and bountiful: ‘Everything is three times the size’ (Wall Street Journal)
Video of the day: The Genius of Mechanical Time
Be sure to check out our Master’s in Business next week with McKeel Hagerty, CEO/Chairman of Hagerty Specialty Insurance. He transformed a family specialty-insurance agency into an enthusiast-driven platform focused on collectible cars, events, valuation data, and auctions. HGTY is now a public company that insures everything from classic cars to boats, trucks, tractors, and military vehicles for over 2.8M collectors.
Record labels no longer dominate which artists get radio airplay
Source: Bloomberg
Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This text functions as a highly curated, personal reading list. While the structure is clean, the blend of deep niche interests and high-level finance suggests human curation rather than purely synthetic mass production.

Signals Detected
low severity: Sentence/headline length variance is high; rhythm is erratic and varied (bullet points vs. full titles).
low severity: The text is a curated list rather than a flowing narrative, lacking the characteristic emotional arc or singular voice of typical AI-generated journalism.
low severity: Specific sources (NYT, FT, Quartz, WSJ) are cited for individual links, suggesting human selection rather than generic aggregation.
low severity: Claims are attributed to specific, verifiable financial or sociological topics; no overtly fabricated statistics are present in the list itself.
Human Indicators
The inclusion of highly specific, niche interests (e.g., Bobby Bonilla contract math, Reflecting Pool maintenance) alongside major financial topics suggests a personalized editorial voice.
The introductory framing ('My morning train WFH reads:') establishes a clear, idiosyncratic personal style.