Sunday, September 22, 2024

Weekend reading: Commuting is so 2019


What caught my eye this week.

Bosses continue to ask their staff to get back into the office more. And workers continue to reply by email from their laptops: “Yeah, maybe not…”

You don’t need to look hard for evidence. My local gym – located in a business park – is dead on a Friday, for example. Or check out the slump in rail season ticket sales in the UK:

Source: Mail Online

The Mail Online reports (my bold):

There were 60.3m passenger journeys made using season tickets in the latest quarter of January to March 2024. This was a 3 per cent increase on the 58.7m journeys made in the same quarter last year.

But season tickets made up 15 per cent of total ticket sales in the latest quarter, which was less than the 16 per cent in the previous year and down 24 percentage points from 39 per cent four years ago.

I’m sure the cost-of-living crisis won’t have helped, either, when five out of the most popular season tickets into London now cost over £5,000.

The dearest is £7,150 a year!

Paying that kind of money to sit on a train for as much as an hour or more – only to work less efficiently in an office when you get there?

No thanks. I can easily see why people are choosing to re-wire their work lifestyles instead.

So can plenty of others – it has been a bountiful week for coverage of the ongoing hybrid work reconfiguration:

    • Invested in the WFH argument? Home in on the evidence – FT
    • The benefits of hybrid working [Research]Nature
    • Inside Dell, workers rebel against return-to-office order – Semafor
    • How to be happier at work – A Wealth of Common Sense
    • Bosses are having the hardest time adjusting to hybrid work – CBNC
    • Cultures of destruction are destroying workplaces – Psychology Today

Best wishes to a fellow finance blogger

I was saddened to learn this week that US personal finance writer Jonathan Clements has received a very unfortunate medical diagnosis.

A well-known financial columnist in the US, Jonathan has more recently put his heart and soul into his own personal finance website, Humble Dollar.

I’ve never met Jonathan. But I’ve read his articles and most of those of his contributors for many years. I link to Humble Dollar almost every week, and have especially enjoyed watching Jonathan deftly triangulate his site to find its own unique voice and niche.

I’ve also learned from reading how Jonathan’s thoughts have evolved with respect to his own post-work life and retirement. Which of course only makes his sudden medical challenges the more poignant.

Both myself and TA homed in on the same section of Jonathan’s article about his cancer diagnosis:

The cliché is true: Something like this makes you truly appreciate life.

Despite those bucket-list items, I find my greatest joy comes from small, inexpensive daily pleasures: that first cup of coffee, exercise, friends and family, a good meal, writing and editing, smiles from strangers, the sunshine on my face. If we can keep life’s less admirable emotions at bay, the world is a wonderful place.

We send Jonathan our very best wishes for his treatment and journey.

And everybody please enjoy this sunny weekend.

From Monevator

Blind Date for Investors – Monevator

FIRE pioneers are finding the path for everyone – Monevator

From the archive-ator: The cautionary tale – Monevator

News

Note: Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view click through to read the article. Try privacy/incognito mode to avoid cookies. Consider subscribing to sites you visit a lot.

Inflation falls to lowest level in almost three years – BBC

Natwest to takeover most of Sainsbury’s Bank – Which

Queues for first council housing in Somerset for 30 years – BBC

Hargreaves Lansdown ‘willing to recommend’ £5.4bn CVC-led takeover – CityAM

Revolut seeks $40+bn valuation in employee share sale – FT via Yahoo Finance

Bank of New York rebranding cuts ties to a fading Wall Street era [Search result]FT

Octopus Energy to repay £3bn Bulb cash to taxman – This Is Money

Barcelona to ban apartment rentals to tourists to cut housing costs – Guardian

Private equity firms have amassed $1tn in ‘carry’ fees as taxation debate mounts [Search result]FT

Investment in UK is lowest in G7 for third year in a row, new data shows – IPPR

The election section mini-special

Pressure on Labour and Tories as tax gap hits £40bn – Guardian

Brexit and the election: ‘Guitar exports used to take 48 hours – now it’s three weeks’ – BBC

The manifestos and your finances – Guardian

Reform and the Green Party’s more radical tax ideas – This Is Money

Electing betting claims put focus on who knew what and when – BBC

Products and services

The best buy-to-let mortgages for landlords – This Is Money

St James’s Place under scrutiny: what do its customers say? [Search result]FT

Sign-up to Trading 212 via our affiliate link to claim your free share and cashback. T&Cs apply – Trading 212

Is it cheaper to rent or own a home? – Which

Santander’s bank switch offer: get £175 + £15 – Be Clever With Your Cash

Get £100 worth of free trades when you open an II SIPP account before 30 June.​ Capital at risk. T&Cs apply. New customers only – Interactive Investor

10 ways wedding guests can save money – Which

Credit card debt hits UK mortgage affordability [Search result]FT

Open an account with InvestEngine via our link and get up to £50 when you invest at least £100. T&Cs apply. Capital at risk – InvestEngine

Skinny homes for sale, in pictures – Guardian

Comment and opinion

Quiet compounding – Morgan Housel

Go big early – Humble Dollar

How to get started with FatFIRE – Fire v London

The stock market will crash! – Darius Foroux

“I ask men if they have a pension plan before I seriously date them”Business Insider

Roger Federer versus the stock market – A Wealth of Common Sense

‘Will I ever retire?’: millennials wonder what’s on the other side of middle age – Guardian

Why stocks are the greatest asset class – Of Dollars and Data

Six myths about working in retirement – Which

We suffer more often in imagination than in reality – Life After The Daily Grind

Just asking questions – Money With Katie

Don’t beat up your opponents too badly while smiling – Financial Samurai

Geriatric millionaires: why Boomers keep getting wealthier – Guardian

How the English clergy popularised discounted cashflow analysis – MIT [h/t Abnormal Returns]

Naughty corner: Active antics

Lessons from the Warren Buffett way – Flyover Stocks

Why front-page news can mislead investors – Morningstar

Six charts that explain why US stocks are going up… – Tker

…and why you should consider small caps on valuation grounds – CFA Institute

Hedge fund talent schools are looking for the perfect trader – Bloomberg via Yahoo

Why corporate bonds are so hot right now [Search result]FT

Betting with a weak hand – Behavioural Investment

Millionaire exodus mini-special

Record 9,500 millionaires expected to leave the U.K. this year – Fortune

Wealthy foreigners step up plans to leave UK as taxes increase [Search result]FT

Kindle book bargains

A Man for All Markets by Edward O. Thorpe – £0.99 on Kindle

Doughnut Economics by Kate Raworth – £0.99 on Kindle

Taxtopia by The Rebel Accountant – £0.99 on Kindle

The $100 Startup by Chris Guillebeau – £0.99 on Kindle

Environmental factors

A wild place in Cheshire that should not be bulldozed – Guardian

‘You’ll never find an insurer saying, “I don’t believe in climate change”[Search result]FT

Iberian lynx no longer endangered after numbers improve in Spain and Portugal – Guardian

Global renewable energy capacity through time [Infographic]Visual Capitalist

The climate is the economy – Slate

Robot overlord roundup

AI took their jobs. Now they get paid to make it sound more human – BBC

The Goldilocks zone – Not Boring

Apple is smart to go second on AI – Professor Galloway

Better than Google – Seth Godin

AI cameras used at London stations to detect passengers’ emotions – Standard

Off our beat

The rise in DINKs, SINKs, DINKWADs, KIPPERs and more… – Forbes

…although more young people are becoming NEETs, too – Yahoo Finance

The world is running out of soldiers – Vox

Some scientists think extreme heat is why people keep disappearing in Greece – CNN

Japan’s abandoned houses wipe $25bn off nearby property – Nikkei Asia

The scammy ads fuelling app gaming – Sherwood

What Frank Lloyd Wright tells us about late bloomers [Search result]FT

Is moving like an animal the secret to good health? – Guardian

And finally…

“It was always the becoming he dreamed of, never the being.”
– F. Scott Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise

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