LogoLedger
Hand-drawn financial chart on graph paper with fountain pen resting beside it, natural window light casting a long diagonal shadow across the page

"the data was always there — we just weren't asking the right questions"

Vol. I, Issue 0
Launching Spring 2026
A Weekly Field Journal

The money storiesno algorithmwill tell you.

Every week, one carefully reported story about how ordinary people actually build, lose, and pass on wealth — told with the patience the subject deserves.

Free. No spam. Just the journal.

Weekly

Cadence

~12 min

Read time

No ads

Ever

Scroll
Generational Wealth Patterns·The Hidden Cost of Financial Inertia·When the Middle Class Stopped Saving·Inheritance & Identity·The Yield Curve as Social Barometer·How Ordinary People Beat Inflation·The Quiet Arithmetic of Retirement·Generational Wealth Patterns·The Hidden Cost of Financial Inertia·When the Middle Class Stopped Saving·Inheritance & Identity·The Yield Curve as Social Barometer·How Ordinary People Beat Inflation·The Quiet Arithmetic of Retirement·
Specimen Issues

What the journal reads like

Three stories from the upcoming inaugural issues — the kind of financial reporting that rewards slow reading.

Aged family financial documents and handwritten ledger entries spread across a wooden desk
No. 01
68%

of inherited wealth transferred to top 20% of earners

Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, 2022

Inheritance

The $84 Trillion Transfer Nobody Talked About

Wealth doesn't trickle down. It pools.

Between now and 2045, American families will pass down more money than at any point in recorded history. But the distribution follows a pattern that looks less like a river and more like a drought — vast amounts accumulating in narrow channels while most families inherit something closer to a story than a sum. We traced four families across three generations to understand why the same windfall lands so differently.

Preview in first issue
Subscribers only
Person reviewing financial spreadsheets and graphs at a mahogany desk with reading glasses
No. 02
3.2×

lifestyle inflation rate for households crossing $200K threshold

Ledger original analysis, BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey 2023

Behavior

Why Smart People Make Terrible Decisions at $200,000

The income that changes behavior isn't a million. It's two hundred thousand.

There's a specific income threshold where financial behavior stops being about scarcity and starts being about identity. We interviewed 34 households who crossed the $200K household income mark within the last five years. What we found wasn't a story about money. It was a story about who people think they are now — and the expensive gap between that self-image and their actual balance sheet.

Preview in first issue
Subscribers only
Handwritten grocery expense tracking notebook with receipts and pencil annotations
No. 03
2.4×

gap in real grocery inflation between bottom and top income quintiles

Ledger field research, 2024–2025

Inflation

The Grocery Store as Economic Observatory

The CPI measures a basket. Families live in a kitchen.

Official inflation figures capture an average experience that almost nobody actually lives. We spent six months tracking the full grocery receipts of eleven households across different income brackets in three American cities. The divergence in what inflation actually costs — not in aggregate, but per household per week — reveals a stratification that the headline number was never designed to capture.

Preview in first issue
Subscribers only
Seventy Years

The trend that reframes everything above it

Wealth concentration in America, 1955–2025. One line. Seventy years. The story the quarterly earnings calls don't tell.

"The data was never hidden. It was just inconvenient."

— From Issue No. 01: "The $84 Trillion Transfer"

Wealth Concentration Index

Top 10% share of total wealth · Normalized index · 1955–2025

Ledger Research
195519701985200020152025Post-war peak equalityTech boom beginsPost-crisis dipPandemic acceleration

Source: Federal Reserve DFA, Saez & Zucman (2020), Ledger analysis

First issue explores the full story ↗

Join the Waitlist

Reserve your seat
before the first issue lands.

The inaugural issue ships in Spring 2026. Subscribers receive it the morning it publishes — and nothing else until then.

Your question may shape a future issue. We read every one.

2,847readers on the waitlist

Growing quietly, one careful reader at a time.

FreeAlways free to readNo paywall, no tiers
WeeklyOne issue per weekSundays, 7am Eastern
No adsReader-supported onlyYour attention is the product of other newsletters, not ours