Pinned

What Reading 51 Books Taught Me in 2025

In 2024, I began reading a book every week. I wanted to share what I’d read, so I posted a recap of my 2024 reading stats and lessons learned (see here). I was frustrated by how hard it was to share a list of all the book titles (see here), so I created a page about each book I read in 2024 (see here). I wanted to replace the Google Sheet I use to track all my reading, so I created a searchable library of all the books I’ve read (see here). I update it weekly.

Last year, 2025, was year two of consistently reading a book every week, and I want to share a recap of my stats and lessons learned. Sorry it’s late (the goal was January).

High-level stat for 2025:

  • Books read: 51

2025 breakdown by month:

  • January: 4
  • February: 4
  • March: 4
  • April: 4
  • May: 4
  • June: 5
  • July: 4
  • August: 5
  • September: 4
  • October: 4
  • November: 5
  • December: 4

If you’d like to know what those 51 books were, see my 2025 reading list here.

Here are a few things I learned along the way:

  • Reading for general information is critical if I want to generate new ideas—and I do. A Technique for Producing Ideas reinforced this. I have to learn about ideas so I can borrow from them when I’m trying to come up with a new one myself.
  • Rereading high-quality books is sometimes better than reading new books. I reread a few books last year, and that helped me a ton. I’m now trying to reread at least one book every month.
  • Synoptical reading is key to leveraging books to solve hard problems or deeply understand something. See more here.
  • Framework books are a good fit for my personality, and they’re helpful. They give you the framework or process to use when you’re trying to accomplish something. They don’t give you the answer, but they show you how to get to the right answer.
  • I get the most out of books when I read with intention; that is, with a clearly defined purpose for reading that book. That purpose should be a problem I’m actively trying to solve or a topic I want to understand better. This year, I’ve started writing down the problem I need to solve or the topic I want to understand before I choose a book. That’s helped me do more synoptical reading and get more from my reading that I can quickly put to use.
  • There are no hacks with reading. I have to not only read but also do the work to understand what I’m reading. The best way to do that (that I’ve found so far) is to synthesize a book and share what I learned with others. But I haven’t found a way to be consistent with that.
  • Learning through reading doesn’t feel like a chore anymore. It’s something I enjoy doing in my downtime. The personal-growth aspect of it appeals to my curious nature, and I feel like I can sustain it for a long time.
  • Application of knowledge is the key to getting better outcomes. A priority of mine in 2025 is to apply what I’ve learned from reading, specifically around decision-making with imperfect information and probabilistic thinking.

Those are my takeaways and reading stats for 2025!

Pinned

Are Beaten-Down Tech Stocks Finally Cheap?

This week, I looked deeper into publicly traded software and technology companies. Over the last two or three months, some of these names are down over 30%. I wanted to know if they’ve become cheap and could appeal to value-minded investors.

Now, a lower stock price doesn’t mean a company is being offered at a cheap price (see cheap vs. low here). The only way I can determine if something is cheap is by determining its value first and then comparing its value to the price at which it’s being offered. If its price is below its value, it’s likely cheap.

I picked a few names and did some quick, back-of-the-envelope math to value them. I looked only at software and technology companies that were increasing in three areas: revenues (or equivalent), cash provided by operating activities, and free cash flow. Said differently, they had to be increasing top line, generating more cash, and putting more cash in their bank account.

I determined how much net cash each company has on its balance sheet. Think cash, treasuries, etc., minus short- and long-term debt. For example, a company has $ 4 billion in cash equivalents but $1 billion in total debt. Its net cash position is $3 billion.

I then subtracted that net cash amount from the market capitalization (i.e., valuation) to determine the enterprise value of the company. For example, a company with a $10 billion market cap but $3 billion in net cash has an enterprise value of roughly $7 billion.

Next, I looked at the statement of cash flows to determine the trailing 12 months of cash provided by operating activities. Some people like free cash flow, but I like cash provided by operating activities because it’s a good estimate of how much cash the company generated from its core business and could hypothetically distribute to shareholders. Again, this isn’t the perfect figure to look at, but for quick, back-of-the-envelope math, it does the trick for me.

I then divide the enterprise value by the trailing 12 months of cash provided by operating activities to determine the operating cash flow yield. For example, a company with a $7 billion enterprise value that generated $700 million in cash from operating activities in the last year is generating a 10% annual operating cash yield on an investment made at a $7 billon enterprise value. In theory, over 10 years (assuming no growth, no taxes, etc.), the company would generate an additional $7 billion in cash. It could distribute that $7 billion to shareholders, which means anyone who bought at a $7 billion enterprise value would have made their money back over those 10 years. Alternatively, if no distributions were made to shareholders, there’d be an extra $7 billion in the company’s bank account, so net cash would increase by $7 billion (assuming they didn’t reinvest any of the cash). This is a simple example that ignores lots of potential nuance, but you get the gist.

The result of my analysis was eye-opening. Some of the software and technology names I examined (mid- and small-cap companies) were trading at very attractive yields considering that the current 10-year treasury is ~4% and historically it’s ~6% (see here). One mid-cap software name was trading at an almost 9% yield. It’s an application software company, so the threat of AI is a real unknown for them and the durability of their cash flows isn’t crystal clear right now. But that’s still an attractive yield for a company that’s currently growing at over 20% and whose growth rate likely won’t go down in the short-term to medium-term.

My gut feeling is that the baby might have been thrown out with the bathwater. Some software and technology names are currently offering attractive operating cash yields. There’s more risk than with something like a 10-year treasury, for sure, but I’d imagine that savvy, value-oriented investors are analyzing these companies and closely watching the ones with strong moats that AI can’t easily erode and whose cash flows seem durable and likely to continue increasing.

I can’t predict the future, but my rough math indicates that today, some (not all) public software and technology company valuations reflect reduced potential downside (risk) and increased potential upside (reward).

I’m curious to see how things in the stock market play out going forward.

Pinned

100 Books in 100 Weeks: A Milestone

Yesterday, I shared a post (see here) that includes my reading stats for 2025. After writing it, I realized that since I began my book-a-week reading habit in April 2024, I’ve read 100 books in roughly 100 weeks. For whatever reason, that hadn’t occurred to me before yesterday. It made me feel accomplished and motivated, and it feels like a material milestone that I want to keep extending. So now I’m more motivated than ever to read a book every week!

Pinned

Apple Enters the Video Podcast Wars

I’m a huge fan of podcasts. Watching them is one of the main methods I use to learn. Whenever I’m trying to learn about a topic, I find the most knowledgeable and credible people (i.e., they’ve had outsize success) in that field and listen to them being interviewed on podcasts. Like many, I started off on Apple Podcasts, but over the last few years I’ve been consuming podcasts via YouTube. I don’t watch the videos, really; I just listen. But YouTube’s search and discovery algorithm makes it many times easier to find relevant podcasts. Combine that with the fact that most podcasts (even audio-only ones) can be found on YouTube, and it became hard to stick with Apple Podcasts.

Today, the battle for podcast dominance heated up a bit. Apple announced that its Podcasts app will start supporting video in addition to audio podcasts (see here). This likely isn’t enough to get me to switch back to Apple for podcasts, but it signals the importance of podcasts to Apple and how video is becoming a dominant part of the podcasting landscape.

I’m curious to see what other changes (if any) Apple makes to its Podcasts app. YouTube has shown how lucrative placing ads in videos can be, and I imagine Apple wants in on this revenue source—especially when you consider that they pretty much invented the podcast space.

Pinned

Weekly Update: Week 307

Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them

Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success

Cumulative metrics (since 4/1/24):

  • Total books read: 102
  • Total blog posts published: 679

This week’s metrics:

  • Books read: 1
  • Blog posts published: 7

What I completed in the week ending 2/15/26 (link to the previous week’s commitments):

  • Reread Limping on Water, the memoir of Philip Beuth about his time building Capital Cities Broadcasting and ABC along with Tom Murphy

What I’ll do next week:

  • Read a biography, autobiography, or framework book

Asks:

  • No ask this week

Week three hundred seven was another week of learning. Looking forward to next week!

Pinned

What I Learned Last Week (2/15/26)

Current Project: Reading books about entrepreneurs and sharing what I learned from them

Mission: Create a library of wisdom from notable entrepreneurs that current entrepreneurs can leverage to increase their chances of success

What I struggled with:

  • No material struggles related to this project this week.

What I learned:

  • No material learning related to this project this week.

That’s what I learned and struggled with last week.

Pinned

2026: Will It Be Good or Bad for Tech IPOs?

We’ve heard from lots of headlines and chatter that public software companies have seen their valuations dive. The stock market has seen more sellers than buyers for shares of these companies. Many narratives exist (a common one is that AI will disrupt these companies), but I’m not sure what the root cause of this multi-month sell-off is.

One thing I’m curious about is whether, and if so how, this tech sell-off will impact 2026 IPOs of tech companies. So far this year, we’ve seen 58 total IPOs (not just tech). This is about 31% above 2025, which had 44 by this time. So far, that’s strong.

With talk about SpaceX and other technology companies aiming for 2026 IPOs, I’m curious about whether the current turmoil will subside or persist, which likely will determine whether these IPOs will happen as planned or be shelved.

This is something I’ll be watching closely.

Pinned

Weekend Project: My 2025 Reading Review

At the beginning of 2025, I shared a post that included the number of books I read in 2024 and what I learned while establishing my reading habit. It also links to a page where you can see every book I read in 2024. Writing that post led to my creating a book list page (see here) populated with all the books I’ve read over the last decade or so. Every week, I update that book list with my latest read.

I read consistently in 2025, but I haven’t created a dedicated page for each book I read, posted my reading stats, or shared what I learned during my second year of consistent reading. So that’s my project for this weekend. I’m going to knock those three things out and pin that new post as the first one on my blog.

Next week, everyone will be able to see a bunch of info about the books I read in 2025.

Pinned

The Best Way to Learn Investing? Teach It

For several months, a close friend has been seeking to understand how to calculate a company's intrinsic value. I shared several books with him, but that didn’t do the trick. So, I told myself that the next time I was analyzing a company and calculating its intrinsic value, I’d loop him in.

Publicly traded software companies have been crashing for several weeks. They’ve reached levels where I suspected they might be priced below their intrinsic value. As I analyzed one company, I fired off a text message to my buddy asking if he wanted to go through it alongside me. Yes, he said.

An hour later, we’d walked through the financials of Snap Inc. (i.e., Snapchat) and he’d calculated an estimate of the company’s intrinsic value.

I learned a few things from the exercise. First, all the books in the world can’t replicate learning through doing. Working through a live example is the best way to learn, in my opinion. Second, it helps tremendously to have someone who understands the area help you learn something new. They can push you, explain nuances, and drastically accelerate learning (but they can’t do the work for you!). Last, the best way to learn something is to teach it to someone else. Explaining this process to my buddy forced me to identify gaps in my understanding and figure out simple ways to communicate complex things.

Overall, this was a fun exercise, and I’m glad I did it. I think this skill will help my buddy a ton, and I learned new ways to explain this topic simply.

Pinned

Google Just Borrowed $32 Billion in 24 Hours

Yesterday, I shared that Alphabet (Google’s parent company) was planning to issue some 100-year bonds. According to a Bloomberg article (see here), they were planning to raise around $20 billion. But they ended up raising almost $32 billion in debt in less than 24 hours. It looks like they sold $20 billion in debt Monday. And then raised another almost $12 billion in pounds sterling and Swiss francs. I don’t know why they’d raise in those denominations, and I’m curious to learn more about bonds and why they chose this strategy in particular.

I’m eager to learn more about the world of bonds, and this seems like the perfect time.