What caught my eye this week.
Ever wonder what happened to that great little money or travel or cookery blog you read for years?
Yeah, it closed down – or at least its creators stopped updating it.
Why would they? Nobody visits anymore.
But maybe you didn’t notice because Google no longer takes you there, anyway.
Google search results are now dominated by big corporates who create content that’s made more to appeal to Google’s search engine than readers, and who can afford to pay SEO experts to keep up with Google’s endless rule changes.
To some extent Google’s apparent capriciousness was well-intentioned, as it’s fought to outrun spam sites and AI slop, and other gaming of the system.
But the end result is that the death of the independent web continues apace, with the damage done by waves of Google algorithm changes now redoubled with a kick in the balls from AI chatbots and AI search.
You don’t have to take my word for it:
- ‘AI is killing the web [1]‘ warned The Economist earlier this month.
- Venture capitalist Tom Tonguz shared data [2] showing how OpenAI already gets about a quarter of the queries Google gets every day.
- In response, Google is including more AI summaries in search results. And people tend not to follow [3] these links to see where the data comes from.
It’s all an existential threat for anyone who creates the content that AI outfits train their models on, which they then regurgitate to their users freely instead of directing back to the original source.
We’re all in it together
Fortunately I ignored Google – and some well-meaning people who worked there – when they assured me that small publishers had nothing to worry about.
I realised the future of Monevator must be as an email newsletter – where we can sidestep search and the web altogether – and with our best posts reserved for those who pay to support our ongoing efforts.
After 15 years of sharing our knowledge for free it was a hard decision to make.
But honestly, introducing paywalled Monevator content two years ago has kept the lights on at Monevator Towers.
Ever more of you have become Monevator members [4]. We’re grateful to every one.
Our member-only content archives are getting pretty well-stocked, too:
- Our Mavens [5] articles (for all our members)
- Our Moguls [6] articles (for active investors – or simply our biggest supporters!)
Only a small percentage of members ever cancel (‘churn’, in the industry lingo) which is also heartening.
So if you’re not a member, please do sign up [4]. The price is still the same as two years ago. Annual Mavens membership is a steal!
A greater share of our content will probably have to go behind the paywall in the years ahead – perhaps including Weekend Reading.1 [7]
I don’t like it either. But I don’t run a tech giant and I didn’t make up the rules.
How to get Monevator membership for free
On the grounds that some of you must like what we do, I’m introducing a referral program.
This way you can tell your nearest and dearest, and bag yourself an ongoing discount as a small thank you from us for your troubles.
To benefit, you must be on an annual membership plan. Not a monthly plan.
Most of you are already annual members. But if you’re not then please switch before referring anyone, as it won’t count otherwise. (Annual is cheaper, too!)
- See the membership FAQ [8] for how to change member plans
Already an annual member? Great, then by referring friends and family who would enjoy Monevator to sign-up to our annual memberships via your personal link, you can get a recurring discount on your own membership as follows:

Yep – find ten lucky people who become Monevator members on annual plans and you’ll get your own membership plan for free, forever!
- You will find your unique referral code to share via your membership account settings. See the membership FAQ [8] for more details
I stress again, both you and your referees must be annual members for the referral to count.
The software handles referrals automatically and I can’t change things later, so please do take note of this.
Monevator versus Skynet
Obviously I hope these referrals will get us a few more members. But I also see the discounts as a tiny way to thank our most loyal readers.
I know it will take a long time for most people to get to ten referrals, if ever. (Though if you run a website – or have a lot of money-savvy workmates – who knows?)
But I love the idea of our top supporters getting even just a few quid off.
So again, please see the membership FAQ [8] to learn where to find your unique referral code, and give it a go.
And thanks again for supporting us fleshy and bloody humans over the robots!
P.S. I forgot to include the link [10] to my new property newsletter Propegator [10] last week. Not very good at this promo malarkey, am I? Anyway it’s just a fun hobby project, but if you live in London you might like it so please do take a look [10].
From Monevator
Gold miners: do they improve your portfolio? [Members] – Monevator [11]
Going without versus doing without – Monevator [12]
From the archive-ator: How to invest in sectors, themes, and megatrends – Monevator [13]
News
Average house price registers steepest drop for 20 years – Rightmove [14]
UK vehicle making hits lowest level since 1953 – BBC [15]
Rachel Reeves’ capital gains tax changes backfire as receipts fall – MoneyWeek [16]
Government to conduct review into State Pension age – Sky [17]
City trader wins bid to overturn LIBOR-rigging conviction – Standard [18]
Brewdog to close 10 pubs across UK, citing ‘ongoing industry challenges’ – BBC [19]
BNY, Goldman agree tokenised money market fund deal – The Block [20]
Wise co-founder slams ‘inappropriate and unfair’ US listing move – Standard [21]
Payment on account deadline: 31 July to avoid HMRC’s 8.25% penalty – Which [22]

Wall Street is starting to warn about the stock market – Sherwood [24]
Products and services
FCA softens remortgaging rules in dash for growth – City AM [25]
How does NS&I’s new one-year savings bond compare to rivals? – This Is Money [26]
Get up to £2,000 when you switch to an Interactive Investor [27] SIPP. Terms and fees apply. – Interactive Investor [27]
Eight questions answered about cash ISAs – Which [28]
How to save money on airport parking – Guardian [29]
Get up to £100 as a welcome bonus when you open a new account with InvestEngine via our link [30]. (Minimum deposit of £100, T&Cs apply. Capital at risk) – InvestEngine [30]
Carmakers discounting EVs on fears they’ll not qualify for new grants – T.I.M. [31]
Cut the cost of using your mobile phone abroad – Be Clever With Your Cash [32]
Homes for sale with wild gardens, in pictures – Guardian [33]
Comment and opinion
Selling sales – Money with Katie [34]
Could the triple-lock really push state pension age to 74? – This Is Money [35]
“What I learned from being disinherited” – Daisy Goodwin [36]
Restrictions on capital flows should be considered [Paywall] – Financial Times [37]
Small, value, or small/value? – Klement on Investing [38]
The market has a short memory – Apollo Academy [39]
What if gold went the way of diamonds? – Abnormal Returns [40]
If active investing is the loser’s game, what is the winner’s game? – Morningstar [41]
Avoiding investment scams [Podcast] – Rational Reminder [42]
To Bitcoin or not to Bitcoin? The corporate cash question – Musings on Markets [43]
Gilts (again) mini-special
Investing veteran Peter Spiller: brace for a breakdown in UK gilts – City AM [44]
New OBR research paints a painful future for gilts – Interactive Investor [45]
Britain is at the mercy of the bond markets as debt spirals – This Is Money [46]
Naughty corner: Active antics
Should investors take another look at the rebounding property sector? – T.I.M. [47]
Japan’s dividend and buyback surge – Verdad [48]
Betting on GLP-1 – Market Sentiment [49]
Palantir’s valuation is insane – Sherwood [50]
Buffett’s intangible moats – Sparkline Capital [51]
An interview with renowned short-opportunity spotter Mark Hiley – FT [52]
Kindle book bargains
The New, New Thing by Michael Lewis – £0.99 on Kindle [53]
The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell – £0.99 on Kindle [54]
The Everything Store: The Age of Amazon by Brad Stone – £0.99 on Kindle [55]
Essentialism by Greg McKeown – £1.99 on Kindle [56]
Or try one of the all-time investing classics – Monevator shop [57]
Environmental factors
How can we negotiate with autocracies on the climate crisis? – Guardian [58]
Gene editing could save species on the brink of extinction – The Conversation [59]
Why Filipinos keep getting married in flooded churches – BBC [60]
In Ukraine’s bombed-out reservoir, a huge forest has grown – Guardian [61]
The right is waging war on climate-conscious investing – The Atlantic [62] [h/t A.R. [63]]
How plastic industry swamped vital global treaty talks – Guardian [64]
Robot overlord roundup
OpenAI and UK sign deal to use AI in public services – BBC [65]
The hater’s guide to the AI bubble – Ed Zitron [66]
Gaps in our knowledge of ancient Rome could be filled by AI – BBC [67]
Content and community – Stratechery [68]
ChatGPT advises women to ask for lower salaries, study finds – The Next Web [69]
Not at the dinner table
About that US-Japan deal – Paul Krugman [70]
CBS’ cancelling of The Late Show looks political – Daring Fireball [71]
Biting the Fed that feeds you – Sherwood [72]
The anti-immigration backlash comes to Japan – Noahpinion [73]
Fascism and first-time founders – Tech Dirt [74]
Life is (increasingly) luck mini-special
The Ovarian lottery – A Wealth of Common Sense [75]
Zero-sum thinking and the labour market – Kyla Scanlon [76]
Off our beat
Should old home movies be canned? – Next Avenue [77]
The sinister truth at the heart of the Coldplay kiss story – Guardian [78]
If GLP-1 drugs are so good, should we all be on them? – Derek Thompson [79]
Tales from the island of illness – More To That [80]
The rise and rise of country music – Stat Significant [81]
Seeing the lottery – Seth Godin [82]
And finally…
“If you’re the first out of the door, it’s not called panicking.”
– John Tuld, Margin Call [83]
Like these links? Subscribe [84] to get them every Saturday. Note this article includes affiliate links, such as from Amazon [85] and Interactive Investor [86].
- It takes more than a full working day to compile it, and for my trouble I’m advised Monevator is probably penalised for hosting what looks like a link farm. So it actually hurts our traffic! [↩ [91]]