Compound interest one month. Tax-loss harvesting the next. Each issue a carefully folded broadsheet — patient as a long letter, precise as a balance sheet.
Depth defeats frequency.
here are already ten thousand newsletters that tell you what happened. Ledger tells you why it matters, how it works, and what to do about it — one subject at a time, with the space to get it right.
We spend four weeks on a single topic. We read the IRS publications, the academic papers, the court cases. We talk to the CFP who has run the numbers and the freelancer who made the mistake. Then we write it once, clearly, at the length it actually requires — never shorter for convenience, never longer for authority.
"One issue. 4,000 words. No ads, no affiliate links, no sponsored content. Just the subject, exhausted."
Every claim cites a primary source.
Dollar figures are inflation-adjusted to current year.
Tax advice is educational, not professional counsel.
Corrections are published in the following issue.
Early-career professionals who maxed their first 401(k)
Mid-life couples who want to understand their mortgage, not just sign it
Self-employed freelancers with no CFO but themselves
Three issues. Three proofs.
Click any issue to see the full table of contents. Every archive issue is available to subscribers.

The Compound Effect
Why time is the only variable that can't be bought
The number that will appear on your retirement statement in 2048 is not primarily a function of how much you earn. It is a function of when you start and whether you stop.
- 01The mathematics of patience
- 02Why your 401(k) statement lies to you
- 03Reinvestment: the invisible engine
- 04Tax drag and how to minimize it
- 05The 40-year model: three scenarios
- 06Behavioral traps that kill compounding

Tax-Loss Harvesting
Converting paper losses into real tax savings
Selling a losing position is not defeat. When done deliberately, it is one of the few legal mechanisms for manufacturing a tax asset from a market setback.
- 01What a realized loss actually means
- 02The wash-sale rule, fully decoded
- 03Harvesting across account types
- 04When NOT to harvest (the math)
- 05Automated harvesting: pros and cons
- 06Year-end vs. opportunistic timing

The Backdoor Roth
A legal workaround for high-income earners
The backdoor Roth is not a loophole in the pejorative sense. Congress created the conversion mechanism deliberately. Using it is not tax avoidance — it is tax literacy.
- 01Why the income limit exists
- 02The two-step conversion, step by step
- 03The pro-rata rule: the trap nobody mentions
- 04Mega backdoor: employer plan version
- 05Roth conversion ladders for early retirement
- 06Paperwork: Form 8606 explained
Every issue cites primary sources: IRS publications, SEC filings, peer-reviewed research, and named practitioners. No anonymous sources. No sponsored claims.
started writing Ledger because I kept having the same conversation. A friend would call — a nurse, a software engineer, a freelance photographer — and they'd ask about something they'd read. A backdoor Roth. Sequence-of-returns risk. The step-up in basis at death. Smart people. Good questions. And nowhere to read a real answer.
Financial media has two modes: the 800-word article that leaves out every important caveat, and the 400-page textbook that assumes you already know what a basis point is. Ledger lives in the space between. Long enough to be honest. Short enough to finish.
"I will never publish an issue I wouldn't hand to my own mother and say: this is the whole picture."
Each issue takes four weeks to write, fact-check, and edit. The topic is chosen because it's genuinely useful to the three people I picture when I write: the 29-year-old who just got their first brokerage account, the 47-year-old refinancing their second home, and the 38-year-old freelancer filing quarterly for the first time.
If you read the free sample and it's not what you were looking for, I'd genuinely like to know. The email address is real and I read every reply.
"The backdoor Roth issue saved me from a $4,200 pro-rata tax bill I didn't know I was walking into."
"I've read three books on investing. Ledger's compound interest issue taught me more in 19 minutes."
"Finally understand what I'm signing at my mortgage closing. Read the amortization issue twice."
"As a freelancer, the quarterly estimates issue was the first time I didn't just guess. Actual math."
"The writing doesn't condescend. It assumes you're intelligent and just haven't had the right explanation yet."
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