TOPLEY’S TOP 10 February 12, 2026

1. Tech vs. Non-Tech Stocks

Tech Top (Relative Terms): on a relative basis US tech stocks have not only peaked but broken sharply lower vs non-tech stocks.


2. S&P Companies Replacing Stock Buybacks with Capital Spending

Kalani o Māui


3. Stock Trading Daily Turnover $1 Trillion

The Kobeissi Letter


4. Robinhood -34% 2026….. 4th Quarter Crypto Trading Revenues Decreased -38%

Google Finance


5. Rolling Mini-Bear Markets in Sub-Sectors Due to AI Disruption

Real Estate Services Stocks Sink in Latest ‘AI Scare Trade’-Bloomberg

By Janet Freund and Arvelisse Bonilla Ramos

Bloomberg


6. Central Banks Buying and Selling Gold 2020-2025

Visual Capitalist


7. Social Security and Poverty-Ben Carlson

A Wealth of Common Sense


8. Russia Running Out of Soldiers

Semafor


9. Majority of Americans Low Confidence in Journalists to Act in Public’s Best Interest

Pew Research Center


10. 26 Rules to Be a Better Thinker in 2026

What follows is my advice for what you’re going to need more than ever in this brave new world—26 rules for becoming a better thinker. 

– Take another think. The problem with our thoughts is that they’re often wrong—sometimes preposterously so. Nothing illustrates this quite like what’s called an “eggcorn,” words or expressions we confidently mishear and then contort to match our misperception. “All for not” instead of all for naught. “All intensive purposes” instead of all intents and purposes. But the greatest eggcorn is doubly ironic: people who say “you’ve got another thing coming” are, in fact, proving the point of the actual expression, “you’ve got another think coming.” We need to be able to slow down and use a second think. Especially when we’re sure what we think is right. (And by the way, at least 50% of the time I have to ask ChatGPT to think again because it’s answers are obviously wrong). 

– Take walks. For centuries, thinkers have walked many miles a day—because they had to, because they were bored, because they wanted to escape the putrid cities they lived in, because they wanted to get their blood flowing. In the process, they discovered an important side-effect: it cleared their minds and made them better thinkers. Tesla discovered the rotating magnetic field—one of the most important scientific discoveries in modern history—on a walk through a Budapest park in 1882. Hemingway took long walks along the quais in Paris whenever he was stuck and needed to think. Nietzsche—who conceived of Thus Spoke Zarathustra on a long walk—said: “It is only ideas gained from walking that have any worth.” I have never taken a walk without thinking, after, “I am so glad I did that.”

– Embrace contradiction. F. Scott Fitzgerald said, “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.” The world is complicated, ambiguous, paradoxical. To make sense of it, you must be able to balance conflicting truths.. F. Scott Fitzgerald said, “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.” The world is complicated, ambiguous, paradoxical. To make sense of it, you must be able to balance conflicting truths.

– But don’t confuse complexity with nonsense. Stupid people are especially good at having a bunch of contradictory thoughts in their head at once. So the first-rate mind Fitzgerald described isn’t just about tolerating contradiction—it’s really about the ability to examine and interrogate it. It’s asking, Does this actually make sense? 

– Go to first principles. Aristotle taught that one must go to the origins of things, go all the way to the primary truth of the matter, instead of just accepting common observation or belief. Don’t just blindly accept what everyone else seems to say or believe. Go to first principles. Instead of engaging with an issue from a headline, a tweet, or a take, go to the beginning. Break things down and build them back up. Put every idea to the test, the Stoics said. The good thinker approaches things with a fresh set of eyes and an open mind. 

– Think for yourself. Generally, people just do what other people are doing and want what other people want and think what other people think. This was the insight of the philosopher René Girard, who coined the theory of mimetic desire. He believed that since we don’t know what we want, we end up being drawn—subconsciously or overtly—to what others want. We don’t think for ourselves, we follow tradition or the crowd.

– Don’t be contrarian for contrarian’s sake. Peter Thiel, widely considered a “contrarian,” (and a big fan of Girard) once told me that being a contrarian is actually a bad way to go. You can’t just take what everyone else thinks and put a minus sign in front of it. That’s not thinking for yourself. So in fact, if you find yourself constantly in opposition to everyone and everything (or most consensuses) that’s probably a sign you’re not doing much thinking. You’re just being reactionary. 

– Ask good questions. When Isidor Rabi came home from school each day, his mother didn’t ask about grades or tests. “Izzy,” she would say, “did you ask a good question today?” This doesn’t seem like much, and yet it is everything. After all, questions drive discovery. The habit of asking questions turned Rabi into one of the greatest physicists of his time—a Nobel Prize winner whose work led to the invention of the MRI. Questions are the key not just to knowledge but to success, discovery, and mastery. They’re how we learn and how we get better. And they don’t have to be brilliant, probing, or incisive. They can be simple: “What do you mean?” They can be inquisitive: “How does that work?” They can aim for clarity: “Sorry, I didn’t understand, can you explain it another way?” The point is to stay curious. To never stop asking questions.

– Watch your information diet. When I’m not feeling great physically — tired, irritable, sluggish — usually it’s because I’m eating poorly. In the same way, when I feel mentally scattered and distracted — I know it’s time to focus on cleaning up my information diet. In programming, there’s a saying: “garbage in, garbage out.” Aim to let in the opposite of garbage. Because that leads to the opposite of garbage coming out.

– Go deep. I thought I knew a lot about Lincoln. I’d read biographies, watched documentaries, interviewed scholars, visited the sites. I’d even written about him in my books. So when I sat down to write about him in Part III of Wisdom Takes Work, I thought I was set. I wasn’t even close. So I went deeper. I read Hay and Nicolay. Doris Kearns Goodwin’s 944-page Team of Rivals. Michael Gerhardt’s 496-page book on Lincoln’s mentors. David S. Reynolds’s 1088-page Abe. David Herbert Donald’s 720-page Lincoln. Garry Wills’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book on the Gettysburg Address. I spoke with the documentarian Ken Burns about him, and Doris too. I read Lincoln’s letters and speeches. I went, multiple times while writing the book, to the Lincoln Memorial. In the end, I spent hundreds of hours reading thousands and thousands of pages on the man. Basically, I “dug deeply,” as Lincoln’s law partner once said of Lincoln’s own approach to learning, in order to get to the “nub” of a subject. This is a skill you need. Whether you’re an author, politician, lawyer, entrepreneur, scientist, educator, parent—you have to be able to pursue an idea, a question, a thread of curiosity until you’ve gotten to the nub and wrapped your head completely around it.

https://ryanholiday.net/26-rules-to-be-a-better-thinker

TOPLEY’S TOP 10 February 11, 2026

1. Staples Sector Forward PE Equal to Tech

The Irrelevant Investor


2. Market Breath Surging….65% of Stocks Outperforming Over Last 3 Months


3. Small Cap Earnings Growth at Highest Level in 3 Years

R3K earnings growth. And finally, “earnings growth for the median Russell 3000 stock is at its highest level in four years. Fundamentals are in line with the stock market broadening.”

Daily Chartbook


4. Goldman Predicting Record IPO Year 2026

Google


5. Huge Amount of Short Selling…Not Usually a Sing of Market Top

Hedge fund shorts. “Short selling across single stocks last week was the biggest on record going back to 2016”.

Goldman Sachs via @macrocharts


6. Copper Inventories at All-Time Highs

Bloomberg The US has quietly built up its biggest stockpile of copper in decades, distorting flows of the red metal to the rest of the world.

The influx of copper into American inventories has gathered momentum over the past year and added to upward pricing pressures. The higher prices have reverberated across the copper supply chain.

Bloomberg


7. U.S. Total Oil Production Declining for the First Time in 5 Years

Otavio (Tavi) Costa


8. Polymarket Odds 57% that Digital Asset Clarity Act Passes

Perplexity


9. Leading Crypto Political PAC Raises $193M

Axios


10. 2 “Annoying” Habits That Actually Signal Intelligence

If you’re prone to these two “annoying” habits, you could be smarter than you think. Mark Travers Ph.D.

Key points

  • Mind wandering can support creative thinking and cognitive flexibility.
  • Talking to oneself can support self-regulation, planning, and metacognition.
  • When we idealize focus, discipline, and a silent mind, we overlook powers of the brain beyond concentration.

We often judge habits like a drifting mind or moments of spontaneous “zoning out” as flaws. To most people, these are considered signs of poor focus, weak discipline, or even cognitive decline.

However, what we often fail to factor in is that our perceptions are influenced by the culture of relentless productivity and tangible rewards that surrounds us. From this lens, these mental habits will obviously look like distractions that need to be corrected, rather than cognitive processes that simply need to be understood.

Psychological research tells us that, under the right conditions, these seemingly unproductive behaviors can reflect cognitive flexibility, creative problem-solving, and the brain’s ability to adaptively shift between modes of thought. In other words, rather than being mental glitches, they may be signs of an active mind doing important background work.

Here are two common behaviors many people dismiss or try to suppress, as well as what they really mean, when they can be helpful, and how to start approaching them with greater psychological nuance.

1. A Habit of Daydreaming

Mind-wandering, or the drifting of attention away from the present task toward self-generated thoughts, has long been considered a telltale sign of inattention. However, recent studies show that it can also support creative thinking and cognitive flexibility.

For example, a 2025 study involving more than 1,300 adults found that deliberate mind-wandering (that is, a person intentionally allowing themselves to daydream) predicted higher creative performance. Neuroimaging data suggested this effect was supported by increased connectivity between large-scale brain networks involved in executive control and the default mode network, a system associated with self-generated thought and imagination.

People with higher spontaneous mind-wandering tendencies also show better performance on task-switching paradigms, meaning they can shift mental sets more quickly, which is a clear sign of flexible thinking.

Another habit closely related to mind-wandering is an individual’s capacity for spontaneous thought. A 2024 study published in PNAS Nexus analyzed spontaneous thought samples from more than 3,300 participants using natural language processing. According to the results, unprompted thoughts tend to organize around goal-relevant information and support memory consolidation. In other words, this means that “idle” thinking often serves adaptive cognitive functions rather than being random mental noise.

It’s important to note, however, that mind-wandering isn’t a magic bullet. Its benefits will only take root when balanced with attention control. If you find your mind often drifting, and if you also have good focus and self-awareness, then you might be tapping into a mental mode that supports creativity, flexible thinking, and problem-solving.

2. A Habit of Talking to Yourself

Talking to yourself, whether silently in your head or softly out loud, might look odd or even neurotic from the outside. However, recent psychological research suggests that inner speech and self-talk can actually be used to support self-regulation, planning, and metacognition (the act of thinking about your own thoughts).

According to a 2023 study of university students published in the journal Behavioral Sciences, there is a considerable correlation between reported use of inner speech and measures of self-regulation and self-concept clarity. In other words, individuals who “talked to themselves” more often than others would report significantly clearer self-identity as well as better self-regulation.

Of course, this does not mean that self-talk directly signals higher intelligence. Instead, it suggests that inner speech may function as a cognitive scaffold, or as a way to organize complex ideas, sequence actions, and monitor goals.

This means that by externalizing thoughts internally (or quietly aloud), the brain may find it easier to reduce cognitive noise. As a result, it may also impose structure on abstract or emotionally charged problems more efficiently and effectively. So, if you catch yourself murmuring through your thoughts, it could be your brain’s way of scaffolding complex ideas, turning chaotic thinking into ordered plans or self-reflection.

However, as with mind-wandering, self-talk also benefits only in moderation. Excessive or negative self-talk, especially in the form of rumination or harsh self-criticism, can undermine focus and mental well-being. When used constructively, however, that same internal dialogue can transform half-thoughts into actionable plans.

What to Do if You Have These ‘Annoying’ Habits

If you have one or both of these supposedly “annoying” habits, then you must always remind yourself that there isn’t anything wrong with you; they’re both incredibly common and totally normal. However, despite their benefits, they aren’t necessarily guaranteed markers of genius, either.

In reality, the relationships between these habits and their associated productive behaviors are contextual and conditional. This means minds that wander with purpose, self-talk used for planning rather than rumination, and rest that is balanced with effort will correlate most strongly with enhanced thinking or creativity.

On the other hand, when these behaviors spiral into chronic distraction, anxiety, or disorganization, then they may risk becoming problematic. However, if an individual engages in them consciously and moderately, they can indeed be used as valuable tools. Here are three steps you can follow to use them adaptively:

  1. Notice context. Pay attention to when and where you typically start mind-wandering or talking to yourself. Are you daydreaming during monotonous tasks? Do you talk to yourself when trying to focus on something critical? Try giving yourself a 10-minute idle moment first, then return to the task.
  2. Use inner speech consciously. When planning or thinking through ideas, speak (silently or quietly) as if guiding yourself. That structure can help shape clarity.
  3. Allow mental rest. Schedule micro-breaks for reflection. Sometimes, the best ideas come when the brain has space and freedom to wander.

When we idealize focus, discipline, and silence inside the mind, we overlook the powers of the human brain beyond sheer concentration. The next time you catch your mind drifting, hear a soft whisper of self-talk, or notice your gaze drifting out the window, don’t immediately judge it as laziness or lack of control. Sometimes, it’s just your mind thinking in a language beyond tasks and deadlines.

A version of this post also appears on Forbes.com. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/social-instincts/202602/2-annoying-habits-that-actually-signal-intelligence

TOPLEY’S TOP 10 February 10, 2026

1. History of Emerging Market vs. S&P Cycle

Ben Carlson


2. Fund Flows Post October Nasdaq Peak

Since the Nasdaq peaked on October 29th, the money has been flooding into emerging markets, thematic funds, and cyclicals. ETF flow data shows a clear exodus from mega-cap tech into overlooked corners of the market.

Todd Sohn via Daily Chartbook


3. Notable Drawdowns


4. Big 4 Companies Spending $650 Billion 2026 on Capex

Dave Lutz Jones Trading ROTATION WATCH– Four of the biggest US technology companies together have forecast capital expenditures that will reach about $650 billion in 2026 — a mind-boggling tide of cash earmarked for new data centers and the long list of equipment needed to make them tick, including artificial intelligence chips, networking cables and backup generators.

The four companies “see the race to provide AI compute as the next winner-take-all or winner-takes-most market,” said Gil Luria, an analyst at DA Davidson. “And none of them is willing to lose.”


5. Russian Oil and Gas Revenue -50% in January

Janis Kluge


6. The Most Valuable Private Companies


7. The $20 Trillion Increase in U.S. Debt

King Report-US debt under Trump soared $8 Trillion or 40% from his January 2017 inauguration until Biden’s January 2021 inauguration.  US debt soared $8 Trillion during Biden’s term, or 28.77%.  US debt during Trump’s 2nd term has jumped $2.32 Trillion in ONE YEAR!

The King Report


8. Bitcoin ETF Hits 2024 Levels of Support

StockCharts


9. Disney Flip in Operation Income Over 10 Years-Prog G

Prof G Markets


10. How Do Family Offices Allocate-Barrons

Barron’s

TOPLEY’S TOP 10 February 09, 2026

1. The Magnificent 2


2. MAGS Mag 7 ETF Chart …Sideways Since Sept 2025

StockCharts


3. Software Forward PE Drop ….Forward P/E of Software ETF 55x to 35x

Perplexity


4. IGV Software ETF Right on Liberation Day Lows

StockCharts


5. Private Equity ETF PSP Failed 4x at New Highs

StockCharts


6. Defensives Still Close to Lowest Weighting in S&P 500 Since 1990

After a fascinating week in markets, today’s CoTD —updated from last week’s pack (link here)—shows that US defensive stocks remain close to the “cheapest” levels we’ve seen since our dataset begins in 1990. In other words, even with the recent rotation out of tech, the broader picture still shows limited impact when you zoom out.

For more colour on positioning and flows behind the recent equity move, see Parag Thatte’s latest weekly report (link here). Two themes stand out:

  1. Tech bounced on Friday from the bottom of its 10-year relative channel versus the S&P 500. Notably, it was sitting at the top of that channel back in October when the rotation began.
  2. The rotation away from tech began around the time Q3 earnings revealed a broadening of earnings growth—from a narrow set of sectors (mainly tech) to most sectors.

This second point is particularly interesting: improving earnings elsewhere may have helped create the conditions for the tech sell-off just as much as anything happening within tech itself. And while tech still shows the strongest earnings growth, today’s chart suggests that as other sectors improve, relative valuations become compelling enough for investors to reallocate.

Deutsche Bank


7. Murder Rate Per 100,000 People

Semafor


8. Source of Power by State 2025

Orennia


9. Unemployment Rate for College Grads in U.S. 2.5%-2.8%….Vs. China/India

Perlpexity


10. Super-Aged Societies-Demographics is Destiny

Visual Capitalist

TOPLEY’S TOP 10 February 06, 2026

1. Crypto Assets Lose $1.7 Trillion in Value Since October

Bloomberg


2. 2 X Leverage an Already  Leveraged MSTR -97%

Ben Carlson


3. For Short-Term Traders

Highs vs. lows. “This is a very split market. 16% of S&P 500 stocks are at 52 week highs while 5% are at 52 week lows. This only happened 3 other times: July 1990, August 2015, March 2025. Each were followed by at least a -10% $SPX correction in the next 2 months”.

@themarketstats


4. Palantir PLTR-A Series of Lower Highs and Close Below 200 Day

StockCharts


5. XLP Consumer Staples 15% Over QQQ 2026…XLP +12% vs. QQQ -3%

YCharts


6. Top 5 P/E with Exposure to Enterprise Software

Pitchbook


7. Countries with Largest Copper Reserves

Semarfor


8. Chile ETF +62% One Year

Google Finance


9. Home Sellers Outnumber Buyers Nationally

Barchart


10. Why your brain needs everyday rituals-The Big Think

Rituals serve psychological functions that go far beyond mere habit or tradition.

by 

Anne-Laure Le Cunff

Key Takeaways

  • Rituals — repeated, meaningful routines — give the brain structure when life feels uncertain.
  • Their predictability can calm stress, reduce mental load, and improve social interactions.
  • You can design small, personal rituals to actively program your brain for resilience, clarity, and connection.

A few years ago, during a particularly chaotic period at work, I started making my morning coffee the exact same way every day: same mug, same timing, same two minutes of silence while it brewed.

It wasn’t intentional; I was just too overwhelmed to think about it. But something interesting happened: Those two minutes became the calmest part of my day. Even when everything else felt out of control, I had this one predictable moment that somehow made the rest manageable.

I had just experienced the power of rituals completely by accident, and it wasn’t until I left tech to study neuroscience that I understood why that simple coffee routine had been so effective.

Rituals are some of the most powerful technologies invented by humankind.

Most people think of rituals as elaborate religious ceremonies or ancient traditions. But your life is actually filled with them.

Waiting for everyone to be served before eating, giving presents for birthdays and holidays, saying “hello” and exchanging scripted pleasantries, clapping at the end of a performance — all of these are rituals woven throughout our days.

Since the dawn of time, humans have used rituals to acknowledge one another, signal belonging, mark beginnings and endings, and more.

In fact, I believe rituals are some of the most powerful technologies invented by humankind. Think of them as repetitive, patterned, often culturally transmitted “software” that serves psychological functions that go far beyond mere habit or tradition.

The psychology and neuroscience of rituals

When people face stress, danger, or major life changes, rituals provide a sense of stability through structured actions. Having something concrete to do when everything appears uncertain reduces anxiety and feelings of helplessness.

This sense of agency extends to rituals’ broader social function: Shared routines make cooperation easier in times of stress. When a team huddles before a game, the action signals membership and commitment to the group.

Rituals also help us make sense of life’s most challenging moments. They mark transitions — such as birth, puberty, marriage, and death — and help us navigate events that feel overwhelming. They also support us as we forge a new identity through rites of passage. That’s why graduation ceremonies don’t just celebrate achievement; they help transform a person’s identity from “student” to “graduate.”

Lastly, rituals transmit culture across generations. Children learn gratitude from family dinner traditions, not from lectures about being thankful. Repeatedly doing something together works better than just talking about it.

Rituals are like a software upgrade for your nervous system. They affect your brain and body in three specific ways:

  1. Calm. Rituals help quiet the brain’s threat-detection system, especially the amygdala. When that system calms down, we feel more grounded. This is one reason repeating familiar sequences of actions helps during chaotic transitions.
  2. Clarity. Predictable steps activate parts of the prefrontal cortex involved in planning, which reduces mental load as your brain doesn’t have to constantly decide what comes next. This makes challenging tasks feel more manageable, especially under stress.
  3. Connection. When people move or speak in sync, the brain releases bonding chemicals, such as oxytocin and endogenous opioids. These make social interactions feel warmer and more trusting. That’s why shared rituals create a sense of “us.”

Most rituals are inherited from the culture around us — we simply adopt what we see others doing. But here’s the part I find most exciting: You don’t have to copy-paste rituals from others. You can consciously design rituals that serve your specific needs.

How to design your own rituals

Creating personal rituals that serve your specific needs only takes a bit of observation, experimentation, and reflection.

  • Start with observation. Notice the moments in your day when you feel scattered, stressed, or disconnected. These transition points are perfect opportunities for designing a new ritual.
  • Next, experiment. Pick one specific moment in your day and try a simple ritual. Maybe it’s making your morning coffee the same way each day, arranging your desk before work, or taking three deep breaths before important meetings. The key is choosing something small enough to stick with yet meaningful enough to feel intentional.
  • Finally, reflect and adjust. After a week or two, ask yourself: Does this ritual actually help? Does it feel natural or forced? Pretend to be a scientist and answer these questions from a place of curiosity. Tweak as needed.

The most effective personal rituals are simple enough to remember, specific enough to feel meaningful, and flexible enough to adapt to different circumstances. Start small with one daily ritual, then gradually expand your toolkit.

These repeated patterns of action will help you actively program your brain for resilience, clarity, and connection. Use them before exams, competitions, or challenging conversations. Keep experimenting and adapting them as you and your circumstances change.

Your brain is already wired to respond to rituals — you just need to give it the right patterns to follow.

https://bigthink.com/smart-skills/why-your-brain-needs-everyday-rituals