The Power of Tangible Wealth: Gold, Real Estate, and the Human Obsession with the Physical.
Gold and other precious metals are challenging the U.S. dollar’s dominance as the world’s reserve currency, signaling a global shift in how investors protect and diversify their wealth.
What has happened since the NFT and crypto bubbles of 2021 and 2022? We’ve seen that the only real asset in times of uncertainty are physical assets and more increasingly bitcoin. Smart money has been shifting towards physical assets since early 2024, with gold finishing the year strong and reaching record highs by October.
What does this shift mean for the global economy, and what signals can we take from it? Ultra-high-net-worth investors are quietly losing confidence in the world’s largest economy. With U.S. debt ballooning over the past two decades, it has become increasingly apparent that finding a sustainable solution is proving difficult.
Gold, real estate, and even the recent Hollywood-style museum heist at the Louvre all point to one undeniable reality: physical assets are having a moment. As uncertainty grips global markets, tangible wealth is regaining importance.
History reminds us that during World Wars I and II, many who fled conflict did so carrying only what they could—family jewels and gold. Those assets allowed them to rebuild their lives in new countries.
Today, as nations grow more divided and geopolitical tensions rise, we’re seeing echoes of that behavior. In the family office world, ultra-high-net-worth investors are once again prioritizing mobility, security, and portability—seeking assets that transcend borders, such as gold, real estate, and fine art.
These are not just stores of value, they are symbols of resilience in an era where confidence in traditional financial systems continues to crumble and the world prepares to see what comes next.
As I continue to explore options with family offices and build a path forward, the focus, in addition to physical assets, is on finding a Plan B residency to call home and feel safe in. As more billionaires buy bunkers and carve out pieces of paradise in places like Hawaii and New Zealand, it’s clear that planning for the future is essential and urgent. With pandemics and global instability on the rise, it’s only natural to seek regions that are less susceptible to these crises and better equipped to withstand them.
At the end of the day, it’s not about escaping; it’s about protecting and preserving. Wealth, when paired with foresight, becomes a shield , one that protects families from uncertainty while giving them the freedom to choose where and how they live.
The new definition of wealth is not dollars, but options.

