The Context
Why this. Why now.
Three forces are converging. Each is independent. Together, they redefine what "preserving wealth" means for the next decade.
The Quiet Debasement
The U.S. money supply has expanded by over 47% in the last six years. Public debt has crossed $39 trillion. The dollar is doing what every fiat currency has eventually done = losing purchasing power, slowly, then quickly.
What you held in 2020 is not what you hold today. What you hold today is not what you'll hold in 2035.
The Institutional Crossing
BlackRock, Fidelity, and the world's largest asset managers now hold over $200 billion in Bitcoin ETFs. Sovereign wealth funds are quietly allocating. Corporate treasuries are following Michael Saylor's playbook.
What was fringe in 2017 is mainstream in 2026. The question is no longer if Bitcoin belongs in serious portfolios, it's how, and how much.
The Great Wealth Transfer
Over the next two decades, $84 trillion will pass from baby boomers to their heirs. The largest intergenerational wealth transfer in human history. Most of it will move through outdated structures (trusts, wills, accounts not built for digital assets).
The question isn't only "what do I own?" It's "what survives me, and how cleanly?"
You need to position correctly for the next decades.
The earlier you start, the smaller the cost of being right.


