Before any investment strategy, the choice of location is paramount. A stable country with strong property rights and rule of law provides the fundamental framework for wealth to compound across generations. Without this, even the best strategy can fail due to confiscation or conflict.

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Drawing from Sun Tzu and Charlie Munger, the key to long-term investment success is not brilliance in stock picking, but systematically avoiding common causes of failure. By identifying and steering clear of ruinous risks like excessive debt, leverage, and options, an investor is already in a superior position.

A board member's role includes flagging strategic risks, including geopolitical exposure that could drastically limit future acquirers or prevent an IPO. Advising a CEO to relocate teams from a high-risk country is not operational meddling, but a core governance duty.

Many LPs focus solely on backing the 'best people.' However, a manager's chosen strategy and market (the 'neighborhood') is a more critical determinant of success. A brilliant manager playing a difficult game may underperform a good manager in a structurally advantaged area.

For high earners, strategic tax mitigation is a primary wealth-building tool, not just a way to save money. The capital saved from taxes represents a guaranteed, passive investment return. This reframes tax planning from a compliance chore to a core financial growth strategy.

Advisors for wealthy Asian families face a complex challenge. They must help the founding generation with liquidity events (IPOs or sales) for their traditional businesses, while simultaneously catering to the next generation's vastly different, more global and tech-focused investment appetite (e.g., Mag-7, digital assets).

True generational wealth is rarely built in 401ks, which often just pace inflation. It's achieved via a three-step process: eliminate high-interest debt, build a foundation in public markets, and then network into private market investments like venture capital and real estate to access higher returns.

Simply "thinking long-term" is not enough. A genuine long-term approach requires three aligned components: 1) a long-term perspective, 2) an investment structure (like an open-ended fund) that doesn't force short-term decisions, and 3) a clear understanding of what "long-term" means (10 years vs. 50 years).

In the face of a true systemic collapse and hyperinflation, traditional financial assets become unreliable. The most effective long-term strategy is having a plan for physical relocation to a more stable economic region, preserving not just wealth but personal safety and opportunity.

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The secret to top-tier long-term results is not achieving the highest returns in any single year. Instead, it's about achieving average returns that can be sustained for an exceptionally long time. This "strategic mediocrity" allows compounding to work its magic, outperforming more volatile strategies over decades.

Jurisdiction Is the Most Critical Factor for Multi-Generational Wealth Preservation | RiffOn