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Hi Friend,
Let me tell you about the most financially vulnerable person in America right now.
It's not who you think.
It's not the person living paycheck to paycheck on $40,000 a year. That person already knows they're exposed. They're not waiting to figure it out.
The most vulnerable person is the high income earner. The one making $200,000, $300,000, maybe more. The one who looks at their bank account and thinks: I'm doing great. I don't need to think about financial planning right now. I'll figure it out later.
But later is getting more expensive by the month.
I've been talking a lot about Iran this week. But Iran isn't the real threat to your financial future.
The real threat is the monetary system itself.
Every time there's a crisis, governments respond the same way. They print.
The US, the UK, the EU, Japan… they all face the same math. The debts are too large, the obligations too great, and the only tool available that doesn't require political courage is the printer.
That printed money has to flow somewhere. So it flows into hard assets. Real estate. Bitcoin. Gold. Equities. The things that hold value when the purchasing power of the dollar doesn't.
Now here's the part most high income earners miss.
Right now you're playing the P&L game. You earn income, you pay expenses, and whatever's left over is yours. The higher your income, the better it looks like you’re doing.
But inflation is slowly destroying the P&L game. Every year your income buys a little less. Every year the things you need cost a little more. The math that works today gets harder every year.
At some point the P&L game will stop working. Your income won't be enough to fund the lifestyle you've built. Not because you did anything wrong. Because the system is designed to erode purchasing power over time.
The only way to win at that point is the balance sheet game.
Instead of funding your lifestyle with income, you fund it with a personal treasury. You acquire hard assets that compound faster than inflation and you borrow against them to live.
Your assets keep growing. You never sell. You never pay capital gains. And the system that's working against the P&L player starts working for you.
But here's the catch.
I call this a wealth battery. But to use the battery to power your life, you need to charge it in the first place. You need enough assets accumulated to make the math work. Enough collateral to borrow against. Enough compounding base to generate real liquidity.
And that battery is getting more expensive to charge every single month.
I believe we have about two years before prices get so high that you’re priced out entirely.
After that, the real estate is already owned. The Bitcoin is already held.
The people who understood this five years ago are already on the balance sheet game. Everyone else is still grinding the P&L and wondering why it feels harder every year.
The cruel irony is that the high income earner feels this last. The money keeps coming in. The lifestyle stays comfortable. Right up until it doesn’t anymore.
Iran will resolve. The next crisis will come. The printer will run again.
The only question is whether your battery is charged when it does.
On Thursday I'm doing a virtual live event where I’m going to show you how to charge your battery faster than you even knew was possible.
You can learn more here and sign up for free: https://link.1markmoss.com/jmr0e
See you there.
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