
In his book “Wealth, War and Wisdom”, legendary investor Barton Biggs examines how people preserved wealth during global upheavals – including World War II.
His conclusion is clear – those who survived financially didn’t bet everything on one horse. They kept a cool head, diversified their holdings and thought ahead.
🔑 What helped preserve wealth back then:
Real estate in safe countries
Land and housing in neutral or stable regions (like Switzerland or the US) helped preserve wealth when everything else collapsed.
Shares in leading companies
Long-term investments in solid businesses – especially US industrial and consumer brands – bounced back and delivered returns.
Gold and precious stones
Classic safe-haven assets during hyperinflation or currency collapse. Hard to move or sell – but often a “currency of last resort”.
Physical assets abroad
Farms, wineries, warehouses, artworks – anything held outside conflict zones could serve as a post-crisis foundation.
Cash in hard currency
Freely convertible currencies (like the US dollar or Swiss franc) enabled investors to buy assets cheap in the aftermath.
📌 What it means today:
- Diversification isn’t luxury – it’s survival.
- A global perspective matters – don’t keep everything in one country. Investing beyond your borders is smart insurance.
- Safety is more important than returns. In a crisis, the goal isn’t profit – it’s preservation.
- History is not just a textbook, but a guide to action. Those who learn from the past have a chance to avoid repeating others’ mistakes.
💡 The takeaway?
Wealth can survive war – but only when managed wisely. Greed, haste and hope rarely make it through the first round.
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