Stability before growth: why investors need a financial safety net

When people talk about a financial safety net, they usually picture something simple: money “for a rainy day,” a cash reserve, a bank deposit. This is true – but only at the basic level. For someone with meaningful capital, the concept is broader: a financial safety net is not merely a sum of money, but a properly designed “Plan B”: a separate liquid layer of capital, insurance policies covering key risks, alternative residency options, contacts of specialized professionals in different countries, and clear instructions for trusted persons. All of this can be activated quickly and without damaging the long-term strategy. ...

Brokerage accounts, IIS-3, and foreign assets: tax logic for private investors in Russia in 2026

Fees, taxes, and inflation are an inevitable part of the investment process. They cannot be eliminated completely, but it is possible to understand how they work and avoid unnecessary payments where the law provides legitimate ways to reduce the tax burden. That is the focus of this article. We will not examine dubious schemes or methods of tax evasion – instead, we will focus on a clear understanding of tax mechanics for a private investor in Russia: who withholds tax and at what point, which benefits are truly effective, which documents need to be kept, and where the line lies between legal tax planning and risky financial structures. ...

Once upon a time in Kazakhstan: how an experiment became an investment strategy

“Wait, you could actually do that?” This is the typical reaction I get when I mention my fairly successful investments in the Kazakh stock market in recent years. That said, I’m not promoting anything. The Kazakh market is not some “undervalued gem” that investors have somehow overlooked. This article is a story about a personal experiment that began spontaneously and, over time, developed into a thoughtful strategy – with its own methodology, challenges, and results . ...

How much does an investment advisor cost, and why transparency matters more

In one of my previous articles, I examined in detail how the economics of private banking works: mutual funds, discretionary management, structured notes, IPOs, real estate – and why “free” investing does not exist , even when it seems that you are not being charged anything for management or consulting. Today I would like to narrow the focus and talk about how financial and investment advisors earn money: what compensation models exist, how they differ from one another, and how my own model is structured. ...

“2 rubles, monsieur”: what is a strong currency? And when will the West finally “rot away”?

What makes a currency truly strong, why the ruble sometimes falls and then suddenly “strengthens,” why the yuan does not replace the dollar, and why talk of the West’s collapse looks more like a political TV series than an investment plan? A true investor thinks in dollars. Indeed, the US dollar is: the world’s main reserve currency, liquid and in demand a currency that can be transferred quickly and relatively cheaply to almost any point on the planet a currency in which you can open a bank deposit in almost any country a currency whose cash can buy almost anything almost anywhere, even where the US dollar is not officially in circulation the currency to which most stablecoins in the cryptocurrency market are linked a currency that even Vladimir Putin uses in his speech when discussing the growth of trade turnover between Russia and China with settlements in national currencies ...

Capital is there, but the system is not: a case study of a Russian executive after relocating to Europe

There is money, but no real sense of order. Some sits in deposits, some with a broker, some in cash. All of this seemed perfectly reasonable at one point. But the capital grew, and the situation changed. Add relocation, a change in tax residency, and sanctions-related restrictions — and you get a situation where even a financially literate person loses sight of the full picture. That was precisely the point at which my work began with one of my clients — a senior executive at a large company who, by the time we met, already had substantial capital but did not understand how to make the process of managing it more systematic and consistent. ...

Structured notes: the illusion of calm at an inflated price

2019, Moscow City – the financial nerve center of the capital. You are in a meeting room at a large brokerage firm on the 47th floor. Floor-to-ceiling panoramic windows reveal a dizzying view of the city that never sleeps. A pleasant assistant – Tanya, Masha, or whatever her name is – places a cup of freshly brewed coffee on the table, smiles, and leaves without a sound. Your personal manager, wearing a suit that costs more than some cars, confidently launches a presentation. The projector comes alive. Slide one of eighteen appears. ...

“Free” investing: the economics of private banking

Investing is never free. Yes, even “free” investing through a bank, brokerage firm, or asset manager. Usually, nobody sends you a separate invoice – the fees are simply embedded inside neatly packaged products with a personal manager, lifestyle services, privileges, and the overall feeling that your capital is being handled in a VIP format. This is convenient and, at times, genuinely justified. However, the investment value of such solutions is not always obvious, while total costs often exceed the price of working with an independent advisor. Over long periods, the difference may amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars – and for larger portfolios, millions. ...

Business is about growth. Capital is about resilience.

Are you a successful entrepreneur? Good. That means you have already proven that you know how to generate money — build products, structure teams and processes, take risks, and deliver results. Investors often forget this. A significant share of large private fortunes, both in Russia and globally, has been built not in public markets or real estate, but in business. This is indirectly confirmed by global studies (BCG Global Wealth, UBS Global Wealth Report). Almost all names on the Russian Forbes list are owners of real businesses: commodities, finance, IT, development, logistics. Business provides leverage and direct control over outcomes: in strong years, it can deliver returns unavailable to most private investors. ...

Reviews are useless: how to evaluate an investment advisor

Looking up reviews online is a natural instinct when choosing a financial or investment advisor. It makes sense. That’s how we choose restaurants, hotels, and products on marketplaces. At first glance, it may seem the same. But in investing, things work differently. Results here are a function of time, discipline, and the risks taken. Not a single good or bad decision. Over short periods, the same advisor can simultaneously have a satisfied client who benefited from a strong market and a dissatisfied one who entered right before a drawdown. ...