Research
Latest
Frameworks
Liquidity ≠ Solvency — A Structural Primer
Beginner Learning Path — Part 2 of 5 This essay is part of the Beginner Learning Path and builds directly on the previous essay. → Previous: Custody ≠ Ownership — A Structural Primer → Beginner Learning Path Liquidity and solvency are often treated as the same problem. They are not. Liquidity describes the ability to
Structure
Why Wealth Systems Fail Without Memory
Beginner Learning Path — Part 5 of 5 This is the final essay in the Beginner Learning Path. → Previous: Where Control Lives → Beginner Learning Path Most wealth systems are built to measure value. Very few are built to remember how that value was created, protected, or nearly lost. This omission is
Frameworks
Custody ≠ Ownership — A Structural Primer
Beginner Learning Path — Part 1 of 5 This essay is part of the Beginner Learning Path. If you have not started at the beginning, read the overview first. → Start at the Beginner Learning Path Custody ≠ Ownership — A Structural Primer 1. Restating the Core Distinction Custody and ownership are often treated
Market Structure
Where Control Lives
This is Part 4 of 5 in the Beginner Learning Path. * Previous: Incentives Define Outcomes Markets do not fail because prices move. They fail when control concentrates invisibly. Control determines: – who can act – when they can act – under what conditions Ownership does not guarantee control. Liquidity does not guarantee access.
Synthesis
When Liquidity, Custody, and Control Diverge
Liquidity, custody, and market structure are often discussed independently. In practice, they are inseparable. Liquidity determines whether an action is possible. Custody determines who can act. Market structure determines how stress propagates. During periods of abundant liquidity, these distinctions appear academic. Assets move freely. Access feels universal. Risk appears distributed.
Research
Exchange Flows During Liquidity Contraction
Frameworks
Liquidity ≠ Solvency
Liquidity and solvency are often conflated. They are not. Liquidity determines whether obligations can be met in the short term. Solvency determines whether obligations can be met at all. A system can be solvent and still fail due to illiquidity. It can also appear liquid while masking insolvency. Liquidity stress
Frameworks
Custody ≠ Ownership
Custody and ownership are often treated as interchangeable. They are not. Ownership defines who bears economic risk and benefit. Custody defines who controls the asset operationally. When these two diverge, failure modes emerge. In traditional financial systems, custody is deliberately layered. Legal ownership, beneficial ownership, and operational control are separated