About this episode
Jake Claver , after starting with nothing and betting big on digital assets during COVID, turned his financial instincts and crypto foresight into a booming $300M+ advisory firm in under a year. Now one of the fastest-growing RIAs in the world, Jake is bridging the gap between traditional finance and decentralized innovation, giving ultra-high-net-worth families a roadmap to preserve—and protect—their wealth for generations. Jake Claver shares how he built his business from a personal need for trustworthy digital asset guidance, what he learned from watching a client lose $30 million, and why legacy planning, ethics documents, and mission-driven governance are the new cornerstones of modern wealth. Key Discussion Points: How Jake turned a post-COVID market play into a multi-million dollar crypto portfolio Why most traditional wealth managers don’t understand digital assets—and what that means for investors The biggest red flags in digital asset management and how to avoid them What every Gen 1, Gen 2, and Gen 3 family office needs to future-proof their wealth The Rockefeller playbook: legacy planning that lasts beyond three generations Why high-net-worth individuals are moving from real estate into crypto How to merge TradFi safety with DeFi upside The most common (and devastating) mistakes people make in crypto today Takeaways: If you're not thinking about legacy, you're building on sand Crypto wealth requires more than returns—it demands protection Family charters and ethical frameworks are just as critical as tax structures The future of wealth is hybrid: institutional-grade custody meets decentralized flexibility Professional guidance in digital assets isn’t optional—it’s survival Closing Thoughts: Jake Claver isn’t just managing portfolios—he’s redefining how we think about wealth, legacy, and security in the digital age. In a world of volatility and misinformation, his approach proves that with the right structure, strategy, and values, crypto wealth can be built to last. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.