Global Wealth Architecture
Cross-border control. Currency discipline. Generational continuity.
Families operating across the United States and international jurisdictions face estate exposure, currency volatility, fragmented ownership, and succession uncertainty. Without coordinated architecture, capital becomes vulnerable to taxation, disruption, and generational dilution. This is global wealth architecture built for permanent structural control.

Cross-Border Wealth
Requires Control.
For international families, entrepreneurs, and private capital investors moving between Mexico, Latin America, and the United States, wealth can become exposed the moment it crosses borders. U.S. estate tax exposure, accidental tax residency, currency volatility, reporting obligations, fragmented ownership structures, and succession conflicts can quietly erode what took a lifetime to build.
Most traditional estate planning was never designed for globally mobile families operating across multiple tax systems, currencies, and jurisdictions. Without a coordinated cross-border wealth architecture, families risk losing control, liquidity, privacy, and generational continuity precisely at the moment wealth is meant to transition and endure.
U.S. Estate-Tax Exposure
- Non-U.S. persons with U.S. assets over $60,000 may trigger estate-tax filing at death
- U.S. citizens are taxed on worldwide assets
Becoming a U.S. Tax Resident by Accident
- Time spent in the U.S. can trigger the substantial presence test
- May cause worldwide-income reporting
Currency Risk
- Peso/dollar volatility
- Trapped liquidity
- Conversion timing
- Loss of purchasing power
Fragmented Ownership
- Assets across countries, entities, banks, and family members
- Succession confusion & probate
- Reporting gaps
- Creditor exposure
Reporting & Compliance
- FATCA / Form 8938 exposure
- FBAR obligations
- Serious reporting penalties
Exit-Tax & Residency Traps
- Expatriation rules
- Mark-to-market treatment
- Worldwide asset exposure
Legacy Dilution
- Estate taxes, divorces, lawsuits
- Forced distributions
- Heirs' mismanagement
- Cross-border legal conflict
Cross-Border Liquidity
- Premium financing
- High-cash-value insurance
- Legacy Bank liquidity architecture
- Generational continuity planning
Loss of Privacy & Control
- Public probate exposure
- Banking disclosure risk
- Multi-jurisdiction reporting
- Loss of centralized governance
Political & Jurisdictional Risk
- Government instability
- Regulatory changes
- Asset seizure exposure
- Cross-border enforcement risk
Wealth Often Outgrows the Family System
As wealth expands across generations, families often struggle with alignment, stewardship, communication, and long-term decision-making.
Global Families Live Across Multiple Realities
International families navigate different cultures, legal systems, institutions, priorities, and financial environments across multiple jurisdictions.
Transition Is Where Families Become Vulnerable
Succession, relocation, divorce, business exits, and liquidity events often expose weaknesses hidden during periods of stability.
Long-Term Continuity Requires Active Stewardship
Multigenerational wealth requires disciplined oversight, responsible administration, and long-term stewardship capable of adapting across generations.
International Families
Families seeking long-term protection, continuity, and governance for wealth held across multiple countries and generations.
Entrepreneurs & Business Owners
Founders expanding internationally who require coordinated planning for ownership, liquidity, succession, and long-term control.
Multigenerational & Dual-Citizenship Families
Families managing cross-border identity, residency, inheritance, and continuity across multiple jurisdictions and future generations.
The Legacy Preservation Trust is a six-layer architecture for tax efficiency, liquidity, strategic exits, and generational wealth preservation.
