Financial Empire Reset is a macro-finance channel focused on understanding how financial systems rise, peak, and reset.
This channel connects historical financial cycles with today’s global economy, monetary policy, and central banking decisions — not through speculation, but through real frameworks used by professionals.
I hold a PhD in Finance with a focus on financial markets and central banks. I spent years teaching finance and banking at university level, then moved into the real economy, working inside some of the most powerful global corporations in the world before reaching top management. After that, I built and invested in multiple businesses, scaling four companies to 7–8 figure valuations.
Finance has shaped my life for over 20 years professionally — and over 40 years if you include growing up in a family of entrepreneurs and business owners.
Disclaimer:
This is not Financial Advice, but Financial Clarity for Educational Purpose Only.
Macro Finance Explained
I just published a video on Safe Havens.
These are the best options the playbook offers for you to be able to protect your wealth during the financial crash. I made a comparison between all of them so you can have them in today's macroeconomic context.
I encourage you to watch it and I really look forward to hear what your opinions are regarding which one should work best: cash, bonds, real estate, silver, or gold
4 months ago (edited) | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
I've been promising a video analyzing the Crypto Market. Yes, I have been saying it is still not mature enough to be what we all hope it will become. Yes, I know there will be many Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies fans who will say everything is perfect the way it is today, but the reality is that this market still has to take a few steps before it can become a true alternative to the current financial system.
In this video, I explore exactly that, and I encourage you all to check it out and leave a comment telling me how you feel about my proposals for improvement. Do you find them "too much"? Do you think it's impossible? Or maybe you think it is perfect the way it is today and want to defend it.
Let me know what you think. I am open to optimizing my perception, and if your proposals are better than mine, I will include them in a coming video on this topic.
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
Every crash starts the same way:
“This time is different.”
▶️ From tulip mania to crypto collapses, this video shows why history keeps repeating itself—and how to spot the warning signs early.
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
In 1999, losing money was a sign of genius.
Profit was considered a failure.
And “dot-com” was worth more than a real business.
▶️ Today’s video breaks down how hype almost wiped out the internet.
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
Everyone thought housing prices could only go up.
Banks believed risk could be “engineered away.”
And regular people trusted a system that didn’t protect them.
▶️ Today’s video explains what really caused the 2008 financial crisis—and why it wasn’t an accident.
4 months ago | [YT] | 1
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Macro Finance Explained
In 1929, America collapsed.
Wealth vanished. Jobs disappeared. Faith in the system shattered.
And yet… after all that devastation, nothing truly changed.
▶️ Today’s video explains why the Great Depression is a lesson we keep refusing to learn.
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
BlackRock didn’t panic.
It repositioned $2.1 trillion.
That’s not emotion.
That’s pattern recognition.
When the largest asset manager in the world quietly moves capital away from the reserve currency issuer,
what do you think they’re seeing that retail investors aren’t?
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
1929 had one bubble.
2000 had one bubble.
2008 had one bubble.
2026 has four, all peaking at the same time.
Commercial real estate.
Stocks.
Government debt.
The consumer.
If one system breaking causes a recession,
what do you think happens when all four feed into each other?
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
In every collapse, paper wealth disappears first.
Not slowly.
Not fairly.
Overnight.
Bank balances.
Bonds.
“Guaranteed” claims.
History is clear:
paper burns, real things don’t.
Which category holds most of your net worth right now?
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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Macro Finance Explained
In 1944, Bretton Woods changed everything.
The dollar became the backbone of the global system.
Nations began holding their reserves primarily in USD.
Trade, debt, savings, central banks — all anchored to one currency.
Fast forward to today:
the U.S. owes $38 trillion it can never repay honestly.
So it doesn’t default.
It dilutes.
Every new dollar issued reduces the real value of all dollars already in existence —
held by governments, pension funds, institutions, and individuals worldwide.
This means the U.S. is paying its debt by depreciating the wealth of everyone who holds dollars, not just Americans.
Inflation isn’t domestic anymore.
It’s global.
So when people ask, “Who is paying for this?”
the answer is simple — and uncomfortable:
anyone whose wealth is denominated in USD.
Knowing this, here’s the real question:
why would any rational system allow one country to export its debt through everyone else’s savings?
4 months ago | [YT] | 0
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