Modern Creator
Mark Moss | Wealth Engineering · YouTube

Give Me 7 Minutes And You Will Never Sell Anything Ever Again

How the top 2% borrow against their compounding assets instead of selling them — and why selling a $1M position could cost you $64M.

Posted
3 days ago
Duration
Format
Talking Head
educational
Views
25K
528 likes
Big Idea

The argument in one line.

Selling an appreciating asset to access its value is the most expensive way to get liquidity — borrowing against it at a rate below its growth rate lets you spend the money without breaking the compounding curve or triggering a tax event.

Who This Is For

Read if. Skip if.

READ IF YOU ARE…
  • You hold appreciating assets (stock, Bitcoin, real estate) and have considered selling some to fund a large purchase or life expense.
  • You earn over $100K but feel like your wealth is not growing proportionally to your income.
  • You want to understand how billionaires access liquidity without appearing on a tax return.
  • You have heard of the Buy, Borrow, Die strategy and want a concise 7-minute explanation of the mechanics.
SKIP IF…
  • You are in the accumulation phase with no meaningful asset base to borrow against yet.
  • You are looking for a deep dive on risk management, LTV ratios, or lender selection — this is the concept video, not the execution guide.
TL;DR

The full version, fast.

The top 2% never sell their compounding assets because selling breaks the exponential curve and creates a taxable event. Using the Rule of 72, a 20% CAGR doubles wealth every 3.5 years — meaning a $1M asset becomes $128M in roughly 21 years. Selling at the $2M mark to fund spending costs you $64M in foregone compounding. The alternative is borrowing against the asset at 7-10% interest, which is less than the 20% growth rate, leaving the asset intact and generating no taxable income. This is how 50% of Fortune 500 CEOs access liquidity. The critical caveat: executing this safely requires a risk framework — treasury doctrine, LTV limits, and liquidity buffers — that most retail investors do not have in place.

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Chapters

Where the time goes.

00:0000:33

01 · Hook + promise

Identity challenge opens the video. The one unsexy move teased without being named yet.

00:3401:29

02 · Compounding 101

Einstein's 8th wonder. Linear vs. exponential thinking. Human brain defaults to linear.

01:2902:15

03 · Rule of 72

20% CAGR / 72 = 3.5 year doubling. $1M grows to $128M in roughly 21 years. Miro whiteboard illustration.

02:1503:03

04 · The cost of selling

Selling at the first doubling ($2M) forfeits $64M in compounding. Emotional argument for never selling.

03:0304:07

05 · The borrow move

Take a loan at 7-10% against an asset earning 20% CAGR. Forbes article: richest people access billions without selling. 50% of Fortune 500 CEOs use this.

04:0705:42

06 · Tax + renting the liquidity

Selling = taxable event. Debt = no tax. Elon Musk/SpaceX example. Renting the liquidity as the core concept.

05:4207:04

07 · Risk warning + CTA

Treasury doctrine, LTV ratios, liquidity buffers. Surfing analogy. Warren Buffett Rule #1. CTA to a longer webinar.

Atomic Insights

Lines worth screenshotting.

  • Selling a compounding asset is not just losing the sale price — it is losing every doubling that would have followed.
  • A $1M asset at 20% CAGR becomes $128M in roughly 21 years; selling at the first doubling costs you $64M in foregone wealth.
  • Debt is never a taxable event; selling an appreciated asset always is — that asymmetry is the core of the borrow strategy.
  • 50% of Fortune 500 CEOs issue credit against their stock rather than selling it, according to Forbes reporting.
  • The break-even logic is simple: borrow at any rate below your asset growth rate and the math always favors holding.
  • Elon Musk borrowed against SpaceX to buy Twitter rather than sell stock — he accessed billions without a single taxable sale.
  • Einstein called compounding the eighth wonder of the world: those who know it earn it, those who do not pay it.
  • Warren Buffett's Rule #1 is operationalized through hedging every position, not through avoiding leverage entirely.
  • The surfing analogy applies: watching experts execute a dangerous strategy does not mean you are ready without the prerequisite training.
  • A treasury doctrine — defined LTV ratios, liquidity floors, risk leverage policies — is the prerequisite for leveraged asset strategy, not an optional add-on.
Takeaway

The real cost of selling is what you forfeit, not what you get.

WHAT TO LEARN

Every sale of a compounding asset breaks the exponential curve permanently — borrowing against that asset instead preserves the growth and avoids the tax hit simultaneously.

  • Compound growth is not linear: a 20% annual return adds 20% to an ever-growing base, which means selling at any point forfeits all future doublings, not just the current gain.
  • The Rule of 72 gives you a quick read on compounding velocity: divide 72 by your annual growth rate to find years to double — at 20%, that is 3.6 years per doubling.
  • Selling a compounding asset to fund spending forfeits not just the principal you withdraw but the $64M that would have existed from a single $1M position a decade later.
  • Debt is not a taxable event; a sale is — borrowing at 7-10% against an asset growing at 20% gives you cash, no tax bill, and a positive net spread.
  • Fifty percent of Fortune 500 CEOs borrow against their stock rather than sell it — this is not a hedge fund tactic reserved for billionaires, it is standard practice among anyone with a sufficiently sized asset base.
  • The strategy only works safely with a defined risk framework: know your LTV limits, maintain liquidity buffers, and have a written policy for what triggers paydown before you borrow a dollar.
  • The wealthy focus on loss prevention before gain maximization — Buffett's Rule #1 is not a passive principle, it is an active structural choice to hedge every position before sizing for upside.
Glossary

Terms worth knowing.

CAGR
Compound Annual Growth Rate — the year-over-year growth rate of an investment assuming profits are reinvested each period. A 20% CAGR means the asset grows 20% per year on the previous year's total value.
Rule of 72
A shortcut for estimating how long it takes an investment to double: divide 72 by the annual growth rate. At 20% CAGR, 72 / 20 = 3.6 years per doubling.
LTV ratio
Loan-to-Value ratio — the loan amount divided by the value of the collateral asset. Lenders and borrowers use this to define how much credit can be issued against an asset without excessive risk.
Treasury doctrine
A personal or institutional policy defining the rules under which you deploy leverage: maximum LTV, minimum liquidity reserves, conditions for paydown, and criteria for unwinding positions.
Renting the liquidity
The practice of borrowing against an asset to access cash without selling it — you pay interest to rent the purchasing power the asset represents while the asset itself keeps compounding.
Taxable event
Any transaction the IRS recognizes as generating realized gain or loss — selling stock, selling property, or receiving income. Taking out a loan is never a taxable event.
Resources Mentioned

Things they pointed at.

04:04linkForbes: How America's Richest People Access Billions Without Selling Their Stock
Quotables

Lines you could clip.

00:15
They never spend their assets ever. They issue credit against their assets.
The thesis in two sentences, no setup needed.TikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
02:36
In only three years, I made $64,000,000. That's what the law of compounding does.
Visceral number, no context required.IG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
05:00
I call it renting the liquidity. I can rent the liquidity against the asset without giving the asset up.
Memorable phrase introducing the core mechanic.newsletter pull-quote↗ Tweet quote
06:30
The wealthy never think about how much money they can make on a winning investment. They always think about how much they could lose.
Counterintuitive framing of wealth mindset.TikTok hook↗ Tweet quote
06:50
Rule number one: don't lose money. Rule number two: don't forget rule number one.
Buffett quote as punchline — clean CTA setup.IG reel cold open↗ Tweet quote
The Script

Word for word.

metaphoranalogystory
00:00The top 2%, they don't save the way you save. They don't invest the way you invest, and they don't retire the way you retire.
00:06The real difference, it's not really a secret asset, though. It's not a hedge fund, and it isn't an offshore account. It's one move.
00:13One single, repeatable, deeply, I don't know, unsexy move that the wealthy make and you don't.
00:19They never spend their assets ever. They issue credit against their assets. And today, I'm gonna show you what that actually looks like, what that means, why it changes everything, and why almost nobody outside of the top fraction of the percent are doing it.
00:31You ready? Let's go. Now before we can get into how they do this and maybe why you might want to copy them, other than why copying success is always a good thing to do, let's talk about what.
00:42Let's talk about what they're trying to save themselves from. So what happens is assets are hopefully growing if you make the right investment assets, and they have what's called compound annual growth. So they're compound.
00:52Compounding means that it's growth on top of growth. Now most people don't understand this. The human brain really is, uh, makes it difficult to even comprehend what this means.
01:01Now Einstein called the compounding the eighth wonder of the world. He said that those who know it earn it, and those who don't know it, they pay it.
01:09So what that means is there's no standing still in this life. That means that you're either growing your wealth or you're giving your wealth up. You're either earning it or you're paying it.
01:17And again, the human mind can't understand this, and the reason why is because the human mind thinks linear like this. So if I continue to save and if I continue to invest, I start with a 100,000 and maybe I end up with a million over here.
01:30But that's not how the law of compounding works. The law of compounding me can be summed up pretty simply, and we use something called the rule of 72. So we take the yield that we earn, and we divide it by 72.
01:40So let's just say, hypothetically, Bitcoin's two hundred moving day average is about a 30% CAGR, compound annual growth rate, somewhere between 30 to 50. Let's just call it 20 just for easy numbers. So I have a 20% compound annual growth rate divided by seven two equals three point five years.
01:57So what that means is my wealth doubles every three point five years. So if I start with 1,000,000, in three and a half years, it's 2,000,000, and then it's 4,000,000, and then it's 8,000,000, and then it's 16,000,000, and then it's 32,000,000, and then it's 64,000,000, and then it's a 128,000,000.
02:12And my wealth starts going parabolic. What this means is at the same time it took me to go three years here, also took me three years here.
02:21That means in three years, I made $64,000,000 in only three years. That's what the law of compounding does.
02:29And so the reason why the wealthy never sell their assets is let's say that I was able to turn 1,000,000 into two and I sell it. And I take this money and I go on vacation and I send my daughter to college and I buy a new house and I buy a new car. Well, that's cool.
02:43I take that extra million I made, and I buy these things that I wanted. But what I gave up is $64,000,000 if I just would have waited another decade.
02:52That is the cost of you selling your assets, and that's what the wealthy know. So what we wanna do instead is if I want this million dollars right here, what I could do is I could take a loan out for the $1,000,000. Now, of course, I have to pay back this loan.
03:05This could cost me 7 to 10 percent. But, again, we've established this is going up by 20%. So if this is going up at 20%, but I have a loan at 10%, I'll take that deal every day.
03:16As long as this asset continues compounding faster than the rate of the debt that I have to pay, I'll wanna do that forever. Now one question that people would typically ask me, which is the same thing, at what point do I pay that loan off?
03:28And again, I'll reiterate, as long as the asset is continuing to go up faster than the rate of debt, why would I ever wanna do that?
03:36Now while this may sound foreign to you, that might just be because of the people that you hang out with or the advisers that you have. This is not an underground tactic that people don't know about. It's just a tactic that the wealthy use, the billionaires use, and you maybe don't hang out with that many billionaires.
03:50But let me point to the fact. Here's a Forbes article that I was recently reading where it shows that the richest people in the world can access billions without selling their stock. As a matter of fact, 50% of Fortune 500 CEOs, not a small number, half Fortune five hundred CEOs issue credit against their stock rather than selling it.
04:09Why is that? No. I've already told you why.
04:11Number one, we break the compounding, but it gets even worse. On top of the breaking the compounding, which could cost me 64,000,000 in ten years, I'm also paying tax.
04:20So when I sell an asset, it's a taxable event. Meaning, if I sell an asset, it's taxable. If I make a profit, I pay the tax.
04:27If I take a loss, I could claim that back on my taxes. It's a taxable event. Debt is never a taxable event.
04:32So if I'm one of the wealthiest CEOs in the world and I want to have money to buy a new house or buy a new company, like Elon Musk did when he borrowed against SpaceX to buy Twitter, for example. If I wanna buy a company, wanna buy a house, I could sell the stock. But the problem is, let's say that I need a million dollars, I might have to sell $1,500,000 worth of stock to get the million I need.
04:53Versus what I could do is I could issue credit against the asset that I have. So I could take a million dollar credit line against my stock portfolio.
05:01Now I pay zero tax on that because, of course, debt is not tax. Debt is not a taxable event. So I can access what I call renting the liquidity.
05:09I can rent the liquidity against the asset without giving the asset up. It allows me to save on the taxes, and it allows me to hold the asset to continue to compound forever. Alright.
05:18Now just a quick warning here. Sure. While 50% of Fortune five hundred CEOs do this, and the fact that other people can do it means that you can as well, the truth is that they have a system.
05:29They have a team. They have advisers that understand this and can put all types of risk mitigation strategies in place to make sure they don't blow themselves up. The problem is when you are smart enough to understand the problem but not smart enough to keep yourself out of danger, things can turn south for you.
05:43So for example, you're watching TV and you're watching some guys in Hawaii surfing these waves. You're like, shoot. I'd like to go surf those waves.
05:50But you're from the Midwest. You've never been in the ocean before. That's probably not the best thing.
05:54Now you might go, but they're doing it. I don't see anybody dying out there, but they've had to work their way up there over time. So before you just go jump in and do these dangerous strategies, make sure that you're mitigating your risk properly, making sure that you have the proper liquidity, making sure that you have your treasury doctrine in place and you understand what your parameters are, your risk leverage policies are, your LTV ratios.
06:13Make sure that you understand how you can protect yourself. The wealthy do another thing differently. They never think about how much money they can make on a winning investment.
06:23They always think about how much they could lose and how they protect themselves from it. That's why Warren Buffett said the number one rule to investing is don't lose money. Number two rules, don't forget number one.
06:31And so a hedge fund is literally called a hedge fund because they hedge every single position they make. And so while we certainly want to plan for growth and shoot for the moon, we make sure to hedge our position.
06:43So certainly, do what the success will do. Take a strategy like the success will do, but make sure you also put the risk mitigation strategies in that the success will do as well.
06:51So there's only one piece of the puzzle. If you wanna learn the entire system or how you can apply this system to yourself, then you might wanna go watch this video that I have right here, which breaks it down into even more detail, and I'll see you over there.
The Hook

The bait, then the rug-pull.

The title makes a promise that sounds like clickbait but delivers a genuine mechanism: borrowing against compounding assets instead of liquidating them, a practice 50% of Fortune 500 CEOs use to access billions without a single taxable sale. The host opens by disqualifying the usual wealth explanations — no secret asset, no hedge fund, no offshore account — before landing on the one unsexy move that separates the top 2%.

Frameworks

Named ideas worth stealing.

01:29model

Rule of 72

  1. Take your annual growth rate
  2. Divide 72 by that rate
  3. Result equals years to double your money

Quick mental model for estimating compounding velocity. At 20% CAGR: 72/20 = 3.6 years per doubling.

Steal forAny compounding or long-term thinking explanation
03:03concept

Borrow Against, Never Sell

Access liquidity by issuing credit against a compounding asset at a rate below its growth rate. Preserves the compounding curve and avoids taxable events.

Steal forWealth positioning content, financial literacy videos
06:10concept

Treasury Doctrine

A personal policy defining LTV ratios, liquidity floors, risk leverage policies, and paydown criteria — the prerequisite for executing the borrow strategy safely.

Steal forRisk management framing in any leveraged investment context
CTA Breakdown

How they asked for the click.

06:54next-video
If you wanna learn the entire system or how you can apply this system to yourself, then you might wanna go watch this video that I have right here.

Low-pressure internal link. No product pitch, no subscription ask. Points to a longer masterclass-style video.

Storyboard

Visual structure at a glance.

hook open
hookhook open00:00
whiteboard intro
valuewhiteboard intro01:29
cost of selling
valuecost of selling02:15
$1M credit line
value$1M credit line04:07
risk warning
ctarisk warning05:42
CTA
ctaCTA06:50
Frame Gallery

Visual moments.

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