A new Arton Capital report finds 221,800 global ultrarich, with 205,000 primarily residing in the U.S., are increasingly seeking alternative residencies and assets abroad.
Foreign-born U.S. ultra-high-net-worth individuals, representing 13% of the group, are leading this trend as states consider higher taxes and global wealth is projected to reach $84 trillion by 2030.
Singapore and Dubai are gaining popularity as wealth hubs, while London declines and the U.S. risks losing status and capital as the ultrarich adopt a portfolio approach to citizenship and investment.
Is the U.S. losing its wealthiest residents, or becoming their indispensable financial anchor in a diversified world?
With London's appeal fading, which city is winning the race to become the world's next top wealth hub?
As countries curb real estate 'golden visas,' what new investment paths are the rich taking to secure residency?
How will AI and tokenization reshape the global migration of private wealth and investment by 2030?
As the ultrarich adopt 'portfolio' citizenships, what does this mean for the concept of national allegiance?
If the wealthy need a global 'plan B,' what does that signal about future stability for everyone else?