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I was sitting in a coffee shop the other day, watching the ticker tape of the S&P 500 scroll across a muted TV screen in the corner. Green arrows. Record highs. The familiar narrative of wealth compounding upon wealth. It’s a story I know intimately; my portfolio hums along in the background, a silent engine powered by the greatest wealth-generating machines in history: the US stock market and prime real estate.
But as I sipped my espresso, a statistic I’d read in a World Bank report kept nagging at me, disrupting my peace. It wasn't about inflation or interest rates. It was about people.
There are approximately 4 billion adults on this planet who have absolutely zero access to high-quality investment assets.
Let that sink in for a moment. I’m not talking about people who choose not to invest because they prefer cash or are risk-averse. I’m talking about half the global population—people with dreams, ambitions, and often, small amounts of disposable income—who are systemically barred from the financial engines that built the modern middle class in the West.
When I look at my own financial life, I see frictionlessness. I can open an app, tap a button, and own a sliver of Apple or a fraction of a Manhattan skyscraper via a REIT. The barriers are non-existent. But for someone sitting in Lagos, or Jakarta, or a rural town in Brazil, that same act is effectively impossible.
Why is this happening? Having spent years analysing global macroeconomics, I've realised the problem isn't a lack of desire; it's a structural failure of the global financial architecture. We have built a system that is incredibly efficient at moving capital between New York, London, and Tokyo, but utterly broken when it comes to the "last mile" of the global south.
The barriers are multifaceted and deep-rooted:
The tragedy here isn't just about missing out on a stock market rally. It's about the miracle of compound interest. Einstein called it the "eighth wonder of the world," but for 4 billion people, it might as well be magic; they are forbidden from practising.
I often think about the "wealth gap" discussions we have in the West. We argue about tax rates and wage stagnation. These are valid concerns. But the global wealth gap is being driven by an "asset gap."
When you cannot invest in productive assets, your labour is your only source of income. If you stop working, the money stops coming. True wealth—generational wealth—is built when capital works for you. By locking 4 billion people out of the US stock market (which represents roughly 60% of global equity value) and stable real estate, we are effectively sentencing half the world to a life of labour without leverage.
Let me paint you a picture. Take two individuals, both saving the equivalent of $100 a month for 30 years.
Person A (The Insider): Invests in a generic S&P 500 index fund. Historically, adjusting for inflation, they might see a 7% real return. After 30 years, they have significant purchasing power, a retirement nest egg, and security.
Person B (The Outsider): Lives in a country with high inflation and no access to US markets. They save cash under a mattress or in a low-yield local savings account that barely keeps up with inflation (or lags behind it). After 30 years, they have... roughly what they put in, perhaps less in real terms. Their labour was just as hard, their discipline just as strong, but the vehicle for their wealth was broken.
It’s not just about returns; it’s about safety. Irealisedd recently that for me, the US stock market is a "risk" asset. I worry about volatility. But for someone in a volatile emerging economy, US assets represent safety.
When your local government might seize assets, or your currency might hyperinflate, owning a piece of a multinational corporation or US real estate is the ultimate insurance policy. Denying this access forces people into desperate measures—hoarding physical gold (which has high premiums and theft risk) or engaging in risky informal lending circles.
Despite the grim statistics, I am optimistic. I’m seeing cracks in the wall.
Technology is finally starting to democratize access in a way that policy never could. I’ve been closely watching the rise of "embedded finance" and tokenisation. We are moving toward a world where a share of Amazon or a square foot of a London apartment can be sliced into digital tokens worth pennies and transmitted instantly to a digital wallet in Nairobi.
We aren't there yet—regulatory hurdles are massive, and scams are prevalent in the crypto-adjacent space. But the infrastructure for a truly global, borderless investment market is being laid. I believe the next decade will be defined not by the "unbanked" getting bank accounts, but by the "uninvested" getting brokerage accounts.
You might be reading this thinking, "I have my 401(k), why does this matter to me?"
It matters because capital is oxygen for innovation. Imagine the unleashed potential if 4 billion more people started investing. That is trillions of dollars of dormant capital flowing into the global economy. It means more funding for companies, more liquidity in markets, and a more stable global middle class.
Furthermore, financial exclusion breeds instability. When people feel the game is rigged—that the rich get richer simply because they have access to a VIP club of assets—it fuels populism, unrest, and geopolitical tension. A world where everyone has a stake in global prosperity is a safer world for my portfolio and for my children.
I don’t have all the answers. I am just an observer, an investor, and a writer trying to connect the dots. But I know that the status quo is unsustainable. We cannot have a globalised economy for consuming goods but a fragmented, medieval economy for building wealth.
The 4 billion adults standing on the sidelines aren't looking for handouts. They are looking for a fair shake. They want to buy a ticket to the game. It is high time we opened the gates.
Until next time,
Your Guide to the Global Markets
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