Hi Friend,


Something incredible just happened for the first time in over 50 years. I hope you caught it!


NASA launched the Artemis rocket that will take humans to the moon for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972. (Although they'll slingshot past it, not land.)


I've been consuming a ton of content about the war in Iran. It's like watching a car wreck. It's nerve-wracking but I can't look away. 


Watching Artemis take off felt completely different.


It was awe-inspiring and hopeful. It was like literally watching something rise above all of this earthly drama.


It reminded me that we still live in the greatest time in human history.


You're not wrong for feeling anxious about what's happening in the world. I feel it too. But don't let that make you miss all of the reasons to be optimistic and excited.


I was listening to the launch coverage, and from the moment they lit those engines, it was a nonstop string of confirmations.


"Thrust nominal. Guidance nominal. Chamber pressure nominal. Booster separation confirmed."


On and on. Dozens of safety checks in the first few minutes alone.


Strapping yourself to a rocket is insanely dangerous. So they minimize the risks with redundancy on top of redundancy. Layer on top of layer. Until they can accept the risk and receive the reward...


Being one of the few humans who get the life changing experience of looking down on Earth from space.


In yesterday's email I talked about borrowing against your assets.


Every time I bring that up, I hear the same thing.


"Isn't that dangerous?! What if the price drops???"


Yeah. It can be. If you do it wrong.


But that's why we have layer upon layer of risk mitigation...


We borrow at a conservative loan-to-value ratio, and we stress test it for worst case scenarios, so even if the asset drops significantly we don't get liquidated. 


We borrow to buy assets that create cashflow. So the asset services its own debt. 


We engineer the payments into the loan itself. So there are never forced decisions. The structure handles it.


We map out our four liquidity layers in advance. So if we ever need liquidity we know where to get it without being forced to sell.


When those layers are in place, just like the astronauts we can accept the risks and benefit from the massive rewards. In this case creating financial freedom to live life on our own terms.


Obviously that's a super high level explanation. If you want to go deeper on exactly how to create these risk mitigation layers for yourself, I'm doing a live event next Thursday. We'll run the actual numbers together so you can see exactly how to structure this yourself. The ratios, the layers, all of it.


It's for entrepreneurs and high earners who are making good money but feel like they're not getting ahead the way they should.


If that's you, grab your spot here. It's free:

https://link.1markmoss.com/QduN0


See you there.



To your wealth,

P.S. At my last in-person event, we all went out to dinner after the first day. Someone said they thought the moon landings were fake. The subject spread like wild fire and soon the entire room was buzzing about it. Hit reply and tell me if you think they're real or not.