Why protecting your wealth must come before growing it
Would you ever buy a house and not get insurance?
Of course not. That would be absurd. You might spend $500,000, $1 million, or more on a property. And the first thing you do — before you even move in — is get insurance. Because you understand that protecting your asset is just as important as acquiring it.
That's the Insurance Principle. And it applies to crypto just as much as it applies to property.
In crypto, thousands of people do it the wrong way around every single day. They chase the potential rewards without putting the proper insurance in place first.
They buy crypto on a platform they don't fully understand. They leave it sitting in an account with basic security. They don't ask the hard questions about custody, licensing, or what happens if something goes wrong.
And then, when the platform gets hacked, goes bankrupt, or freezes their account — their "house" burns down. It happens more often than you think. And it's completely preventable.
In traditional finance, insurance is straightforward. In crypto, it's a bit different. There isn't a single "crypto insurance policy" you can buy. Instead, insurance in crypto means choosing the right infrastructure from the start.
It means asking the right questions:
These questions are your insurance policy. If you can't answer them confidently, you don't have insurance. You're living in an uninsured house.
Examples: Storing crypto on a standard exchange, or using a hardware wallet (Ledger, Trezor)
The Risk: If the exchange is hacked or goes bankrupt, you might lose everything. If you lose your private keys, there's no customer service to help you.
Analogy: A basic padlock on your front door. It might stop an opportunistic thief, but it won't stop a professional.
Examples: Platforms with licensed custody (assets held by a regulated, third-party custodian), blocked withdrawals, and AFSL licensing
The Benefit: Your assets are segregated and protected even if the platform fails. Your assets cannot be withdrawn or stolen. You can sleep at night knowing professionals are protecting your wealth.
Analogy: A bank vault with 24/7 security, cameras, and insurance. You're not just hoping for the best — you're guaranteeing protection.
| Aspect | Personal-Grade | Institutional-Grade |
|---|---|---|
| Custody | Self-custody or exchange custody | Licensed, regulated third-party custody |
| Insurance | Usually none | Insured Licensed Custody |
| Regulation | Often unregulated | Licensed and regulated |
| Risk | High (you bear all the risk) | Low (professionals manage the risk) |
| Support | Limited or none | Professional support team |
| Analogy | Padlock on your door | Bank vault with 24/7 security |
Before you invest a single dollar in crypto, ask yourself this:
"If this platform disappeared tomorrow, would my assets be safe?"
If the answer is "I don't know" or "Probably not," then you don't have insurance. And you need to find a platform that does.
Question 1: Think about your most valuable financial asset right now. What insurance do you have protecting it? Now apply that same thinking to crypto — what level of protection would you need to feel comfortable investing?
Question 2: How devastating would it be to see your hard-earned savings disappear overnight because the proper insurance wasn't in place? What would you do differently knowing this risk exists?
You understand the principle. Now let's get specific. In Lesson 7, we dive into The Two Levels of Security — exactly what institutional-grade protection looks like, how to spot the difference between a padlock and a bank vault, and the three specific questions to ask any platform before you invest.
Have a question about this lesson, or just want to talk through where you're at? Book a complimentary 15-minute call with Darren — a relaxed, no-pressure conversation to see how he can help you move forward with clarity and confidence.
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