A curated guide to private communities, advanced wealth topics, and selective events.
For readers already past the point where generic wealth content is useful.
- Hubs
- 9
- Topics
- 14
- Groups indexed
- 4
- Events tracked
- 6
The advice changes with the jurisdiction. Start with yours.
QP List indexes wealth at nine hubs. Selecting one rewrites the topic library to match: tax regime, estate rules, residency playbooks, and the vehicles available to a household based there. You can also stay global; every topic has a jurisdiction-neutral version.
United States
The deepest market for private wealth, and the most complex tax code affecting it.
United Kingdom
A historic centre for private wealth, in the middle of its largest tax regime change in a generation.
Switzerland
The original jurisdiction of private wealth, still quietly setting the standard.
Singapore
Asia's most rigorous wealth hub, selectively welcoming, operationally deep.
Hong Kong
A deep capital markets hub navigating a structural realignment.
United Arab Emirates
The fastest-growing wealth hub of the last decade, and the most-watched jurisdictional shift.
Canada
A serious market for private wealth, with a tax regime that rewards structure and punishes drift.
Australia
A sophisticated wealth market shaped by superannuation, CGT, and a tightly coupled real estate cycle.
Monaco
A small principality with an outsized concentration of UHNW residents.
Where serious capital pays attention
Advanced wealth topics for operators, investors, and advisors. Curated, not exhaustive.
Tax Strategy
Tax is the single largest controllable cost on most affluent balance sheets, and the one most often left on default. Once the household has real complexity, tax becomes an architecture problem rather than an annual filing problem. The structure compounds more than any single deduction.
Estate Planning
Estate planning is usually framed as a transfer problem. At serious wealth, it is mostly a governance problem about who decides what, when, and under what constraints across generations. The transfer mechanics are the easy part.
Concentrated Stock
A concentrated equity position is both the source of the wealth and the single largest risk in the portfolio. The strategies that work balance diversification, tax, and the principal's actual relationship to the company, which is rarely a purely financial calculation.
Private Banking & Credit
Private banking is less about deposits and more about access to bespoke credit, structured lending, and a single point of accountability. Used well, it turns a balance sheet into an instrument. Used poorly, it is an expensive version of retail banking.
Family Office
The family office is a structure, a staffing model, and a lifestyle decision. The right answer depends less on net worth than on what the principal wants their next twenty years to look like, and whether they are prepared to run a small institution.
Peer Groups & Communities
The most consequential information for affluent households lives inside private peer communities, not on the open web. The question is which group matches the audience, the threshold, and the format the member actually needs. That is rarely what the marketing suggests.
The vocabulary that shapes access
Qualified purchaser, accredited investor, 3(c)(7), GRAT, IDGT, SLAT — the terms that actually decide what a household can and cannot see.
- Qualified Purchaser
A qualified purchaser (QP) is a person or entity meeting investable-asset thresholds under the Investment Company Act of 1940 — generally $5…
- Accredited Investor vs Qualified Purchaser
Accredited investor and qualified purchaser are two different SEC designations. Accredited investor is the lower threshold ($1M net worth or…
- Accredited Investor
An accredited investor is an individual or entity that meets income, net-worth, or professional-credential thresholds under SEC Regulation D…
- Family Office
A family office is a private organization that manages the financial, legal, tax, and administrative affairs of a wealthy family. Single-fam…
- QSBS (Qualified Small Business Stock)
QSBS is stock of certain C corporations that, if held for at least five years, can qualify for a federal capital gains exclusion of up to $1…
- GRAT (Grantor Retained Annuity Trust)
A GRAT is an irrevocable trust that lets the grantor transfer asset appreciation to heirs with little or no gift tax, by retaining an annuit…
The public index names the surface. The private layer names the specifics.
Vetted member communities
A directory of peer communities where the threshold and format actually match the people in the room.
Long Angle
A private community for first-generation HNW individuals, typically post-liquidity operators and investors, who want substantive peer dialogue on portfolio construction, tax strategy, and the less-discussed parts of wealth.
- Audience
- High-net-worth individuals
- Threshold
- Avg net worth ~$15M
- Format
- Peer community with virtual and in-person sessions
- Best for
- Investing, Tax, Philanthropy, Relationships
Hampton
A community of founders and CEOs organized into small, vetted peer groups. Operators discuss the specific problems of running a business at scale, hiring, capital, personal finance, and the weight of the job, with people in the same seat.
- Audience
- Founders and CEOs
- Threshold
- $3M–$50M+ company scale
- Format
- Core peer groups plus curated events
- Best for
- Scaling operators, CEO peer dialogue, Founder mental health
TIGER 21
A long-running peer organization for UHNW wealth creators. Members meet monthly in small chapters and each year present their full portfolio for structured peer review. Skews toward seasoned principals focused on preserving and transferring capital.
- Audience
- Ultra-high-net-worth individuals
- Threshold
- $20M+ net worth
- Format
- Monthly peer groups with portfolio review
- Best for
- Portfolio defense, Multigenerational planning, Peer accountability
Enter the Index
A private network for entrepreneurs and active investors operating at the mid-to-high eight-figure level. Emphasis on direct introductions, deal discussion, and programming that favors depth over attendance.
- Audience
- Entrepreneurs and investors
- Threshold
- $10M+
- Format
- Private network with curated introductions and programming
- Best for
- Deal flow, Operator-to-investor transition, High-trust intros
Selective gatherings
Conferences, dinners, and off-record sessions. Private by default.
Long Angle Annual Gathering
The community's flagship in-person convening. Peer-led sessions on portfolio construction, tax, and life design. Members and approved guests only.
Hampton West Coast Chapter Dinner
A monthly Bay Area dinner for operators in Hampton's vetted core groups. Conversation skews toward scaling, leadership, and the personal finance decisions that come with a growing company.
TIGER 21 Annual Conference
The organization's flagship members event. Sessions on macro, alternatives, estate structure, and multigenerational governance, delivered in the same peer-forward format used in local chapters.
Post-Liquidity Founder Roundtable
A curated working session for founders in the first 24 months after a major liquidity event. Tax, structure, asset allocation, and the emotional side of the transition. No press, no pitches.
Family Office Private Credit Salon
Direct lending, asset-based, and specialty credit managers present to an audience of SFO principals and investment heads. Private, no broad distribution list.
Concentrated Stock Strategy Dinner
A working dinner focused on the real options for concentrated single-stock positions, exchange funds, structured collars, charitable vehicles, and the tradeoffs specific to newly public or soon-to-be-liquid founders.
Short-form notes
Observations on what moves across private capital, wealth structure, and peer networks.
Why exchange funds are back in the conversation
Exchange funds, long-standing vehicles that let holders of concentrated single stocks swap into a diversified pool without triggering immediate capital gains, have quietly returned to advisor conversations after years on the margin. Two drivers. First, the cost of delta-one hedging has risen enough that collared concentrated positions no longer look obviously cheaper than a structured exchange. Second, a new generation of sponsors has narrowed minimums and relaxed the once-onerous lockup experience, making the product usable for operators with $5–15M of concentrated equity, not just the $25M+ tier that traditionally anchored these funds. The mechanics haven't changed, seven-year holding period, a real estate sleeve to meet the qualifying criteria, deferred tax, but the audience has widened. Expect more advisor-led dinners on this in 2026, particularly for newly public founders and executives approaching lockup expiry.
The rise of peer groups as outsourced context
The fastest-growing private groups are not the ones selling access. They're the ones selling context. A founder who just sold a company doesn't need another newsletter on wealth management; they need to sit across from five other founders who sold two years ago and hear what they got wrong. A family office CIO doesn't need a conference; she needs a small room of CIOs who will tell her honestly why they unwound a private credit sleeve last quarter. What the best peer groups do is compress the time it takes to acquire judgment, by giving members structured exposure to decisions other members have already made. That's the actual product. Not curated content, not networking. Outsourced context. The groups that understand this, Long Angle, Hampton, TIGER 21, a handful of others, are converting at multiples of what more conventional communities manage, because the value is legible the first time a member leaves a meeting having avoided a six-figure mistake.
What post-liquidity founders ask first
The first questions are almost never about returns. Advisors who work with founders in the 90 days after a sale or IPO lockup report a remarkably consistent order of inquiry. First: how do I not feel like an idiot at dinner when someone mentions private credit, exchange funds, or a family office? Second: who can I actually trust, and how do I tell. Third: what do I tell my parents, my siblings, and my partner without permanently changing those relationships. Only fourth, sometimes fifth, does portfolio construction enter the conversation. The founders who navigate this window well treat the first three questions as the actual work and spend real time on them, usually inside a peer group, occasionally with a single trusted generalist advisor. The ones who start with asset allocation tend to revisit it painfully a year or two later. The vocabulary matters. The relationships matter more.
When a family office is a lifestyle, not a structure
The decision to build a single-family office is often framed as a structural one, a question of scale, tax efficiency, investment capability. In practice, the decision is a lifestyle question dressed up in structural language. The real variable is not AUM; it's whether the principal wants to be an employer, an investor, a parent of a small institution, or none of the above. Families at $50–150M often overbuild, hiring a CIO, a controller, and an operating team for a portfolio that a multi-family office could run for a fraction of the total cost. Families at $300M+ sometimes underbuild, running the office like a hobby while the complexity silently compounds. The honest question, almost never asked by prospective principals, is: do I want employees and a P&L again, after spending the last twenty years trying to escape exactly that. If the answer is no, a multi-family office is almost always the right answer, regardless of net worth.
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