FINEWS
George E. Bogden | April 16, 2026
Roughly $84 trillion in wealth is expected to transfer from Baby Boomers to the next generation over the coming two decades. That capital will move—but increasingly, so will decisions about where it is held, governed and protected.
For decades, Liechtenstein built its reputation on a simple promise: control. Its fountain structures were marketed as private, orderly and dependable—vehicles designed to preserve founder intent across generations. That promise is now under strain.
“This was more than a family drama. It was a real-world stress test of a system marketed as predictable.”
The recent legal battle involving Zygmunt Solorz—one of Central and Eastern Europe’s most prominent billionaires—has exposed risks that global wealth holders and their advisors can no longer ignore.

