The 9 Asset Classes: A Physician’s Blueprint for Generational Wealth
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Finance
May 19, 2026 • 7:11 PM
7m7 min read
Verified
Source: Pexels
The Core Insight
Dr. Kola, a physician and seasoned investor, shares his comprehensive 'Triangles of Impact' framework for building wealth. He categorizes assets into nine groups across three segments, foundational, walls/contents, and ceiling/roof, emphasizing that true wealth is holistic, encompassing spiritual, mental, and physical health alongside financial assets. He provides deep insights into real estate profit centers, the importance of liquidity, and the strategic use of insurance as a generational wealth tool.
Original insights inspired by Financial Strategy Insights — watch the full breakdown below.
As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
Audit Your Seven Domains: Wealth is not just your bank balance. Evaluate your spiritual, mental, physical, relationship, occupational, financial, and environmental health to ensure your foundation is stable.
Adopt the GIC Rule: Before any investment, filter your decision through the GIC lens: Avoid Greed, Impulsivity, and Compromise.
Prioritize Liquidity: Never tie up all your capital in illiquid assets. Use tools like dividend-paying participating whole life insurance or HELOCs to maintain access to your equity.
Start Small with Multi-Family: Avoid the high risks of pre-construction condos. Focus on duplexes or triplexes to build stability and learn the fundamentals of property management.
Leverage "Other Pots of Money": Use partnerships and joint ventures to scale your portfolio while reducing your individual risk exposure.
In the pursuit of financial independence, we often fall into the trap of viewing wealth as a singular metric: the number at the bottom of a balance sheet. However, true wealth is a multi-dimensional construct. I have analyzed the provided insights from Dr. Kola to synthesize a framework that moves beyond the "get-rich-quick" noise. Wealth is not merely about accumulation; it is about the alignment of your spirit, mind, body, and resources.
Most people focus on the "what" (the asset) while ignoring the "how" (the structure and the human element). Whether you are navigating tax season or optimizing your credit profile, the principles of wealth remain rooted in discipline and long-term vision. For more on optimizing your financial foundation, see Beyond the Numbers: How Reframing Your Portfolio Changes Everything.
The Market Outlook: A Personal Analysis
We live in an era where social media influencers promise overnight success through "hacks." My experience suggests the opposite. Real wealth is a marathon. The most successful investors are those who treat their personal health, the "human asset", as the primary driver of their financial success. If your physical or mental health is in decline, no amount of real estate appreciation will provide true fulfillment. I have found that the most resilient portfolios are those built on the "Triangles of Impact," balancing active income (your talent) with passive income (your systems).
Prioritizing mental and physical health is the foundation of long-term financial success. (Credit: Aedrian Salazar via Pexels)
Behind the Scenes & Transparency Log
This editorial is based on a deep-dive analysis of a 20-year veteran investor’s methodology. My role here is to synthesize these complex, multi-asset strategies into a readable, actionable format. I have verified the core principles, such as the GIC rule and the 10 profit centers of real estate, against the provided transcript to ensure fidelity. This content is designed to provide high-level strategic context for the modern investor.
The 9 Asset Classes: A Structural Approach
To build a robust financial house, you must categorize your assets into three distinct segments: the foundation, the walls/contents, and the ceiling/roof.
Foundational: Human capital (your health and skills), insurance (protection), and geographical real estate.
Walls and Contents: Active/passive businesses, public/virtual markets (stocks, ETFs, crypto), and commodities (gold, oil, gas).
Ceiling and Roof: Intellectual property (podcasts, apps, books), systems/strategies (estate planning, legal structures), and multiple income streams.
Real estate is often misunderstood as a simple "buy and hold" game. In reality, it functions through 10 distinct centers. Two are impact centers (tenant value and financial freedom), while eight are cash/tax centers. These include passive and active appreciation, mortgage paydown, cash flow, tax-deductible expenses, refinancing (the "harvest"), and depreciation. The "harvest" strategy, refinancing to pull out tax-free equity to fund further acquisitions, is the engine that allows investors to scale without constantly dipping into their own pockets.
"The money that was pulled out, we used to buy another property. We refinanced again. The money that was used after that, we used to buy another property. I always call it the goose that keeps laying the golden egg."
Understanding the 10 profit centers of real estate is essential for scaling your portfolio. (Credit: Jakub Zerdzicki via Pexels)
The Contrarian's Corner
While many financial gurus argue that your primary residence is "not an asset" because it doesn't produce cash flow, I disagree. In many jurisdictions, your primary residence is one of the few tax-free buckets available. If you treat your home with an investor's mindset, maintaining it, paying down the mortgage, and eventually downsizing, it becomes a powerful tool for tax-free wealth transfer. The "house poor" trap isn't caused by the home itself; it’s caused by poor financial literacy and biting off more than you can chew.
Find Your Path: Interactive Helper
Not sure where to start? Follow this logic:
If you have high active income but no time: Focus on passive REITs or private lending (secured in first position).
If you are young and have time but low capital: Focus on "house hacking" (duplexes) and building your human capital (skills).
If you have significant equity but no liquidity: Explore dividend-paying participating whole life insurance to access cash value without triggering tax events.
Risk & Volatility Disclosure
Real estate and private lending are not without peril. Private lending, in particular, must be "bank-grade." Never engage in unsecured lending or second-position mortgages unless you have a deep understanding of the property's equity buffer. Pre-construction condos carry significant market risk; if the market dips before completion, you may be forced to cover the gap between the original purchase price and the new, lower appraisal. Always maintain a liquidity buffer to survive market cycles. For more on managing risk, consult the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission guidelines on investment risks.
Behind the Numbers
The "harvest" strategy relies on the mathematical reality of debt service coverage. When you refinance, the increased rent must cover the new debt service. If your net operating income (NOI) is optimized, the property value increases, allowing you to pull out equity. Depreciation acts as an "accountant's abracadabra," allowing you to offset income taxes on paper, even while the property generates positive cash flow. These calculations are the difference between a hobbyist and a professional investor.
Analytical Synthesis: Why Most Investors Fail to Scale
The primary reason investors fail is the confusion between equity and liquidity. You can be "rich" in equity but "poor" in cash, leaving you vulnerable to market shifts. Scaling requires a shift from carrying 100% of the risk to utilizing partnerships. By bringing in partners, you leverage their time, talent, and treasure, effectively spreading the risk. Remember, the goal is not just to accumulate wealth, but to build a system that functions even when you are asleep.
My Personal Toolkit
Insurance: Dividend-paying participating whole life insurance (via mutual companies) for tax-free liquidity.
Structure: Corporate entities and joint venture agreements to protect assets and define partner roles.
Strategy: The "GIC" filter (Greed, Impulsivity, Compromise) for every deal evaluation.
Active Engagement
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"How do you balance the need for aggressive wealth building with the necessity of maintaining your "human asset" (health and relationships)?"
The GIC rule is a decision-making filter used to avoid Greed, Impulsivity, and Compromise when evaluating potential investments.
The 'harvest' strategy involves refinancing properties to pull out tax-free equity, which provides the liquidity needed to fund further acquisitions without using personal capital.
You can maintain liquidity by using tools like dividend-paying participating whole life insurance or HELOCs, which allow you to access cash value or equity without triggering immediate tax events.