At Invest Offshore, we often encounter capital strategies that never appear in glossy brochures or social media feeds. They circulate discreetly among family offices, sovereign advisers, and analytical minds who see money as a tool, not a destination.
Recently, one such framework surfaced—attributed to a Mensa group member and shared privately before quietly leaking into wider discussion. It isn’t a shortcut to riches. It’s a disciplined way to reach financial freedom efficiently, while preserving sanity, capital, and purpose.
The principle is simple—but easily misunderstood.
The Formula Clarified: 12.75% Across Eight Asset Classes
This strategy does not deploy all capital into a single thesis, sector, or macro bet.
Instead:
12.75% of total investment capital is allocated to each of eight separate asset classes.
That means:
- 12.75% × 8 asset classes = approximately 100% of capital deployed
- Each allocation is intentionally capped to prevent concentration risk
- No single investment is allowed to determine the investor’s fate
The goal is balance, not bravado.
Why 12.75%?
The number wasn’t chosen at random.
As the Mensa group member explained:
“The ratio of 1275 is actually 12.75. Risks are spread over 8 investments. Assumption is that some may go negative, some neutral, some advance, and some rocket. I can’t disclose the actual categories as there was an agreement which I won’t break.”
That statement reveals the entire financial freedom philosophy.
This is not about predicting winners.
It’s about structuring inevitability.
When capital is evenly distributed across eight genuinely uncorrelated asset classes:
- Losses are absorbed, not catastrophic
- Flat performance is acceptable
- Strong performers carry the portfolio
- Exceptional outliers (“rockets”) create upside asymmetry
You don’t need perfection.
You need dispersion.
Why Eight Asset Classes?
Eight is not magical—it’s functional.
With fewer buckets, volatility dominates.
With too many, focus is lost.
Eight allows:
- Risk to be mathematically diluted
- Emotional decision-making to be reduced
- Capital to remain productive across multiple economic regimes
While the specific asset categories remain undisclosed by agreement, the logic applies universally: true diversification only works when assets do not fail for the same reasons at the same time.
That is the mistake most portfolios make.
The Real Objective: Time, Not Trophies
Most investors obsess over peak returns.
This framework optimizes for something far more valuable: time independence.
At sufficient capital scale, this approach aims to:
- Generate durable returns without constant oversight
- Avoid binary outcomes
- Free the investor from reactive decision-making
Financial freedom, in this context, is not excess consumption.
It is the ability to:
- Walk away from unproductive obligations
- Fund personal, intellectual, or philanthropic goals
- Focus on family, health, faith, or legacy
Money becomes what it was always meant to be—a means, not the mission.
Why This Strategy Stays Quiet
You won’t see this formula aggressively marketed.
It requires:
- Capital discipline
- Emotional neutrality
- Access to diversified, non-retail opportunities
- A long-term mindset focused on autonomy rather than applause
It doesn’t appeal to speculation.
It appeals to people who already know what freedom is worth.
Invest Offshore’s Perspective
At Invest Offshore, we regularly see variations of this financial freedom philosophy employed by serious capital—particularly in offshore structures anchored to real assets, infrastructure, and commodities, where fundamentals matter more than narratives.
This is also why we continue to highlight investment opportunities in West Africa, including projects across the Copperbelt region, where disciplined capital allocation into tangible assets naturally aligns with multi-asset, risk-balanced strategies like this one.
Final Thought
The Mensa “leak” isn’t about secrets.
It’s about structure.
When risk is intelligently distributed, outcomes no longer need to be predicted—they emerge.
And when money is treated as a tool rather than a scorecard, it tends to deliver the one return that matters most: the freedom to live life on your own terms.

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