
When your city's electricity dies, you can't trade, can't respond, can't even know what happened. You're cut off from markets, from information, from the ability to execute any plan that depends on digital infrastructure. But here's what actually happened: wealthy traders in stable regions and those with backup generators, satellite internet, redundant systems adapted in hours. They pivoted to alternative markets, communicated through channels most people don't have access to, and continued operating while everyone else froze.
The gap is brutal. Someone in New York or London with resources can keep going while someone in a fragile state without backup infrastructure faces something different entirely: not just a temporary inconvenience, but a cascading failure that touches every part of survival—no water pumps, no hospital systems, no way to access savings, no communication with family. The question isn't academic: What's actually possible for people in failed states when infrastructure collapses? What strategies exist when you don't have backup power, satellite phones, or institutional safety nets? And more pressingly, how do you even prepare for something that breaks the systems you'd normally use to prepare?
First of all, your investments must be fundamentally different from what works in stable economies. You should actively seek "safe" assets with fixed yields and long-term holdings—things that don't require constant monitoring or internet connectivity to maintain their value. Bitcoin serves as a non-confiscatable store of value that lives on the blockchain regardless of local infrastructure. HBD Savings on Hive offer yield without requiring you to actively trade. Stablecoin liquidity pools can generate returns while staying denominated in something predictable. Tokenized gold gives you exposure to a physical commodity without needing to physically store or hide it. The strategy is simple: acquire these vehicles and hold them for years, letting compounding work while you focus on survival and local income generation.
But here's the critical balance: you can't lock everything away. You have to keep between 30 and 50% of your money in liquid assets—split 50% USD and 50% local currency—specifically for two purposes. First, genuine emergencies: medical crises, family needs, sudden displacement. Second, local business opportunities that appear with little warning. In a fragile economy, capital dries up fast, and having liquid reserves means you can actually move when opportunities appear.
In the case that you live in a dictatorship, your crypto holdings become something more than an investment—they become insurance against unlawful seizure. Your government can't freeze what they can't find or access. But this protection only works if you actually use it. The first and most important layer of defense is operational security: keep your mouth shut about your finances and wealth. Don't discuss holdings with neighbors, don't post about gains online, don't let anyone know what you own. This isn't paranoia—it's the difference between being invisible and being a target.
Of course, this is no 100% safety guarantee. No strategy is bulletproof in an environment where the rules change overnight. But this approach works in my experience living in Cuba, where poor internet access and frequent blackouts make you fundamentally unable to compete with traders operating from stable countries. They have speed, real-time data, redundant connections. We don't. So we can't play the same game; we have to adapt to a different one entirely: long-term positioning, local opportunity capture, and staying off the radar while your assets compound in the background.
Now I invite you to share a story in the comments if you've got one from living and investing under these constraints. Whether infrastructure failed, liquid reserves saved you, or you learned something about operational security, drop it in the comments. What worked, what didn't, what surprised you. That ground-truth feedback actually helps people prepare.
Image generated with R afiki
Backup generators and satellite internet let them trade while the rest of us are stuck in the dark.