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🔑 He Built an Empire 500 years ago. His Strategy is Still Being Used Today
Imagine being richer than the king who rules over you.
That was reality for Jakob Fugger.
He was a German merchant-banker who established Europe's richest banking dynasty over 500 years ago and built mining, textile, and shipping businesses that spanned the globe.
And he pioneered strategies billionaires use to this day.
Born in 1459 in Augsburg, Jakob grew his family's took over his family's textile business and soon pioneered an emerging trend: Global shipping.
Before Fugger's time, trading with other countries and continents was rare (Fugger was 33 when Christopher Columbus famously crossed the Atlantic Ocean).
Fugger was the first to figure out the global shipping business.
He became so powerful that he financed emperors, popes, and major wars, gaining enormous political influence across Europe and the Catholic Church.
Yet you've probably never heard of him.

Jakub Fugger pioneered several business practices:
At his peak, he was once the wealthiest man who ever lived, with a fortune estimated at around 2% of European GDP.
Building a Dynasty
He began by scaling the family textile trade across Europe at exactly the right time; long-distance shipping was beginning to dominate the economy.
Agriculture, textiles, and mining were the main industries.
But as Fugger started running his family business, shipping had just emerged as a critical piece to make all of those businesses work.
Whoever could get goods from port to port would build incredible wealth and power.
He quickly diversified from textiles into banking, extending credit to the Habsburg emperors Maximilian I and Charles V, as well as to the Vatican.
One time he even had to help the heirs of deceased kings take the throne so that his loans would still be paid back.
When Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, died in 1519, he owed the Augsburg merchant and banker Jakob Fugger (1459-1525) around 350,000 guilders (a massive sum). To avoid losing this investment, Fugger had to help Maximilian’s grandson, Charles V, ascend the throne.
Charles’ unanimous selection by the Electors required exorbitant bribes, to the tune of 851,585 guilders, to smooth the way. Jakob Fugger, nicknamed ‘the Rich’, put in 543,385 guilders, around two thirds of the sum. The remainder was contributed by the Welser banking family and three Italian companies.
-National Museum
But his most lucrative ventures came in mining.
By extending loans when miners needed capital, he gained control of silver and copper mines in Hungary and Slovakia.
He then integrated these operations with his trading networks.
He shipped metals to markets as far as India and the Americas via Portugal, effectively controlling the flow of the most valuable goods in the world.
Basically, he created a vertically integrated machine
His businesses eventually controlled every step of production for several products, from extraction to finished goods, transit, and final sale to the end customer.
Wars, and regime changes couldn't destroy his vast business.
India - then technologically and economically ahead of Europe - suffered a chronic shortage of copper, which was a "stroke of extremely good luck" for the Fugger mining interests.
And timing amplified that advantage: "Vasco da Gama discovered the sea route to India in 1498, just three years after the Fuggers moved into large-scale copper mining in Neusohl [today Banska Bystrica in Slovakia]. Demand soared, and the Fuggers held the supply,"
- DW.com
Later, he helped emperors finance wars and construction - often leading to Fugger being granted monopolies in those kingdoms.
Centuries later, a different family used Fugger's playbook.
And you definitely know their name.
Mayer Amschel Rothschild founded the famous Rothschild banking dynasty in Frankfurt.

He took Fugger’s core playbook (international merchant banking, financing rulers and wars, private information networks, and a tightly controlled family empire) and scaled it to an even larger, more global level in the age of nation-states and industrial revolution.
How Rothschild Built on Fugger’s Strategies
By the time of his death, the Rothschilds were widely regarded as the wealthiest banking family in the world.
Their influence was similar to Fugger's, but 300 years later.
Their model became the template used by modern holding companies and family offices that still dominate parts of global finance today.
Sieva
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Disclaimer: nothing here is investment advice. Please do your own research. The information above is just for information and learning.
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