About
I'm a founder and operator who has spent the last fifteen years building at the intersection of markets, geographies, and emerging systems. I'm most interested in the moments where infrastructure, capital, and regulation collide — because that's where durable things get built.
Thirteen years living across Shanghai, Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Hong Kong, and Abu Dhabi taught me things that no professional role could. Markets behave differently when trust is the primary currency. Capital moves differently when regulatory frameworks are being written in real time. I learned to read rooms, build relationships across cultural contexts, and operate with patience in environments where patience is the actual competitive advantage.
During my years in Ho Chi Minh City, I also built two hospitality concepts as a creative outlet — driven by a genuine love for culture, food, and design rather than any commercial ambition. Quince Saigon became something I'm quietly proud of: it has held Michelin Selection for four consecutive years and was named Restaurant of the Year by Vietcetera. Madame Kew, the bar concept I built alongside it, won Bar of the Year from Vietcetera. What started as a hobby became something real — which, looking back, seems to be a pattern.

My move into Bitcoin wasn't a pivot — it was a recognition. The questions I'd spent years working on in sustainability and energy infrastructure — how do you price externalities, how do you design instruments that align long-term incentives, how do you bring institutional capital into nascent markets — turned out to be exactly the questions Bitcoin mining was asking. The convergence felt less like a career decision and more like an inevitability.
I approach problems structurally. I'm skeptical of narratives that move faster than fundamentals. I believe the most interesting opportunities exist in the gap between how sophisticated allocators think about risk and how new asset classes actually behave. I try to build things that will still make sense in ten years.