If you’ve never seen polo played live, put it on your list.
I’m not talking about watching it on a screen or catching a glimpse from some corporate hospitality tent. I mean standing close enough to feel the ground shake when eight horses come at full gallop, close enough to hear the mallet connect. It’s the closest thing to medieval combat that still exists – fast, physical, and genuinely impressive.
We had a private match organized just for our group, at one of the most exclusive polo clubs in Argentina.
And somehow, it was the least exciting thing we did all week.
I’m Viktorija, CEO of Schiff Sovereign. I’m based between Mexico City and Panama, but spend most of my time traveling – scouting investments, finding undervalued real estate, meeting the kind of people who actually know what’s happening inside a country before the headlines catch up. I know what momentum looks like. And Argentina has it right now.
Which is remarkable, if you know the backstory.
This was, not long ago, one of the world’s great cautionary tales. Decades of Peronist mismanagement, currency crises that wiped out savings overnight, a sovereign debt default of over $100 billion. By 2023, inflation had hit 211%. Not a typo. Two hundred and eleven percent. Ordinary people were watching their money lose value faster than they could spend it.
So they did something drastic. In late 2023, they elected Javier Milei – an “anarcho-capitalist” economist who campaigned with a literal chainsaw as a prop and promised to use it. And then, in office, he actually did.
The shock therapy was real and it was painful. Poverty spiked to 53% in early 2024. The protests were widespread and angry. Nobody was pretending this was painless.
But here’s where it gets interesting.
Argentina’s GDP grew 4.4% in 2025 – the strongest expansion the country had seen in years. Inflation, starting from that 211% ceiling, has now fallen to its lowest level in eight years. Poverty has dropped back to 32% – the lowest since 2018. The turnaround is happening faster than almost anyone expected, and faster than most people outside Argentina realize.
When you’re on the ground, you feel it before you can explain it.
I recently brought a group of 16 people here as part of Total Access, our highest-tier membership. We spent time with real estate developers in Buenos Aires, walked through their projects, and saw firsthand what early-stage capital deployment looks like in a country that’s turning a corner. Construction is booming. Foreign capital is flooding in. The mood is genuinely different from even a year ago.
But the most interesting part of the trip wasn’t the real estate.
I invited a friend to join us for lunch – one of a very small number of people formally approved by the Argentine government to advise on the new citizenship by investment law.
Argentina has become the first South American country to offer citizenship by investment, under Decree 524/2025 signed in July 2025 – with no prior residency requirement and a target processing time of just 30 business days.
The minimum investment is expected to be around $500,000 into qualifying productive sectors. Full program launch is expected in the second half of 2026, and the details are still being finalized – which is exactly why having one of the short list of people worth talking to at our table matters.
This is the stage where having that kind of connection gives you a meaningful head start.
The Argentine passport offers visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to over 170 countries, including the EU Schengen Area, the UK, and Japan – and the US recently kickstarted the process for Argentina to rejoin the Visa Waiver Program.
For a $500,000 investment, that’s a serious passport at a competitive price point.
Later in the week, through one of our Total Access members, we were invited to an Ambassador’s private residence where he showed us how he lives, shared personal stories, and afterwards joined us for dinner.
We hiked and rode horses through the mountains around Bariloche, and had front-row seats at Swan Lake at the iconic Teatro Colón.
One of Argentina’s most celebrated chefs invited us to his home, cooked a traditional Argentine meal from scratch, and shared the recipe with us afterwards.
But the moments that stood out most were the conversations no travel agent can arrange – the kind that happen over long dinners with people who actually know what’s happening inside a country.
And of course, sharing those moments with other members.
The trip was so well-received that I’m heading back next week with a second Total Access group.
This is what we do at Schiff Sovereign.
On one hand, we’re clear-eyed about the problems – the fiscal trajectory of the US, the erosion of the dollar, the risks most people aren’t paying attention to yet. We don’t sugarcoat that.
On the other hand, we spend just as much energy finding the opportunities those same conditions create. Undervalued markets. Second residencies. Real assets.
Places like Argentina – not a perfect place, just a place where the gap between perception and reality is wide enough to be genuinely interesting, and where the story on the ground is more compelling than the one being told about it.
The world isn’t falling apart. It’s reshuffling – and that reshuffle creates real opportunity for people who are paying attention.
You can read about Argentina, study Milei’s policies, follow the data. That’s useful. But what you can’t get from reading is sitting across from the people who are actually building there, on the ground.
That kind of access comes from relationships built over years – and that’s exactly what Total Access is about. The right rooms, the right people, the right conversations at the right time, with a group who share the same values and curiosity about the world.
Information is everywhere. The network is rare.
And in a world reshuffling this fast, that network might be the most valuable asset you have.