Chapter 19: Investment of the Prince — Part II (1939)
The world was changing faster than most statesmen realized.
Europe was no longer merely uneasy or tense — it was preparing, quietly, for the possibility of war. Nations that had once hoped to avoid conflict were stocking supplies, reinforcing borders, and hoarding resources. But amid the fear and hesitation, Prince Aryavardhan Singh saw another layer — one that most leaders ignored: financial geography.
He had learned this from years of observing patterns, both economic and political.
Some states, by virtue of geography or diplomacy, would likely remain neutral or never be fully invaded should war erupt — places like Switzerland, Sweden, Spain, Portugal, and a few others. These countries had maintained neutrality throughout World War I, and Aryavardhan calculated they would attempt the same in any future conflict.
If you could build influence there — quietly, quietly — the payoff could be enormous.
And it began with an old institution that ruled wealth long before empires — the bank.
The Quiet Bank Acquisitions
Aryavardhan chose his targets carefully.
Not the big headline names that everyone knew —
but mid‑tier banks that carried wealth, had local trust, and were underappreciated.
He began with:
1. Schweizerische Kreditanstalt (Switzerland)
A respected bank in a famously neutral country.
The Swiss banking system was durable, discreet, and internationally trusted.
2. Svenska Handelsbanken (Sweden)
In a nation likely to remain neutral, Aryavardhan saw a safe vault for golden reserves.
3. Banco de Portugal
Portugal's banks were small compared to London and Paris, but strategically beneficial due to their neutrality and access to colonial gold.
4. Banco de Crédito Industrial (Spain)
Spain, though politically turbulent, was neutral and geographically well‑positioned.
5. Banque de Luxembourg
A small but wealthy system, ideal for discreet holdings.
6. A pair of mid‑level American banks
Aryavardhan bought Citizens & Southern Bank and Union Banking Corp — not the largest in the U.S., but well‑connected and stable.
Why Banks? Not Just Profit — Security
Banks were not chosen for headline returns —
they were chosen for stability, neutrality, and vaults.
Aryavardhan did three things simultaneously:
1. He owned controlling stakes in these banks.
This was not about press attention — it was about legal ownership and influence.
2. He began quietly transferring gold and foreign currency into them.
Gold that Europeans, fearing war, were desperate to secure.
3. He shifted currency positions ahead of the storm.
The world was not yet at war, but currencies were wobbling — especially in Europe.
The Gold Flow Mechanism
Europe was a continent where gold meant security.
As tensions grew:
Wealthy Europeans wanted US dollars for safety.
But many only had gold, not secure currency.
Governments, nobles, and merchants began moving gold out of shaky economies.
Europe → Gold → U.S. Dollars → Safe Assets
This is where Aryavardhan's banking strategy intersected with global fear.
He positioned his banks as discreet exchange points:
A European merchant with gold walks in,
Exchanges gold for local currency (at a slight premium),
That currency is exchanged for U.S. dollars,
And the bank holds the gold physically — safe, untaxed, transferable.
Within months:
These banks became unspoken gold repositories.
European elites preferred Aryavardhan's network because it was influential but quiet.
Money flowed not just for war preparations, but for simple survival.
Aryavardhan did not publicize this.
He did not boast.
He merely held the doors open and watched wealth flow.
The Banking Network's Strategic Advantage
Each bank served a role:
Swiss Bank
Main gold vault
Gold reserves stored deeply under European neutrality.
Swedish Bank
Currency conversion hub
Neutral territory, easy access to Scandinavian markets.
Portuguese & Spanish Banks
Gold + Currency buffers
Southern Europe was less likely to be invaded, making these ideal for storage.
Luxembourg
Discrete wealth management
Ideal for holding assets away from political noise.
U.S. Banks
Dollar liquidity
Converted gold into stable currency and future investment flows.
Prince Aryavardhan's Financial Position in Mid‑1939
By August:
The original 10 crore rupees had grown to 580 crore rupees.
He invested:
10 crore into the empire
20 crore into factories & state needs
30 crore into strategic alliances & education
…and the remaining into bank acquisitions and currency reserves
After these placements:
Aryavardhan now held ~480 crore rupees in deployable capital
— but this capital was spread across continents, secured in neutral banks, and backed by gold and currency positions.
Of that:
A substantial portion was in gold reserves.
Another portion was in U.S. dollar holdings.
The rest remained in strategic investments (steel, food production, chemicals).
Why This Matters
Most rulers hoarded land, palaces, prestige.
Aryavardhan hoarded security.
He understood that:
Wars are not won only on battlefields.
They are influenced by capital, logistics, and supply chains.
Whoever controls currency flows and reserves can survive crises others cannot.
Other states feared invasion and spent cautiously.
He quietly built a financial fortress.
His kingdom was not trembling at the edge of war —
it was prepared before the storm arrived.
The Empire at Peace… For Now
Inside Surya Nagri itself, the mood was calm.
The irrigation project continued.
Factories operated.
Agriculture fed both people and surplus exports.
But Aryavardhan's bank network—silent and vast—was now a player in the international game.
His capital was no longer just wealth —
It was leverage.
Closing Image of Chapter 19
Late August sunshine filtered through the tall windows of the Surya Nagri palace.
Prince Aryavardhan Singh stood by a long wooden table.
Maps of Europe, Asia, and the Americas were spread before him.
Next to them lay spreadsheets — golden, blue, and black ink weaving numbers that he alone could interpret.
For every bank on his list, there was gold waiting.
For every currency position, there was leverage.
For every continent, a foothold.
The storm in Europe was still on the horizon.
But unlike others…
Surya Nagri would be ready.
