I mean, yeah. There is a privilege associated with that. The US is a great starting point, but you can outgrow it, especially when it comes to financial services if you aren't interested in the incumbents.
People with money in stable economies aren't clamoring for US citizenship, some are interested in it but its just an option. The whole continent is populated by people that lost consensus wherever they came from. Like 99% of the population has a heritage that was either deemed an extremist in their "motherland" or were simply just outside of the cool kids club and had to fight for scraps, or avoiding the impending reality of both. The other 1% are basically the 1% financially and just here for play while retaining their options to do the same anywhere.
People with money in stable economies aren't clamoring for US citizenship, some are interested in it but its just an option. The whole continent is populated by people that lost consensus wherever they came from. Like 99% of the population has a heritage that was either deemed an extremist in their "motherland" or were simply just outside of the cool kids club and had to fight for scraps, or avoiding the impending reality of both. The other 1% are basically the 1% financially and just here for play while retaining their options to do the same anywhere.