Speed is often mistaken for effectiveness in liquidity decisions. Capital accessed quickly can feel like success, but without structure, that speed frequently introduces long-term friction.
Liquidity architecture begins before execution. It accounts for asset behavior, jurisdictional exposure, confidentiality requirements, and future optionality. When these elements are ignored, liquidity may solve an immediate issue while quietly weakening the broader asset position.
At L2O, we treat liquidity as infrastructure. Designed correctly, it supports decisive action without eroding control, value, or governance. Speed matters, but only when it is supported by structure.
