Matthias Weik und Marc Friedrich

Matthias Weik und Marc Friedrich

Impressive talk by bestselling authors Marc Friedrich and Matthias Weik on the causes, effects and consequences of the financial crisis, as well as other highly charged topics. The audience was successfully prompted to engage critically with existing habits of thought and action, and to think outside the box.

Full bio



Marc Friedrich


After studying international business, Marc experienced first-hand the Argentinian state bankruptcy in 2001 and its ruinous consequences for the country and its citizens. He already gained international work and life experience as a young man.

Together with Matthias Weik (his friend from kindergarten days), for the past decade he has been holding seminars and specialist talks on the topics of precious metals, EU, the euro, Industry 4.0, digitalisation, Bitcoin & crypto currencies, blockchain and decentralisation at national and international companies, associations and foundations, and at congresses and specialist conferences around the world, as well as at universities and colleges.

Marc Friedrich is an enthusiastic connoisseur of whiskey. He recommends selected single malts as a mixer (!) for both balanced investment portfolios and balanced meals.




 





Matthias Weik


Matthias, a passionate networker and strategic thinker, studied international business in Melbourne, Australia. He gained his MBA while working for a major German corporate group. In 2009, he founded asset protection and financial advisory firm Friedrich & Weik Vermögenssicherung together with Marc Friedrich.

Matthias Weik’s big passion is for travel. He is familiar with four continents and has visited around three dozen countries – some of them several times. He is equally familiar with Anglo-Saxon pragmatism, Asian efficiency thinking, French laissez-faire and southern style mañana. Weik knows from his own experience that people everywhere around the world want to make the best of their lives, but that each culture has its own ideas of the “good life”. And that people have their own individual strategies (and sometimes also tricks) to help luck play its part.