About Aetheltrust
Jurisdictional logistics for the globally mobile. We move capital between the world's most secure financial jurisdictions with complete discretion and speed.
Our Story
Aetheltrust was founded on a simple observation: the world's most sophisticated investors, business principals, and politically exposed persons lacked a partner focused purely on jurisdictional mobility—not wealth management, not banking, but the secure and rapid movement of capital between stable jurisdictions.
We built Aetheltrust to fill that gap. Today, we maintain relationships with trustees, private banks, and licensed intermediaries across 14 jurisdictions. We do not hold your wealth. We move it where you direct, when you direct, with no unnecessary oversight or disclosure.
Our name combines Old English roots meaning "noble trust"—a reminder that our relationship with clients is built on discretion, reliability, and absolute confidentiality.
By The Numbers
14
Active Jurisdictions
72h
Average Deployment
100%
Discretion Guaranteed
Leadership
Alexander Thorne
Founder & Principal
20+ years in international wealth structure and jurisdictional logistics. Previously at major Swiss private bank and independent trust company.
Victoria Chen
Director, Asia-Pacific
Former private banking executive covering Singapore and Hong Kong markets. Specialist in cross-border structures for Asian families.
Marcus Weber
Director, Europe & Middle East
Expert in Swiss and DIFC structures. Previously headed Middle East desk for Geneva-based private bank.
Our Principles
Discretion
Your affairs remain known only to you and your designated advisors. We maintain no unnecessary records.
Speed
When capital must move, it moves. Our network executes rapidly and without friction.
Compliance
We operate within all applicable frameworks while maximizing legitimate privacy for our clients.
Independence
We answer only to our clients. No government, no institution, no third party directs our actions.
Ready to begin?
Establish contact with our team to discuss your jurisdictional requirements.