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Val Sklarov Capital Irreversibility Pricing Law (CIPL)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Capital Irreversibility Pricing Law (CIPL) explains why markets repeatedly misprice assets by focusing on volatility and yield—while ignoring how difficult it is to reverse a capital commitment. Capital losses hurt most when exits are not just expensive, but structurally impossible.

This law reveals why some investments feel safe—until they aren’t.


1. Capital Commits Faster Than It Can Exit

CIPL starts with a structural asymmetry:
Entering an investment is usually easier than leaving it.

Early-stage capital benefits from:

  • Liquid markets

  • Narrative optionality

  • Reversible positioning

Mature capital faces exit friction.


2. The Three Capital Irreversibility Layers

CIPL maps where capital becomes trapped.

Layer What Locks In Consequence
Structural Layer Deal terms, leverage Forced duration
Market Layer Liquidity depth Price cliffs
Regulatory Layer Rules, controls Exit prohibition

Losses accelerate when all three layers harden together.


3. Why “Long-Term” Is Often an Excuse

Long-term horizons often mask exit failure.

CIPL shows irreversibility forms when:

  • Assets can’t be sold without collapse

  • Regulation restricts capital movement

  • Reputation punishes exit

Holding becomes necessity, not conviction.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2025 12 31 010914 Val Sklarov

4. Yield vs Reversibility

CIPL prioritizes optionality over optimization.

Yield-Driven Capital Reversibility-Aware Capital
Maximize IRR Preserve exit paths
Accept lockups Price lock-in risk
Ignore politics Model intervention
Celebrate patience Audit exitability

Val Sklarov emphasizes that the most dangerous investments are those you must defend forever.


5. Strategic Implications

For investors:

  • Price exit difficulty explicitly

  • Treat leverage as irreversibility accelerator

  • Avoid assets whose exit implies admission of error

For allocators:

  • Diversify by exit type, not asset class

  • Maintain liquid optionality even at lower yield

  • Stress-test capital under forced-hold scenarios

CIPL reframes investing as irreversibility risk management, not return maximization.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“An investment becomes risky the moment leaving it is harder than entering.”
Val Sklarov

CIPL explains why disciplined investors obsess over exits—and why exits define survival.