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Val Sklarov Capital Dependency Irreversibility Model (CDIM)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Capital Dependency Irreversibility Model (CDIM) explains why investments don’t fail when returns disappoint—but when capital becomes structurally dependent on conditions it cannot exit. Profitability masks captivity. Losses arrive when independence was already gone.

This model reveals why capital feels liquid—until it isn’t.


1. Capital Becomes Dependent Before It Becomes Illiquid

CDIM starts with a structural illusion:
Liquidity at entry hides dependency at scale.

Early capital enjoys:

  • Market depth

  • Narrative optionality

  • Regulatory tolerance

Later, exits depend on permission, timing, and optics.


2. The Three Capital Dependency Locks

CDIM maps where capital is trapped.

Lock Dependency Source Consequence
Market Lock Thin liquidity Price collapse
Regulatory Lock Controls, approvals Exit denial
Structural Lock Leverage, covenants Forced holding

Capital is free until two locks engage.
With three, it is captured.


3. Why “We Can Hold Longer” Is Not Strategy

Holding often substitutes for exit.

CDIM shows irreversibility when:

  • Selling signals failure

  • Regulation punishes withdrawal

  • Structure disallows unwind

Time becomes constraint, not ally.


4. Yield vs Independence

High yield often compensates for dependency.

Yield-Seeking Dependency-Aware
Accept lockups Preserve liquidity
Optimize structure Stress-test exits
Ignore optics Model intervention
Defend positions Maintain flexibility

Val Sklarov emphasizes that the most dangerous capital is the kind that must stay invested.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2026 01 01 011650 Val Sklarov

5. Strategic Implications

For investors:

  • Map dependency vectors explicitly

  • Price exit optionality aggressively

  • Avoid synchronized lock-ins

For allocators:

  • Diversify by exit path

  • Keep liquid ballast

  • Treat leverage as dependency amplifier

CDIM reframes investing as dependency risk management, not return maximization.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“Capital stops being yours when leaving becomes a problem.”
Val Sklarov

CDIM explains why disciplined investors obsess over exits—and why exits define power.