Kind of unavoidable by her nature Molly is rapidly going to become the biggest tech company, richest person etc in the world. And that is honestly with Molly only throwing a few AP out once in a while.
Disagree.
1)Nothing in Molly's skillset lends her to being involved in the tech industry.
We didn't spec her to be a tech billionaire like Tony Stark; she's way more like Scrooge McDuck, if anything.
2)We have, and will have, expenses that need servicing.
Its quite easy to burn through eight or nine figures yearly paying upkeep for a couple hundred people; 200 people collecting 80k a year each is a recurring yearly wage bill of $16 million before things like health insurance and retirement contributions and operating costs for stuff like operating safe houses.
Never mind one off costs for things like upgrading Dragons Nests, paying off informants, and buying components for Tier 5/6 artifacts and Wonders.
I chose the number 200 deliberately, because the White Court had 100 human combat troops in their Chicago estate as of Peace Talks, just in Chicago, not counting other places or non-combat staff.
And Odin was able to deploy 500 Einherjar to Chicago during Battle Grounds.
I am reasonably sure the Whamps, at least, pay more than 80k apiece to ensure they get people who are experienced, skilled AND discreet; according to this
AMA, US military contractors during the War on Terror were getting paid around 120k before taxes to do security work in Iraq back around 2010.
3)Molly can, if she chooses to, accumulate significant amounts of wealth.
Its definitely an active choice, but she can do it; between bullshit crafting, alchemy, her Cyberdevils background for financial trading and the Crown, she can raise her net worth into the 9-figures range by next year.
Just dabbling in platinum-group metal transmutation is enough.
Where its an issue is if she tries to concentrate said wealth in strategic industries in order to wield control.
THAT draws attention.
If her wealth is spread out across investments in different nations and sectors, it has a much higher chance of passing unremarked; the drug cartels and corrupt government officials launder tens of billions of dollars yearly through the modern financial system.
See HSBC, which was fined around 1.8 billion dollars in 2012, for failing to monitor about 670 billion dollars in wire transfers and nine billion in physical cash over three years in and out of Mexico.