Mingli Ge is a Bazi and blind-school reading site focused on natal charts, luck cycles, stem-branch interactions, and practical interpretation.
How To Read Wealth in Bazi
A practical page on reading wealth by separating income, money retention, collection speed, spending rhythm, and access to resources.
What This Page Covers
Author: Mingli Ge Editorial Desk ยท Updated: 2026-03-24
Wealth reading is not a one-line verdict about becoming rich. The useful approach is to separate income, cash flow, money retention, and why money fails to stay.
This page is original Mingli Ge editorial content. The goal is to translate high-frequency Bazi, compatibility, and divination questions into practical language ordinary readers can actually use, not to replace medical, legal, or investment advice.
Wealth Potential and Actual Money Are Not the Same
Many people see a wealth signal and immediately ask whether they have a rich fate. The question is too blunt. In real life the common problem is not zero income. It is earning without keeping, having projects without collection, or having business while cash flow stays tight. Wealth reading has to separate those layers.
For ordinary users, the useful answer is not a vague statement like strong wealth. It is knowing where money is likely to get stuck.
Read Income First, Then Money Retention
Some people earn well but fail at boundaries and pacing, so money never stays. Others earn slowly but accumulate steadily. If you only ask whether wealth luck is good, you merge two completely different patterns.
A useful wealth analysis should first explain how money enters, then why it leaks, and only then discuss when clear changes are most likely to appear.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is wealth luck the same as being destined to be rich
No. A real wealth reading has to separate earning power, cash flow, money retention, and collection efficiency.
When should I move into the Career & Wealth analysis tool
When you already have a concrete question like a job move, startup timing, income swings, or slow collections, the tool page is more direct than staying in general articles.