When you are in the income bracket which can rightfully afford a Porsche and a pair of $500 shoes (*), your main fear should be identity theft. Victimization rates in property crimes or violent crimes such as burglaries seems to be relatively low in the upper income brackets (and the property crime rates are consistently declining year over year).if you're a thief, no matter the country, would you go after someone that drives a porsche and wears $500 shoes instead of a regular dressed guy that drives a civic? you attract the wrong type of attention and people when you're flashy
Identity theft is on the rise and, most importantly, it's correlated with the income brackets. In 2014, a total of 17,576,205 identity thefts were committed, a meaningful increase from 16,580,500 in 2012. Most importantly, 6,758,000 of the victims (38%) where from the $75,000+ k/year income bracket, while only 13% of Americans make over $75,000 a year.
* I doubt one can easily distinguish a $500 pair of shoes from a $150 one unless you holding them in your hands. That is for men, for women it's a different story.


