The problem is
$b = (1, -1)^\top, c = (1, 1)^\top, A \in \mathbb{R}^{2 \times 2}$, suppose the sum of reverse diagonal elements of $A$ is zero (i.e., $A_{12} + A_{21} = 0$), prove that the sum of reverse diagonal elements of $\sum\limits_{r=0}^{n-1} A^r c b^\top A^{n-1-r} $ is zero for any $n \in \mathbb{N}^{+}$.
In fact, this is my conjecture and I have tested many examples in my computer. For diagonal case, it is easy to prove it, but for the general case I do not know how to do it. One idea come to my mind is to write $A$ as the sum of a diagonal matrix and an anti-diagonal matrix, then expand $A^r$ by binomial expansion, but unfortunately they do not commute.
Could someone give me some hints?
Thanks!