Family Office
Single Family Offices Emerge From Shadows To Win Hottest Deals

This news service spoke to those involved in a new report on the world's family offices. One takeaway is their view that SFOs, traditionally seen as discreet institutions shying away from the public realm, are pushing themselves forward, if only to grab a greater share of investment action.
Single family offices in the US and possibly other parts of the
world are getting more open about what they do and are becoming
less obsessed about staying “under the radar” as they seek to
capture deal-flow and as younger wealth holders take
control.
This is the view of those involved in a new study of family
offices by FINTRX, a
data and analytics firm tracking the sector, and sponsored by
Charles
Schwab. The 24-page study draws on the FINTRX database of
contacts with more than 2,750 family offices around the
world.
As Family Wealth Report and its sister news services
will attest, American SFOs tend to be more willing to talk about
their activities, attend events where journalists and
product/service vendors are present, than is the case with their
peers in Europe and other regions. To some extent the concern for
privacy and keeping out of the media is a particular cultural
force in Europe, possibly driven by governments having at times
been more hostile to great wealth than is the case in the more
pro-capitalist US and Canada. The US family office segment is
also much older and has given practitioners more time to work out
how to conduct themselves. Family offices date back to the JD
Rockefeller/J P Morgan/Carnegie heyday of the late 19th
century.
“Family offices are becoming a bit more public….they are building
a web presence…this is also partly a generational issue. People
are now more used to sharing information and they are seeking
deal-flow,” Russ D’Argento, founder and CEO at FINTRX, told
FWR in a call about the report. If family offices have a
low or non-existent public profile they won’t show up on the
radar of interesting investment propositions, he said.
D’Argento spoke alongside Eddie Brown, head of Schwab Advisor
Family Office. Schwab has invested considerably in the family
offices space in recent months, and regards the area as an
important growth opportunity, Brown said. Brown also agreed about
single family offices in particular getting more
high-profile.
The report, which is the first in a series from the
organizations, said that there are anywhere between 3,500 to
5,000 family offices around the world that have one or more
employees, $100 million or more in investible assets, and about
35 per cent are single family offices and 65 per cent are
multi-family offices. (It is worth noting that some estimates,
from the likes of EY, aka Ernst & Young, have pegged the industry
total at around 10,000; others put it somewhat smaller than
that.) The FINTRX/Schwab report said that about two-thirds of
family offices are North American, a quarter are in Europe and
the rest in Asia and rest of the world. Non-American family
offices are growing the fastest – unsurprising as these are less
mature and have more headroom. (Note: This news service has an
exclusive partnership with Highworth, a UK-based data
and analytics firm with a strong focus on the EMEA region's
single family office sector. Click
here for details.)
In another geographic twist, the report notes that there is a
higher incidence of MFOs in Europe than in the US (75.1 per cent
vs 61.8 per cent, respectively). The study explains this
difference by arguing that North America has a longer heritage of
single family offices; in Europe, more single family offices have
opened their doors to other SFOs to share costs and obtain more
benefits.
As far as where the most family offices are located, New York is
top of the US league with 20 per cent, followed by California at
15 per cent, Texas at 8 per cent, Florida at 6.2 per cent and
Illinois at 5.8 per cent. New York City has 18 per cent of all
such organizations, followed by Chicago (3.9 per cent) and Dallas
(3.4 per cent).
Source of wealth
One notable finding of the report is identifying where family
offices made their money from in the first place, because this
can also mold how they invest and act. For example, 21.3 per cent
of family offices made their money from investing and financial
services – the largest group. Some 19.3 per cent of FOs made
money because they were built by entrepreneurs; 14.3 per cent got
the money from inheritance; and 8.0 per cent were driven by real
estate wealth. Other segments, in descending order, are
manufacturing and industrials (5.7 per cent); technology (5.1 per
cent); retail (4.0 per cent); healthcare and pharmaceuticals (3.4
per cent); oil and gas (2.9 per cent); food and beverage (2.5 per
cent); media and entertainment (2.1 per cent); distribution (1.8
per cent); sports (1.6 per cent); agriculture (1.2 per cent);
automotive (1.1 per cent); telecoms (1.1 per cent); and others
(4.6 per cent).
If families make their fortunes from a specific sector,
FWR has noticed that the trend for “direct investing”
involves FOs putting money to work in the same area where they
originally became rich. (This can create issues of
diversification and risk if not addressed carefully.) FINTRX’S
D’Argento agreed that this was a significant area. “We’ve also
seen the direct investing trend gaining speed and haven’t seen
any slowdown,” he said. Reasons for the trend include a desire
for more hands-on control, a desire to cut out a layer of fees
and to make use of a family office’s own knowledge and
experience, as well as such resources of other FOs.
Family offices also like direct investing because it means they
avoid losing out through “forced liquidity events that can arise
when a private equity fund or VC fund has to exit investments to
comply with its time-frame targets (such as promising investors
to return capital after, say, 5 years),” he said.
The study drills down into asset allocation exposures across the
family offices universe. More than three-quarters of FOs
(77.6 per cent) invest in private equity; 70.2 per cent invest in
hedge funds; 66.6 per cent are in long-only investments
(equities, debt); 59.6 per cent are in real estate; 41.2 per cent
make direct investments and 30.6 per cent invest in venture
capital. North American FOs are by far the keenest on private
equity: 80.9 per cent of such family offices do so.
Schwab’s Brown is bullish about the family office sector’s growth
potential. “We believe family offices will continue to grow
globally to meet the needs of a growing population of
ultra-wealthy families. The level of sophistication of today’s
investor is higher than ever before,” he said.
“As the family office market expands, a talent war is growing.
The competition to attract and retain top professionals for both
single and multi-family offices has intensified,” he added.
To view the report, click here.