Family Office
Family Offices Aren't Stress Testing Enough For Threats – Dentons Study

The report – mostly based on US family offices, but with some in other nations – said there is a culture of underestimating threats. This is particularly important at a time when family offices, once little understood in the mainstream media, are getting more attention.
  A study of 200 family office executives, mostly in the US with
  some in other countries, finds that more than two-thirds (70 per
  cent) of them haven’t “stress tested” risk management plans
  to deal with threats such as data theft, health conditions,
  fraud, kidnapping and business breakdowns.
  
  At a time of rising interest rates, geopolitical risks and
  massive wealth transfer, FOs must address these hazards, argues
  Dentons, the global
  law firm. The Covid-pandemic also was a wakeup call, it
  said. 
  
  While they oversee trillions of dollars of assets, family offices
  often lack the specific resources and skills to stay on top of
  threats. With cybersecurity and other risks on the rise, this
  isn’t wise, Dentons said.
  Such a report also shows how – as SFOs become more
  high-profile for
  investment and regulatory reasons, and with more (sometimes
  hostile) political focus on the "rich" – these institutions
  need to step up their game.
  
  A senior advisor at the law firm, Kevin Hulbert, is quoted in the
  report as saying: “Family offices sometimes fall through the
  cracks of being big enough to be specifically targeted, but not
  having in place the strong risk management measures typical of
  bigger organisations, hence leaving them very vulnerable.”
  
  In a 15-page report, Dentons identifies risks and consequences
  such as: property damage; disclosure of sensitive information;
  health conditions/death; business disruption; identity theft;
  kidnapping or stalking; workplace violence; regulatory penalties
  or lawsuits; loss of investments; financial or liquidity issues;
  tech or operational failure; crises or damage to reputation;
  burglary or robbery; fraud and embezzlement; theft of
  intellectual property; and assault.
  
  The study examines the internal resources that family offices
  might be able to call on, as well as external sources. 
  
  “A change in mindset is needed at many family offices, which
  either underestimate threat levels (47 per cent) or are
  complacent about risks (41 per cent). Limited staff, as well as
  an emphasis on cost and convenience, are other obstacles to
  better risk management,” the report said in its examination of
  areas such as cybersecurity. Switching to the pandemic’s lessons,
  it said: “Almost three-in-ten family offices (29 per cent) did
  not have a business continuity plan in place before the Covid-19
  pandemic. And over a quarter (27 per cent) said implementing
  secure remote working protocols is one of their top risk
  management challenges.”
  
  Fail to prepare, then prepare to fail
  “Our data reveals that while family offices are aware of the
  numerous threats they face, many are not incorporating regular
  stress testing into their overall risk management strategy,”
  Edward Marshall (pictured), global head, family offices and HNW
  group at Dentons, said on his LinkedIn page about the study.
  “This oversight could result in family offices overlooking a
  vital technique to assess the strength and resilience of their
  risk management practices.”
  
  “The spectrum of stress testing methods is broad, extending from
  rigorous computer-simulated analysis to more straightforward,
  low-tech solutions,” Marshall said. “A family office could, for
  instance, use a seasoned risk consultant to facilitate a formal
  `What If’ conversation to discuss strategies and responses to
  various scenarios.
  
  “Regardless of the method chosen, the outcome is invariably
  beneficial: the family office emerges with updated contingency
  plans and identified opportunities to fortify against existing
  vulnerabilities. These assessments also provide a forum for
  family members to discuss their individual risk tolerances and
  uncover ways to better protect against potential reputational,
  regulatory, legal, and geopolitical pitfalls.”
  
  Data for the study was collected from 25 May to 10 August 2020.
  Most respondents were single family offices and described
  themselves as traditional SFOs. The majority of them had between
  $100 million and $5 billion in net worth (2 per cent of family
  offices did not disclose their net worth).
  
  Geographically, family offices were concentrated in the Northeast
  and Southern states of the US with 9 per cent being international
  responses (Australia, Brazil, Canada, Europe, Germany, Hong Kong,
  Italy, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, Singapore, South Africa and UK).
As a reminder, this news service is exclusive media partner with Highworth Research, a database covering the world's SFOs. To register for a free trial, click here.
See here for another feature about Dentons and the work it does in the family offices space.