Family Office
Family Offices Still Pressured To Deploy Cash
.jpg)
This news service talks to Ocorian, a global provider of services to financial institutions, asset managers, corporates and HNW individuals.
Family offices that have been set up by a younger generation of
enthusiastic business creators have been sitting on cash and
weighing when to deploy it – a decision that may be less urgent
now that central banks have raised interest rates. Even so, with
rates still below inflation rates, the pressure hasn’t gone away
to put cash to work.
“We are seeing a number of entrepreneurial people who have made
money quite quickly… it is first-gen wealth and relatively young.
They have had a lot of events to handle over the past few years
and they’re sitting on cash,” Amy Collins, who leads the Jersey
Family Office at Ocorian, said. The firm is a
global provider of services to financial institutions, asset
managers, corporates, and high net worth individuals. It works
with more than 60 family offices around the world.
Rising interest rates help to ease the urgency of finding
alternatives to cash, but people can sometimes think that there
is a binary choice between holding cash or going for a risky
asset.
“We tend to find they sometimes miss out that middle-risk asset,”
she said.
Collins told this news service that many of its clients over the
past 18 months have had large parts of their investment
portfolios in cash as they have sought to protect their assets
from volatile markets.
The conversation also reflects how non-public markets have been
overshadowed to some extent by the rise of private markets, in
part because of their illiquidity premium – an attractive quality
at a time of thin yields in recent years.
The younger cohort of ultra-high net worth individuals, via their
family offices, like areas such as private equity, and the
structures around them, because it is an industry they already
know well. Club deals – in which family offices group
together on similar deals – is a trend that Collins
highlights. “They’re similar people and they trust each
other.”
Given the need to work out the most suitable structures in which
to hold alternative investments such as private equity, it
encourages people to look for neutral jurisdictions – such
as Jersey and Guernsey – she said. An advisory arm might sit
in one country, such as the UK, but the asset-holding part will
be in an IFC such as Jersey, she said. These places have
experience in dealing with administration, reporting, auditing
and tax.
In other trends, Collins said she’s noticed a shift from
traditional trusts where the assets could be quite small to a
more concentrated cluster of structures where they were larger,
and serving more high-value clients.