Family Business Insights
Family-Run Firms Outperform Peers, More Resilient - Credit Suisse Study

An important segment for wealth managers - and breeding ground for family offices - dynastic businesses have a clear advantage over publicly-quoted companies, a study shows.
Debate on whether family-run businesses perform more strongly
than those with a more dispersed ownership structure has taken
another turn, with Credit Suisse saying
family firms have a clear edge.
The Swiss bank’s Credit Suisse Family 1000 in 2018
report, published today by the Credit Suisse Research Institute,
said that in 2017, family-owned firms generated 34 per cent
greater cash-flow returns on investment than among non-family
owned counterparts. The CSRI analyzed its database of over 1,000
family-owned, publicly-listed companies ranging in size, sector
and region looking at their performance over ten years compared
to the financial and share price performance of a control group
consisting of more than 7,000 non-family owned companies
globally. For the first time the report also assesses the best
performing family or founder owned companies for each of the key
regions on a three-, five- and 10-year basis and reviews their
common features.
The financial performance of family-owned companies beats that of
non-family-owned businesses. Revenue growth is stronger,
EBITDA [earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and
amortization] margins are higher, cash flow returns are
better and gearing is lower, the report said.
With family-run firms often spawning family offices over the
decades and transition/wealth transfer issues an important focus
for private banks, strong performance characteristics will be
welcome news.
There isn’t, however, a hard consensus on whether family-run
firms are always stronger. According to a study published
November 2012 in the Harvard Business Review, which
examined a mix of 149 publicly traded, family-controlled
businesses in North America and Europe, it found that
publicly-traded firms tended to outperform in an economic
upswing, but family-run firms fared better when markets turned
sour, suggesting they are more resilient in the long term.
Conservative
The CSRI report confirmed that family-run firms tend to have a
more conservative approach around growth and strategy. The
average family-owned company relies less on debt funding than the
average non-family owned company. Having a longer-term investment
focus provides companies with the flexibility to move away from
the quarter-to-quarter earnings calendar and instead focus on
through-cycle growth, margins and returns. This also allows for a
smoother cash-flow profile, thereby lowering the need for
external funding. In turn, all of this has supported the
share-price outperformance of family-owned companies since 2006,
it said.
“Our analysis suggests that the best performing family or founder
run companies on a three-, five- and 10-year basis are found in
Germany, Italy, India and China,” it said.
The report also seemed to chime with the HBR research,
as previously noted, that publicly-quoted firms can outperform in
economic upswings. “While there does not appear to be a strong
relationship between macro conditions or general equity market
sentiment and relative returns from family-owned companies we did
find that periods of rapidly improving economic conditions tend
to coincide more frequently with weaker relative returns for
family-owned companies.”
One issue that the CSRI report said may be exaggerated as a
problem is succession planning, which has become a talking point
in the wealth industry as the Baby Boom generation retires. “The
report showed that first and second generation family-owned
companies generated higher risk-adjusted returns than older peers
during the past 10 years. The report does not see this to be due
to succession related challenges but a reflection of business
maturity. The report illustrates that younger family-owned
companies tend to be small cap growth stocks, which has been a
strong performing style whereas older firms are less likely to be
located in the `new’ more disruptive (i.e. technology) sectors,
which by their nature offer much stronger growth,” it said.
Family-run firms do not, contrary cliché, simply involve small-
or medium-sized enterprises. Some of the largest groups such as
Walmart, Samsung, Tata Group and Porsche are family businesses.
Within the private banking field, even when the firms might have
become part of a listed group or partly changed their structure,
family connections remain (Schroders, Pictet, Lombard Odier, C
Hoare & Co, Rockefeller Capital Management, and others).