Family Office
Global Politics, Talent Woes, Legacy Anxiety And Private Equity Seize Family Offices' Attention

A new survey of the world’s family offices sector examines what these organisations are most concerned about and where they see opportunities.
An earlier version of this article, written by our US correspondent, ran on Family Wealth Report, a sister news service. An adjusted version follows for readers in the Europe, Middle East, Africa and Asia-Pacific markets.
Combustible global politics, anxiety about younger family members
and an increasingly fraught battle to secure talent, head the
list of concerns facing family offices in 2026. Apprehension
about private equity investments is also surfacing.
Two-thirds of 333 family offices around the world, with an
average net worth of $1.6 billion, cited geopolitics as the
leading risk facing family offices, according to JP Morgan
Private Bank’s 2026 Global Family Office Report.
US-based family offices account for 59 per cent of the total; 14
per cent are in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, 11 per
cent are in Asia-Pacific, and 16 per cent are in Latin
America.
Legacy, succession and family wealth education were identified as
the areas which have “the most needs or gaps” by the surveyed
family offices.
The top concern of Greycourt & Co
clients is whether “the family’s rising generation is ready for
what’s being asked of them,” said David Wells, president of the
Pittsburgh-based firm. A “key priority” for Eton Advisors this
year is “enhancing our engagement with our rising-generation
clients [by] strengthening their financial knowledge and
confidence,” Brian Hughes, president of the North Carolina-based
firm, said.
Families owning businesses cited “internal conflict” as a
principal risk to family stability, and an astonishing 86 per
cent of family offices surveyed by JP Morgan said they lacked
a clear succession plan for key decision-makers.
Private equity questioned
Regarding investments, global family offices that view inflation
as a primary risk are allocating nearly 60 per cent of their
portfolios to alternatives, focusing on hedge funds and real
estate, the survey found.
But families are expressing concern about private equity funds,
long an alternatives stalwart, and they make up nearly 10
per cent of global family office portfolios. A slowdown in
distributions and extending lock-up periods without liquidity are
causing clients to question the asset category, according to
Greycourt’s Wells. “The uncertainty around cash flow impacts the
rest of the portfolio,” he noted.
Pathstone clients
have been more concerned about the fact that PE funds have
“massively underperformed” over the past three years, with
returns in the 6 per cent to 6 per cent range, said
Matthew Fleissig, CEO of the $100 billion-plus family office
powerhouse.
Pathstone remains a booster of private equity, Fleissig said,
noting that historic five-year and 10-year returns have exceeded
the S&P 500. Nonetheless, the category’s recent
underperformance has caused clients to raise questions about PE
as a reliable asset class, he said.
The report said that 2.5 times as many families are increasing
private market allocations as are cutting them.
“Risk-on attitude”
As for other alternative investments, family offices are largely
avoiding gold and cryptocurrencies, according to the report.
Two-thirds of family offices say they intend to prioritise
artificial intelligence investments, but over half have no
exposure to growth equity, venture capital or infrastructure.
Those areas are “where much of the innovation happens,” said
Natacha Minniti, global co-head of JP Morgan’s family
office practice. “What stands out globally is a clear risk-on
attitude.”
Family office investors should focus on “private market exposure”
and “the enablers driving the supply chain, from semiconductors
and power infrastructure to networking and cooling systems,” said
Christopher Aba, head of investment and advice at JP Morgan
Private Bank.
The report also highlighted attitudes to gold and crypto – with
gold being very much in focus after its price fell late last
week and selling continued yesterday. Despite geopolitical fears,
family offices “avoid gold and crypto,” the study found.
Despite the pervasive sense of geopolitical risks, appetite for
traditional and emerging hedges remains limited.
Seventy-two per cent of global family offices have no gold
exposure, and 89 per cent have no exposure to
cryptocurrencies.
The report found that 31 per cent of families keep 10 per cent or
more of total holdings in cash.
Talent woes and rising operating costs
On the business side of family offices, the shortage of
experienced talent is continuing to accelerate.
“Competition for talent and the need for specialised skills are
driving up operating costs and prompting a shift towards hiring
non-family professionals,” according to the JP Morgan report.
The average annual operating cost for a family office is $3
million, rising to $6.6 million for offices with more than $1
billion in assets. Approximately 11 per cent of offices surveyed
spent more than $7 million, with over a quarter of those costs
allocated to outsourcing services such as legal, trading and
cybersecurity.
Developments such as renewed interest by state governments in
wealth taxes and increased client mobility are also gaining
family offices' attention. Overall, however, family offices
appear to be optimistic about the future.