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Asian Family Office - Recent Trends and its Non-financial Role

Family office, if used properly, not only could achieve wealth preservation and growth, but could also preserve harmony and legacy of the family

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Asian Family Office - Recent Trends and its Non-financial Role

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By Professor Winnie PENG,
Director of the Tanoto Center for Asian Family Business and Entrepreneurship Studies,
HKUST Business School

As the number of billionaires grows in Asia, the need for an efficient way to pass on family wealth and values, and to maintain harmony within the family, has been increasing. This has resulted in a dramatic increase in the number of Asian family offices. A report by the EY Family Office estimates that the number of family offices increased tenfold in 2017 compared to a decade ago. With the increasing number of family offices, they are creating greater impact and shaping the future of Asia. Understanding the following trends helps families and professionals better prepared for the future.

Trend 1: A growing number of family offices built on “New Wealth” 

New wealth can be defined as wealth that has been accumulated recently, within one generation of time. It may refer to a large sum of money from a sell-off when the first generation of family business encounters a bottleneck, or when the second generations refuse to take over; it may have been obtained by monopolizing access to natural resources; or it could have been gained from emerging industries and high-tech sectors. Owners of such wealth are keen to have it properly managed, but private banks and asset management firms fail to provide adequate services to satisfy their need. This has resulted in the creation of family offices. 

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According to the Forbes billionaires list in 2019, Hong Kong and Mainland China produced 71 and 324 billionaires respectively. Wealth in Mainland China has been accumulating at an astonishing speed. Forbes states that the private wealth of Chinese billionaires grew by 166% between 2013 and 2019. According to the Hurun Wealth Report 2019, there are more than one hundred thousand super rich families in China whose wealth grows by 11.2% every year and half of them with disposable assets of over US$100 million. Information technology, with a growth of 1.4% compared to 2018, outperformed finance and investment to become the third largest source of income for Chinese entrepreneurs on the billionaires list in 2019.
The number of old wealth family offices is also on the rise, but its increasing rate is not comparable with that of new wealth family offices. Owners of new wealth and old wealth demonstrate differences in behavior, mentality, risk appetite, attitude towards money, and the approach to succession. The growth of new wealth family offices is expected to have a significant impact on the overall development of family offices in Asia.
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