Family Office
After Rapid Growth, Singapore's Family Office Sector Matures

We talk to law firm DLA Piper about the work it has been doing with ultra-HNW wealth holders about family offices, and how this sector is maturing and adapting.
Singapore is a base for hundreds of single-family offices, and
these entities are important sources of market liquidity
which the city-state’s authorities want to encourage.
While the Monetary
Authority of Singapore and the jurisdiction’s government is
taking longer to register SFOs today, mindful of the need to
protect quality, family offices are now important players.
Law firms are an important constituent of the family offices
chessboard, advising ultra-wealthy business owners and families
about the case for creating these structures.
Singapore’s requirement that SFOs, which benefit from certain tax
incentives, invest a portion of their assets into the
jurisdiction also creates work for advisors and enhances the
positive spillovers to the Singapore economy.
That is certainly the case for international law firm DLA Piper.
“It [the family offices sector] has grown tremendously over the
past couple of years,” Barbara Voskamp, partner, and
international tax lawyer, told this news service in a recent
call.
While definitions of “family office” can be fuzzy at times, there
are said to be about 700 family offices in Singapore. Banks such
as DBS, for example, are tapping
into the space. More than 59 per cent of Asia’s family
offices are based in Singapore. Growth is driven by the rising
affluence of the region and Singapore’s attractions as a
relatively legally and politically safe jurisdiction. (It has
sought to clarify and strengthen rules for SFOs, as reported
here. It has also benefited to some degree from concerns
about Hong Kong’s political direction in recent years. (That
said, Hong Kong is also trying to compete
as a centre for family offices. Other centres,
such as Dubai, are also trying to attract
SFOs.
With growth comes a need for quality control. A report in
November last year (the Financial Times) said that the
global queue to set up a family office in Singapore has stretched
to as long as 18 months.
“For sure this is the result of an overload of applications in
the MAS processing teams but there may also be an element of
moderating the influx and focus on more mature and professional
family offices,” Voskamp said.
Singapore’s rise as a family offices hub isn’t the only feature.
Since 2020, the jurisdiction has also operated a variable
capital company (VCC) regime to encourage wealth
management business, and it is looking at an updated VCC
programme to help SFOs.
VCCs were launched so that fund offerings could compete more
effectively against those from jurisdictions such as such as
the Cayman Islands, Hong Kong and Luxembourg. A VCC can be set up
as a standalone structure, or an umbrella entity containing
sub-funds. They are designed to be attractive for venture
capital, private equity, private real estate investments,
infrastructure, fund of funds, private credit, debt funds,
and hedge funds. And, as Singapore’s financial sector knows, the
alternatives space has been hot over the past decade. It remains
busy even as interest rates have risen. Now, VCCs are restricted
to licensed or registered fund managers, so SFOs cannot use them.
That may change.
Maturing
In any event, Singapore appears more focused on building “more
mature and professional” family offices, Voskamp said.
“Singapore aims to be the `Switzerland’ and ‘Luxembourg’ of Asia
at the same time. Family offices and the liquidity they tag along
are an important factor in building the desired infrastructure
and eco system," she said. A pool of talent, political and
legal stability, and efficient services have combined to give the
city-state an edge, Voskamp continued.
Like all jurisdictions, Singapore is closely monitoring the
global tax development and amending and adjusting its domestic
laws, where seen appropriate, to make them more sustainable in
future or BEPS-proof, as well aa complying with high
anti-money laundering standards, she said.
Since the start of January, for the first time the
jurisdiction is taxing foreign-sourced disposable gains.
Known as the Section 10L rule, the change means that capital
gains from the sale of foreign assets are subject to tax if they
are received in Singapore and if the relevant entity does not
have “economic substance” in Singapore. (This requirement for
“substance” is designed to remove the use of “brass plate”
businesses which are located in a jurisdiction purely for tax
reasons, having no office or staff supporting the
business.)
What this and other developments points to, it appears, is a
further maturation of Singapore’s family offices
industry.
The busy DLA Piper team carries out work such as implementing
structures for single family offices and multi-family offices,
tax structuring, tax incentive applications, inbound and outbound
investments tax advice, succession planning, and advice on the
exemption of holding fund management licence.
Among other trends, Voskamp said that multifamily offices
managed by third-party fund managers have become more popular
than single family offices which are subject to higher scrutiny.