WM Market Reports
EXCLUSIVE GUEST COMMENT: Family Office Formation: Growth From Starkly Different Routes
The Gulf region of the Middle East and Italy are very contrasting places - and both will be busy in the family offices space, argues the author of this item.
This article below, by Alastair Graham, of Highworth Research, an organisation working with Standard & Poor’s Global Family Offices, writes about the creation of family offices in very different conditions, to see what conclusions can be drawn from these developments in terms of strategy. The editors here are delighted to share these insights and invite readers to respond. While the examples in the article vary, the lessons are hopefully of value to readers worldwide.
One of the fastest growing sectors of financial services in
recent years has been family offices. This process is likely to
accelerate further but for different reasons depending on country
conditions, leading to the conclusion that so long as wealth
formation is feasible, family offices can flourish in countries
with highly dissimilar social, economic, political and fiscal
conditions. The Gulf states of Saudi Arabia and the Emirates on
the one hand, and Italy on the other, demonstrate this. One of
the few major conditions these countries have in common is that
around 90 per cent of companies are family-owned.
In Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates there has been
steady accretion of wealth by Gulf merchant families since the
first oil price shock in 1973. Wealth has been built with few
constraints thanks to the oil price strength and minimal
taxation.
Income tax in Saudi and the UAE is nil, while corporate tax is
nil in the UAE and 20 per cent in Saudi. Wealth formation may
stall in the next 2 years due to oil price weakness and
government spending constraints but the inherited liquidity among
family businesses is unlikely to erode by much. Moreover, over
the past 10 years and the next 10, the merchant families who have
built companies on the back of their countries’ oil wealth since
the 1970s have reached the stage where the reins of management
are being passed to the next generation, many of them Western
university educated. A high proportion of these are recognising
that corporate governance, which is featuring like a mantra on an
increasing number of Gulf company websites, means that management
of company funds and family money need to be separated, and that
the latter needs to be professionally managed.
In Italy the conditions for the formation of family offices are
very different. It has taken much longer for many large Italian
family companies to build wealth – a minimum of three or four
generations rather than one or two. One of the causes is high
taxation: income tax is 43 per cent currently on incomes above
€75,000 ($82,639), capital gains tax is 27.5 per cent, and
corporate tax is also 27.5 per cent.
Far from a commodity boom, the Italian economy has been in
continual recession since 2008 and current prospects are not
bright: the government debt to GDP ratio in 2014 was 132.3 per
cent, rising to 132.8 per cent in 2015, fourth highest in the
world behind Japan, Greece, and Lebanon: in Saudi in 2014 it was
1.6 per cent, in the UAE 15.7 per cent. Moreover the banks have
significant bad debt issues: non-performing loans comprised 17.3
per cent of total lending in 2014 (rising to 18 per cent, or €350
billion, in 2015). In the microstate of San Marino, a private
banking “haven” and effectively a dependency of Italy,
non-performing loans were an eye-watering 43 per cent of total
lending in 2014 rising to 45.8 per cent in 2015. In Saudi Arabia,
the ratio is 1.4 per cent while the UAE is 6.5 per cent. Economic
growth rates tell a similar story of sharp contrasts: Italy’s
average growth rate from 1960 to 2015 has been 0.6 per cent,
while in Saudi Arabia the rate from 1969 to 2015 has averaged
4.91 per cent, similar to the UAE’s 4.8 per cent.
The contrasts between the Gulf and Italy on many fundamentals
lead to the paradox that family office formation in the one is
likely to accelerate for positive reasons and in the other for
negative. In addition to the differences mentioned already, a
further key contrast can be seen in liquidity events -
acquisitions, buyouts and IPOs: rare in the Gulf, accelerating in
Italy.
In 2015 acquisitions of Italian companies, most of them family
owned, rose a massive 81 per cent. In the longest recession in
Italy for 70 years, some families are throwing in the towel. The
De ‘Longhi family sold its Delclima air-conditioning company,
founded in 1902, to Mitsubishi Electric for €664m in 2015. In
July last year Germany’s Heidelberg Cement acquired the Pesenti
family’s 45 per cent stake in Italcementi, founded in 1864, for
€1.67 billion. In 2014 the Merloni family sold its 60.4 per cent
stake in Indesit, founded in 1930, to Whirlpool for €768 million.
And again in 2015 the Benetton family sold its majority stake in
airport retailer World Duty Free to Dufry AG of Switzerland for
€1.3 billion.
Asset managers dealing with UHNW clients may do well to
prioritise the Gulf and Italy in the next year or two,
recognising that family office formation in each is likely to be
robust for starkly different reasons.