WM Market Reports
Family Office Thinking Over Direct Investment – Dentons Study
.jpg)
The findings of the survey, which are based on the views of 188 individuals at family offices from 32 countries, aim to give a granular view of what FOs think of direct investment, private markets, digital assets and other areas at a time when inflation and volatility have boosted the hunt for yield.
Volatile financial markets and the highest inflation rates in
four decades have galvanised family offices around the world to
be even more enthusiastic about private markets, bypassing funds
altogether to put money directly into companies.
However, family offices, particularly those on the smaller end of
the spectrum, realise that they need resources and help to
execute these ideas successfully, a new industry survey
shows.
The Direct Investing Survey Report, a 38-page production
from Dentons Family Office, part of global law firm Dentons, examines the details
of the kind of investment strategies, resources and goals that
family offices have. The study was produced in association with
several survey partners including Family Wealth Report
(sister publication to this one) and the
US-based UHNW
Institute.
“While many family offices are braced for the worst as investors,
they are also continuing to search for the best direct
investments in public and private markets. An increasing number
of families are interested in direct investments in growing
companies, especially in the healthcare and technology sectors,”
Edward V Marshall, global head of family office, Dentons, said in
the report. “This report examines how family offices are thinking
about allocating capital to funds versus going direct. Private
equity is a key focus. Many families want to back early-stage
growth enterprises in key sectors, rather than participate in
mega rounds involving the largest private equity fund
managers.”
“We can see that larger family offices are better positioned to
look through current market threats, such as inflation or market
slumps. For example, the largest single-family offices (SFOs) and
family enterprises (FEs), with over $1 billion in assets under
management (AuM), are slightly less concerned about inflation (62
per cent), but the smallest SFOs and FEs, with under $250
million, are slightly more concerned about inflation (73 per
cent).”
“The same pattern exists on being patient and looking for lower
valuations before adding risk; the largest SFOs and FEs are less
inclined to take this view, while the smallest are more likely to
be watching and waiting for lower valuations,” Marshall
said.
The findings of the survey are based on the views of 188
individuals at family offices from 32 countries, with 44 of them
based in the US. Most respondents (73 per cent) work at family
offices or are advisors to one or several family offices. Some 24
per cent are family members. In other details, half of the
respondents work in C-suite roles, and 21 per cent are investment
professionals.
The study examines investment strategies of FOs: why direct
investment is gaining attention and what the challenges are in
order to carry it out; the cryptocurrency and digital assets
space; and the case for or against working with external
partners.
In its overview of the macroeconomic and investment concerns of
FOs, the report said: “Family offices are worried about various
threats in 2023, but inflation, recession and the economy
are foremost on their minds. Asked about the current market
environment, over two thirds of family offices (68 per cent) are
very concerned about inflation and are buying assets that will
benefit from inflation. This number increases to 80 per cent in
the Middle East.”
“Seventy per cent are taking a wait-and-see approach, poised to
add risk when valuations fall, while others have already started
to hunt for bargains – just over half of family offices (53 per
cent) say they are taking advantage of market falls to add more
equity exposure,” it said.