WM Market Reports
Europe Has Longest-Lasting Wealthy Dynasties, Notes Societe Generale/Forbes Study

Europe boasts the longest-lasting wealthy dynasties, but its ability to make strengths of family continuity count cannot be taken for granted, according to a Societe Generale Private Banking and Forbes Insights report.
Perhaps unsurprisingly given its history, Europe boasts the
longest-lasting wealthy dynasties, but its ability to make
strengths of family continuity count cannot be taken for granted,
according to a Societe
Generale Private Banking and Forbes Insights report.
The study, called, Behind the Staying Power of Wealth
Creation in Europe: Family, Long-Lived & Long-Term-Oriented,
found that during the past quarter of a century, Europe has
expanded its share of the world’s largest fortunes, with the
second-highest rise in the number of such fortunes, after the
Americas, and the second-highest rise in aggregate growth of
fortunes held by the wealthiest individuals.
Of the fortunes that have been on the Forbes Billionaires lists
for at least a quarter of a century, Europe has the highest
survival rate, at 78 per cent, followed by the US at 73 per cent,
the report said. The longest-surviving European fortunes are
mostly private (67 per cent) and family-controlled or owned, with
the majority (52 per cent) being managed or owned by third and
fourth generations.
Europe owes its pace of growth in fortune creation over the last
15 years to emerging European markets, the report said. Emerging
Europe accounts for 42 per cent of the number of Europe’s largest
fortunes, and 39 per cent of wealth held by Europe’s richest
individuals.
Back in 2002, Germany was in second place for most billionaires
by country, after the US. It was overtaken by Russia in 2008.
(Russia has since been overtaken by China.)
Most recently, Europe has been generating new fortunes at a
moderate pace. Europe has generated 26 per cent of the world’s
new fortunes over the last two years, behind the Americas and
Asia-Pacific. Within Europe, more of the newest fortunes have
been generated in Western Europe than in emerging Europe.
Many Western European fortunes are the result of the second
generation reaching billionaire status based on companies started
years ago. And in emerging markets, some new fortunes still hark
back to the post-communist asset privatisations.
(Forbes Insights is the strategic research practice of Forbes
Media, publisher of Forbes magazine and
Forbes.com.)
The study is based on an analysis of ultra high net worth
individuals in Europe, conducted by Forbes Insights, as well as
interviews with European industrialists and experts on European
wealth creation. The analysis involved the study of “Forbes
Billionaires” data collected over the last 25 years, alongside
data from the “Rich Lists” created by Forbes Russia, Forbes
Ukraine, Forbes Poland, Forbes Romania, Forbes Czech Republic and
Forbes Turkey.