Families advised to get governance right ahead of $83tn wealth transfer - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
财富管理

Families advised to get governance right ahead of $83tn wealth transfer

Structures are needed to ensure that fortunes pass amicably to the next generation — and are not squandered

“Shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations.”

That maxim haunts wealthy matriarchs and patriarchs around the world: describing the risk that hard-won entrepreneurial riches end up being squandered after they pass to grandchildren. And research shows that there is truth in it: 70 per cent of families that create wealth have lost it by the second generation, and 90 per cent lose it by the third generation, according to a 20-year research project by US-based consultancy Williams Group.

All too often, matriarchs or patriarchs simply fail to think beyond tax planning and end up with no infrastructure for a successful wealth transfer. Consequently, nest eggs get devoured by lawyers as siblings squabble — and end up back in shirtsleeves.

However, that succession infrastructure can be established by family governance — a parallel to corporate governance, but not as well understood as it involves less disclosure. While corporate governance is reported and covered by government regulations, family governance is, by contrast, opaque — except for the occasional court fight. Best practices tend to be passed on by word of mouth.

There are similarities between these two types of governance, though. A family constitution, for example, acts much like a corporate charter. Also, adding independent board members to family-controlled businesses helps to pierce some of the groupthink, just as it does in larger corporate boardrooms. And family councils, comprising a subset of family members, can represent wider stakeholders to help make decisions for everyone, as advisory boards do within some companies.

For some families, there can be as much at stake as in any corporate deal. A whopping $83tn is expected to be transferred to the next generation in the next 20 years — much of it in the next 10 years — UBS said in July, in its annual wealth report.

That can make getting started on family governance seem daunting, says Babetta von Albertini, chair of the Institute for Family Governance, which offers case studies of how family problems can be resolved without litigation. “The hardest thing is to get the patriarch or matriarch to do something,” she explains.

$83tnUBS estimate of the value of assets being transferred to the next generation in the next 20 years

Von Albertini cites one case in which a patriarch worth about $3bn had done no estate planning and simply expected his oldest child to step into his shoes. Not surprisingly, that did not go down very well with his other children.

One of the first steps for wealthy families is to create a family constitution, advises Thomas Thiegs, a managing director at Ascent, a division of US Bank. He suggests this should set out answers to questions of control: “What types of roles will family members have? What is our structure for the board of directors? How many seats do we have?”

Thiegs says: “We give [families] a road map that gets them from barely any structure or centralised decision-making to this group decision-making and governance process.” However, he adds: “It does take years to put that in place.”

A further step can be to establish a family council. This is, essentially, a group of family members picked to represent the larger cohort. It can include family members who are on the board of a family company as well as others.

We give [families] a road map that gets them from barely any structure or centralised decision-making to this group decision-making

Thomas Thiegs, Ascent

“That is a structure that we like because it lets people have their opinion and voices heard but it also provides for that more formal decision-making for managing the business,” says Thiegs. “The [family] owners still have a way to provide that feedback to the business.”  

An even broader set of family members can comprise an assembly, where views may be aired. This group can include cousins and people who have married into the family over the decades. These individuals still need a voice with the family and its businesses, but they might not have decision-making authority.

Von Albertini believes family governance structures like these can act as checks and balances to protect wealth. For example, protective committees can be established to oversee financial advisers as well as family members who might be young and are unfamiliar with finances. These protective committees — which, typically, include an outside lawyer — give family members leeway to make “affordable mistakes” with money.

In one example, cited by von Albertini, a father gave up control of a slice of the family wealth to a young daughter with little financial experience — but this allowed her to make impact investments that she felt passionate about.

“It has a purpose to train the family member and empower her,” von Albertini suggests. “The bankers have to go through her family office. The protective committees are a way to train the next generation.”

Family governance can also deal with bad blood between siblings. In business relationships, when disagreements get messy, people can walk away. But wealthy family members cannot cut ties as easily.

In these situations, Doug Baumoel, a family business consultant, reckons the solution is greater familiarity. “If there is one treatment for family business conflict, it is when family members get to know each other better,” he says. “That increases predictability in the system.”

Some believe the reason that disputes often arise in wealthy families is because the children do not spend enough time together when growing up — so they do not develop the same connections to their siblings that middle-class families have. In wealthy families, one child might go off to horse riding camp, for example, while a sibling goes to sailing school.

“When family members don’t know each other well, mistrust develops,” Baumoel warns. “They have not had the opportunity to fight and heal and compromise because they have not had to.”

But there can be simple solutions, Baumoel points out. “I know one family, they live in this very big house, but they insist their two young kids share a bedroom. For this purpose exactly.”

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

欧洲增长前景受到赤字限制打击

欧洲经济还面临多项长期挑战,从老龄化社会导致劳动力萎缩,到应对气候变化和提升防务能力。

“主流媒体”能在第二届特朗普任期幸存下来吗?

美国的新闻集团担心,当选总统将通过监管、诉讼和恐吓来兑现竞选时对新闻业的威胁。

英伟达向全球芯片制造商传达的信息

英伟达向全球芯片制造商传达的信息很明确:如果不能打败它,那就加入它的供应链。

巴西的全球平衡战略比以往任何时候都更难实现

巴西总统卢拉一直寻求与美国、中国和俄罗斯都保持联系。但即使在特朗普再次胜选之前,这一外交空间也在缩小。

冗长的午餐应该为西班牙洪水预警失灵“背锅”吗?

幸存者指责西班牙地方政府失职,专家则警告气候变化正在引发更多难以预测的自然灾害。

广告商将重返X平台,试图讨好马斯克和特朗普

一些品牌曾因马斯克取消审核而放弃在该网站投放广告。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×