The Family Office - The Private Investment Arm of the World´s Ultra-Rich Families



    The Family Office Organisation, based in Sark, Channel Islands has
    just released the 3rd Edition of "The 3300 Global Family Office
    Database 2008", with 1800 entries from the USA and 1240 from Europe

    with full contact details. The majority of Family Offices listed will
    have assets-under-management exceeding US$100m - US$100bn each. These
    extensively researched reports provide valuable details of the
    investment vehicles of the word´s richest families: names of Chief
    Investment Officers, full postal addresses, email contacts and much
    more.

    A Family Office is a small, intimate, centralised office of the
    "creme de la creme" in-house investment management team that manages
    and administers Family Investments, Family Trusts, Legal & Complex Tax
    Issues and the Family Foundation. The Family Office will also
    administer Family Members´ domestic bill payments, arrangement of
    travel / private yacht / private aircraft and the purchase of luxury
    items like fine art and the acquisition of private residences etc. One
    would expect to see at least three - five family members sitting on
    the board of a single Family Office.

    The goal of the world´s ultra-rich families in establishing a
    Family Office is to ensure that their wealth is preserved for future
    generations of that family. The annual cost to manage a Family Office
    can exceed US$2m. However, assets - under-management would normally
    exceed US$500m and well into the US$Billions.

    Family Offices started to evolve in the late 1800s - early 1900s
    on the sale of major family businesses during the industrial
    revolution. Instead of dividing the proceeds to the family siblings at
    that time, where the wealth would erode rapidly, early industrialists
    like the Rockefeller and Carnegie Families - to name but a few - were
    shrewd enough to think further ahead. European aristocratic families
    had similar set-ups, called Estate Offices; many are still in
    existence to this day. However at that time, as now, most European
    families were predominately major land owners.

    Family Offices do not invest in the kind of retail financial
    products one finds on the High-Street. Like financial institutions

    they invest in "High-Risk / High Return" investments and tend to
    retain a mixed portfolio of investments, primarily in alternative
    investments such as Hedge Funds, Private Equity, Bonds, Equities

    Commodities (such as gold), Futures & Options and Currency Trading to
    justify a higher rate of return. Real estate investments and
    shareholdings will of course remain a key part of their portfolio.

    Since 1989, The Family Office Organisation has researched the
    world´s ultra-rich families in depth. Since 2005, this research has
    been more keenly focused on Family Offices for the benefit of
    financial institutions and fund managers across the globe. More
    information can be found on the Family Office Organisation website