All Content from Business Insider 10月22日 22:56
富豪家族投资转向稳健,青睐信贷与房产
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

根据Campden Wealth的2025年报告,北美超富裕家族正从高风险的初创公司投资转向更稳健的信贷和房地产领域。私人信贷和房地产已占投资组合的29%,因其提供稳定收益而受到青睐。与此同时,早期初创公司投资因其高风险和不确定性而逐渐失宠。报告显示,家庭办公室的平均总财富达20亿美元,管理资产达15亿美元,这一投资趋势反映了家族办公室对稳定性和风险规避的日益重视,预示着未来投资将更侧重于直接股权投资、私人信贷和房地产。

💰 **投资策略转向稳健**:北美超富裕家族正将投资重心从高风险的初创公司,转移到提供稳定收益的私人信贷和房地产领域。这一转变反映了家族办公室对风险规避和长期稳定增长的追求,尤其是在当前市场波动加剧的背景下。

📈 **私人信贷吸引力增强**:私人信贷已成为超富裕家族的重要投资标的,占其投资组合的29%。这主要得益于当前高企的利率环境,为投资者提供了具有吸引力的回报。大型家族办公室尤其倾向于通过基金或与私募股权管理人共同投资的方式进入该领域。

🏠 **房地产持续受青睐**:房地产作为家族财富的传统支柱,依然是家族资本的重要投向。约75%的家族办公室持有房地产,其中工业物流和住宅地产最受欢迎。尤其是在人口和就业增长强劲的地区,房地产投资表现尤为突出。

📉 **初创公司投资降温**:早期初创公司的风险投资正迅速降温,其在家族办公室投资组合中的排名有所下滑。过去一年早期风险投资表现不佳,以及对直接私募股权、私募股权基金和风险投资回报的担忧,是导致这一趋势的主要原因。

🎯 **2025年投资目标**:对于2025年,48%的家族办公室将“提高流动性”列为首要投资目标,33%则希望“降低投资组合风险”。这表明未来投资将更加注重资产的流动性和整体风险的控制,平均回报预期也随之下降。

The ultrawealthy are pulling back from risky startups and pouring billions into private credit and real estate, per Campden Wealth's 2025 report.

The richest families in North America are quietly reshaping how they invest their money — trading the high-risk thrill of startups for the steady pull of private credit and property.

As of August, private markets accounted for 29% of the average family office portfolio in North America, according to the North America Family Office Report 2025.

The report — produced by Campden Wealth, a London-based family office research firm, and RBC Wealth Management, the wealth management arm of the Royal Bank of Canada — was based on 317 survey responses from single- and multi-family offices worldwide. That included 141 in North America, all of which were collected between April and August.

On average, the North American families surveyed held $2 billion in total wealth and managed $1.5 billion in assets.

Based on the report's figures, that 29% share equates to roughly $62 billion of the $215 billion managed by North American family offices.

And that share is still growing.

"Future investment is likely to go toward direct private equity, private credit, and real estate," the report said, adding that private credit is attractive to wealthy investors because borrowers are paying higher interest rates.

The rise of private credit

Private credit has emerged as one of the most attractive havens for the ultrawealthy as traditional markets swing with volatility and central banks keep rates elevated.

"Private credit reflects the high nominal interest rates that sub-investment-grade borrowers are prepared to offer," the report said.

Larger family offices are particularly drawn to the sector, often investing through funds or co-investing alongside private equity managers.

The report notes that private credit, direct private equity, and real estate are the three asset classes most likely to see increased allocations in 2025.

Real estate stays in favor

Real estate, long a cornerstone of multigenerational wealth, remains another magnet for family capital.

About 75% of family offices hold real estate, with the most enthusiasm directed toward industrial and logistics at 30% and residential housing at 23%, according to the report.

The report highlights that family offices in Sun Belt states — where population and job growth are strongest — are outperforming the national average, though it does not include specific numeric projections.

It adds that affordability pressures have "made home ownership increasingly difficult and channeled demand into the rental sector," but again provides no quantitative breakdown of rents or prices.

Florida is booming with the superrich, as Miami and other hubs outpace California's old guard, per Altrata.

Cooling on risky startups

While private credit and real estate are heating up, early-stage venture investing — long the domain of bold family fortunes — is cooling fast.

"Venture, high-risk investments in early-stage innovative businesses, which was in top position last year, has now slipped down the ranking following its recent poor performance," the report said.

It also found that "a second factor behind the caution is disappointing year-to-date returns from direct private equity, private equity funds, and venture capital reported by significant percentages of family offices."

Family offices, which often value liquidity and patience, are finding the decadelong wait for venture payoffs less appealing amid higher yields elsewhere.

One chief executive of a single-family office in California told Campden Wealth that while early-stage deals can deliver windfalls, "this only happens 20 to 30% of the time. The trick is to minimize the number of failures."

A cautious new era

After years of chasing growth, the world's wealthiest families are pivoting toward stability.

The report found that 48% of family offices listed "improving liquidity" as their primary investment objective for 2025, followed by 33% who want to de-risk portfolios.

That shift mirrors a broader "risk-off" sentiment: average return expectations for 2025 have fallen to 5%, down from 11% in 2024, and 15% of family offices now expect negative returns — a sharp drop in optimism from last year, when almost none did.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

家族办公室 投资 私人信贷 房地产 风险投资 Family Office Investment Private Credit Real Estate Venture Capital
相关文章