Alt Investments
How Private Equity Molds Shape Of Single Family Offices
Family offices don't just invest in private equity - the very structures used in this asset class are being adopted by FOs themselves as complexity makes older models less appealing.
(Editor’s note: To register for the Highworth database, see here.)
Family offices have become keener on private capital markets
recently. Enthusiasm for private equity, debt, real estate and
other non-public asset class areas has even prompted a few red
warning lights to flash.
Whatever the outlook for private equity and similar assets might
be, it seems that there is a clear trend of family offices' own
structures resembling those of private equity firms; they are
also forming their own PE units to handle private equity
investments.
The fact that family offices are keen on private capital markets
means that FOs are taking on the shape of the organisations they
invest in, Alastair Graham, who founded Highworth, the family
office database with which this publication is exclusive media
partner, said recently.
“If a family office wishes to co-invest with other family
offices, it might want to take the role of a general partner
which manages limited partnerships on behalf of the
co-investors,” he said.
“Private equity and real estate investment are asset classes
which have become increasingly popular among family offices in
recent years. Illiquid investments such as these may typically be
held in closed end structures which will often mean that a
limited partnership is the family office’s preferred corporate
status,” he said.
Private equity is certainly influencing investors in several
ways. It is a favoured asset class for 81 per cent of the SFOs on
the Highworth Database and has enjoyed the most rapid growth in
recent years, both directly and through funds. Highworth carries
profiles of up to 1,100 SFOs, of which 800 are in Europe, the
Middle East and Africa. In 2020 several hundreds of further
profiles of SFOs are scheduled to be added to the database. The
firm reckons that in aggregate, these SFOs oversee a total of
$2.2 trillion in assets under management. (It should also be
noted that this is the aggregate AuM in 2019 of 1,100 SFOs
located outside the US. If there are about 8,000 SFOs globally at
present, on a simple extrapolation basis, the total indicative
AuM would be $17.6 trillion.)
Examples
There is certainly evidence that family offices create
subsidiaries or associate firms focused specifically on private
equity and venture capital.
Graham gives examples such as that of the Mulliez family of
France which invests in PE not through its family office,
Mobilis, but through Creadev SAS which has invested €1 billion in
private equity and venture capital since its establishment. The
firm is driven by an evergreen fund which has an annual
investment capacity of €200 million ($224.8 million). Creadev SAS
is a société par actions simplifié, a structure often used by
families because of its relative simplicity compared with a
socIété anonyme.
On a yet larger scale, another family of retailing billionaires,
the Brenninkmeijers, the wealthiest family in The Netherlands and
owners of the C&A chain, invest in private equity not through
the family office, Cofra Holding AG in Switzerland, but through
Bregal Investments LLP and its six Bregal associate companies,
based variously in London or New York.
Another Dutch family, the De Rijckes, who made its €2 billion
fortune in drugstores, choose to invest in private equity and VC
not through its family office, De Hoge Dennen Holding BV, but
through De Hoge Dennen Capital PE BV, while its real estate
investments are made though De Hoge Dennen Vastgoed.
“The practice of managing large scale private equity investments
in corporate structures separate from the family office is also
evident in Asia. Although Fung Investment Management, the family
office of the Fung brothers of Hong Kong, does undertake some PE
investments itself, more commonly a separate vehicle, Fung
Capital Asia Investments, is the more ambitious player in the PE
market. Fung Investments’ AuM is in the range $1 billion to
$2.5 billion, with alternatives comprising a significant portion
of this," Graham said.
A close fit
To some extent the limited partnership structure – also used in
hedge funds of some kinds – is a natural fit when some of the
newer family offices are run by people who have made their
fortunes in these sectors. And in the US there has been a trend
of investment firms, mostly famously that of hedge fund tycoon
George Soros, morphing into family offices. They have done this
to avoid falling under the regulatory umbrella in the US by
ceasing to manage non-family members’ money.
In the US, practitioners tell this publication that a private
equity, limited partnership structure has been the default option
for some time, because it made more sense to be set up that way
rather than as a corporation, given that for years the US
corporate tax rate had been significantly higher than in most
other major industrialised nations (35 per cent or higher,
depending on how it was calculated).
However, when the Trump administration cut the corporate rate to
21 per cent, it prompted some speculation that a few of the very
larger SFOs might adopt a form of corporate status for tax
purposes. As far as this publication knows, that does not appear
to have happened to a great extent yet.
Single family offices aren’t typically run to make a profit
beyond financing necessary spending to keep the structure viable.
The situation can become complicated when taxes are involved.
Following a recent US court ruling (Lender Management v.
Comm. (December 16, 2017), investors may no longer be able
deduct investment expenses, including those passed through from
an investment partnership. As a result, it might be wise to
restructure these costs into a management company as long as it
is a genuine family office with substantial staff rendering
financial services to extended family members and outside
clients. (Source: Forbes, June 28, 2018)
When family offices arose, as they first did in the late 19th
century in the US (the Rockefellers and others) the structure
tended to be that of the trust, given that trusts were already
well established in English Common Law.
“Trusts continue to be popular, but the family office space is
not a `one size fits all’ market. A variety of different legal
forms are required to meet the evolving needs of family offices.
Limited partnerships are very well suited to co-investment
vehicles in which fund manager, family offices and institutional
investors may be investing alongside each other,” Joe Truelove,
director - fund administration, Trident Fund Services (Guernsey),
told this publication.
As family offices have become larger, with more individuals
involved in running and benefiting from the process, private
equity structures, and the notion of being a limited partner
having certain rights, and some limitations too, have tended to
become more popular, he said.
“A reason for the rise in these PE-type structures is that many
family offices have grown and now employ people with a private
equity background, so they are familiar with how PE structures
work. And as family offices often invest in private equity, this
also reinforces the bond with the idea,” Truelove said.
With a private equity fund, the general partner will be paid a
management fee and if performance is worthy then they also
receive a carried interest fee (described as a performance fee in
the hedge fund world) - this incentivisation scheme can also be
provided to professional managers employed within family offices
to manage their affairs, he continued.
Limiting conflict
Complexity can also push the PE-structure trend. Truelove argued
that in the case of families containing a large number of
siblings and cousins, for example, it is easier to make them all
limited partners because this can also limit potential conflicts
over time.
“Our private client colleagues regularly come across
opportunities where private client introducers such as
multi-family offices come close to running collective investment
schemes, sometimes unintentionally – for example they are in a
position to arrange deals with multiple unrelated investors
co-investing and hence they may need to have those structures
formally regulated or manage them in such a way that they would
be if they were regulated,” he said.
Meanwhile, there is also continued use by families of protected
cell companies, Truelove said. PCCs, likened to the structure of
a tree trunk, are a single legal entity made of a core and
several “cells” with separate assets and liabilities. A single
legal entity that operates segregated accounts, or cells, each of
which is legally protected from the liabilities of the company’s
other accounts.
It may also be the case that the private equity industry, being
more used to increasingly sophisticated ways of charging a fee,
appeal to family offices. This is particularly the case as
investment activity resembles that of a fund. A family’s
investment portfolio may be pooled in several partnerships, such
as organised by asset class category or a line of a family.
Another benefit of using this structure, practitioners say, is
that it aligns the interests of the non-family members with those
of the family when it comes to creating incentives to boost
returns.