Family Office Directory User Guide
Family Office Directory User Guide
USER GUIDE
How to Raise Capital from Family
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
FORWARD ...................................................................... 4
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II. OTHER FACTORS TO CONSIDER WHEN
PURCHASING A DATABASE
III. 3 MISTAKES TO AVOID
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FOREWORD
The family office is not a new concept, but it has
proven to create some confusion in the
investments industry. Capital raisers are looking
to have a better understanding of this entity, and
how they can benefit the family office, and vice
versa. A better understanding of the family office
is pivotal to successfully reaching them with any
marketing efforts.
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offer here to ensure that your marketing efforts
are successful.
RICHARD WILSON
Founder, CEO
Family Offices Group
Portland, OR
June, 2011
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CHAPTER 1
WHAT IS A FAMILY OFFICE?
“Family offices are typically viewed as being
somewhat of an enigma.” – Preqin Family
Offices Survey 2010
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traditional wealth management services (FOX
“Frequently Asked Questions).
7
The costs associated with managing a family office
are typically higher than utilizing a traditional
wealth management office, the reason being that a
family office is usually run by the family, whereas
a wealth management firm may be managed by a
third party and serve many clients with little
overhead cost per client.
8
clients. These variations make it a challenge to
create a single, concise definition of a family office.
9
Frank Act in 2010 (effective July 2011), advisors
and wealth managers needed to evaluate how
their firms would be affected by the repeal of
current exemptions.
10
Before the Dodd-Frank act, family offices meeting
specific criteria were able to avoid registering
with the SEC so they could “resolve disputes
internally without the involvement of the
Commission”, and maintain the privacy of the
family members. The SEC explains that exceptions
are currently made for:
11
order before that section of the Dodd-Frank
Act becomes effective. (6)
12
Single Family Office (SFO) vs. Multi-Family
Office (MFO)
13
To corroborate that definition from FOX, Wharton
management professor, Raphael Amit, says that
“individuals and other groups of families often
form similar entities known as multi-family offices
(MFOs) which, according to Amit, number in the
thousands.” (qtd. in where the wealthy are
investing)
14
means that (despite the number of clients per
family) there can be one family the office manages
affairs/wealth/accounts for, or there can be many
families. The size of their assets can vary greatly,
and there is not set rule as to what that figure
needs to be. (According to the SEC, it is generally
at least 100 million or more of investable assets.)
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namely Dr. Steen Ehlern, Managing Director of
Ferguson Partners Family Office, who writes:
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Family Office Growth – Domestic and
Abroad
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Factors Encouraging the Growth of the
Family Office
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Trends Affecting the Family Office Industry
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and the consolidation of the banking world.
Additionally, the growing wealth of the world, as
mentioned above, is playing a key role, as well.
Hauser writes:
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additions and not quite as important as the
original founding family. (19)
21
financial space. “The services these [smaller]
institutions had provided to wealthy families in
Europe had in many ways been similar to the role
of the family office in the United States” (Hauser,
20).
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reliable and consistent availability, [because] [t]he
investment skills can be outsourced“(19).
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positioning themselves to serve families with
assets of $5 to $50 million or more in a “family
office-like” manner. These providers are often
referred to as multi-family offices or “MFO’s.”
Many registered investment advisors (RIA’s)
are re-positioning themselves as multi-family
offices (MFO’s) to provide “bespoke” services
to the most discerning clients.
Profitability
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managing their investments and taxes to fit their
specific financial goals and risk tolerances.
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CHAPTER 2
FAMILY OFFICE ACTIVITIES:
ALLOCATIONS & PORTFOLIO
INVESTMENTS
The main purpose of the family office is to provide
comprehensive solutions for the family. Family
offices will take the time to see to it that their
clients are well taken care of. While families have
options for other avenues of wealth management,
investment advisory, or estate planning, the family
office is meant to consolidate services and create a
holistic approach to overall management of a
family’s wealth.
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businesses, the family office will likely never be
replaced. The services and attention available to
families through a family office will supersede the
benefits of cost savings that larger institutions
offer to clients, as opposed to funding a personal
family office. (Hauser, 19)
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in the Americas.” This figure gives an idea of how
family offices work, especially in reference to the
single family market. MFOs may operate similarly,
though with reduced costs allocated to each client,
an in-house team of investment managers may be
a more ideal set-up.
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more prevalent for SFOs serving first generation
families” (5).
29
greater percentage of their assets to hedge
funds and principal investment in companies,
which are more volatile asset classes. (28)
30
and two to three generations. The median SFO
serves four households and eight family members”
(10).
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investors, DMS prefers businesses in
industries which have good growth potential,
which have high barriers to entry, which
enjoy superior and consistent margins, which
are non-cyclical and which have stable
customer relationships and defensible market
positions (qtd. in The Capital Express Blog).
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to grow in numbers, and as fund managers
continue to market in an effort to raise capital.
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CHAPTER 3
HOW TO RAISE CAPITAL FROM FAMILY
OFFICES
Raising capital from family offices is a difficult
task. Like capital raising from other investors, you
need to quickly share how your offering is
beneficial to the particular investor you are
talking to. This requires that you understand how
family offices work, why they are in operation, and
what their goals are, and more importantly, how
this differs from family office to family office. With
differences in family offices come differences in
investment preferences and needs.
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“[Family offices] are, by nature, a reclusive and
private set of investors, which can result in fund
managers failing to understand or fully
appreciate their specific investment needs.
Family offices represent a key – at times
underappreciated – source of capital for private
equity fund managers, however” (Preqin, 1).
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long-established relationships for investors with
capital to commit and family offices are one
investor group that are likely to receive greater
attention” (Preqin, 2-3).
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skepticism, demands for transparency, and
close scrutiny of every number. (MasterClass™)
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Another drastic difference from SFOs and the
MFOs is that the latter group is looking to increase
their client size, whereas the SFO does not operate
with the intent to expand or add clients (other
families). The move and transformation of the SFO
to the MFO will affect this, of course, but not while
the two entities are separate (Russ, 69).
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hopes to do. Russ, Grove, Bloomfield and Flynn
note that there are two “groups” here: the wealth
creators, and the wealth preservers (Russ, 55).
This is crucial to pay attention to when you
address the various family offices, as the wealth
preservers will think very differently from the
wealth creators.
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Also important to note is how the economy affects
family offices. Aforementioned were some insight
into how regulations and rules can affect family
offices, and how that might affect your marketing
approach.
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Important Things to Note when Marketing
to Family Offices
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in higher risk investments, so ensure that
you know who you’re talking to.
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can make for a more productive
relationship.
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while 69% said that they value the amount of
experience firms have in the asset class” (Preqin,
5).
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How to Market to Family Offices
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avoidance of taxes. Know how you can
better serve those needs so as to market
your offerings more effectively.
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• Family offices are difficult to identify.
Some may advertise, but many stay below
the radar, and often purposefully don't
even have a website. With regulation
exemptions like those that the Dodd-
Frank is repealing, many family offices
were not required to even register with
the SEC, making it easy for them to work
behind the scenes.
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starting my career with an int’l private
investigative company, and from there moving on
to a large commercial bank where I was in charge
of investigations by the time I left, and found my
way into the public accounting world. I’ve always
been providing investigative due diligence
services, either as a part of an investigation or as a
stand-alone piece of itself.
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manger that someone might invest in, are there
certain things you look for to make sure that that
HFM has invested enough in their own business?
Is that ever part of the research process?
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said they received, We look at employment
history, and we then also look to see if they are
license, are they are required to be license, did
they ever hold a license, either through FINRA or
other regulatory agencies, and if they did have a
license with any of those agencies, were there any
issues, was anything filed under that license, or
against that individual, so we’re looking to see
what’s the background in regards to that licensing.
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the reference you provided usually is probably
saying nothing but good things about you, so we
try to develop references; we look for additional
people, people that the manager may have crossed
paths with during their career that might be able
to give us additional information about their
background, and then you try to corroborate that
information if you can. The important thing for us
is everything we present back to a client is
corroborated, and it can stand alone. If it ever
reaches the level of somebody questioning what
was in the report, it can stand-up to that question.
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Now if it was something dated and you forgot
about it, it’s explainable, but you want to make
sure that the information that you provide is to
the best of your knowledge and that anything that
happens within your career, you just want to, if
you act in a manner that’s treating people with
respect, you’re not burning your bridges, look,
nothing’s going to be perfect, and people are going
to be upset. I’m sure on the investment side of
things there are going to be people that are upset,
and you can’t control that, but you operate in a
way that you can go to bed at night and feel that
you did everything above board and proper, and if
people are upset, there’s nothing you can do about
that, then there’s really nothing to be concerned
about.
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fund of fund has their own risk tolerance. So what
may be of concern to one is most likely or may not
be a concern to someone else. And that risk
tolerance steps up the level of depth in
background information that we’re going to
gather and report.
53
You can’t make general statements that “anybody
with DUIs I’m not going to do business with”.
There’s always a reason why maybe you should.
Not to talk lightly about driving under the
influence, because it’s something that should not
be done, and it hurts people, and it hurts other,
and it hurts family members and yourself, but
with that said, some people have different
tolerances. So a blanket statement of what you
will accept is usually hard to live by.
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put out there and you have to take the approach
that “if I put it out there, somebody’s going to see
it”.
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those files and sees a lot of time spent up in the air
flying, they may be thinking, “how are they
managing money if they’re doing that?” Those are
the types of things that I don’t think people think
through.
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they didn’t even finish high school. I haven’t heard
of it and we’re not involved in that decision.
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definition in the section above this interview
where we’ll talk about why due diligence is
important and what it has to do with family
offices.
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it. Do you want us to chase it down? Do you
already know about it?” And we’ll get the
response, “Yeah, we heard about it, we talked to
them about it, we’re not worried about it. Keep
going.” Or, we’ll hear “No, we didn’t know about it;
put the brakes on, stop, that’s a deal breaker for
us.” So laying everything out on the table, when
the time is right, when you’re discussing
backgrounds, it that’s what’s happening, lay it out
on the table.
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1. Clean up your social media footprint. If you
haven’t thought about that in the past, maybe
you need to go through and delete some
things, make some things private, or just be
more aware of what you’re saying and not say
things that need to be deleted in the first
place.
2. Develop honest and respectful investor
policies, no matter how nasty or unfair an
investor is, or makes claims against you, try to
solve things in a way that doesn’t leave them
with a horrible taste in their mouths, and treat
people fairly.
3. Come up with policies with your whole team
in regards to social media and what you post
online, as well as how you manage your whole
online reputation.
4. Honesty is always the best policy. Once you’re
going through a research or due diligence
process, your credit history could make an
impact, so pay attention to that, and just
remember that they may ask for that at some
point. Perhaps review your own name on
Google within the search engine results so you
can see and manage your own online
reputation.
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Is that a good list, you think, for people to pay
attention to?
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match, there’s a match on the date of birth; it may
not be you. And if it’s not, you want to address it
and deal with it. You may have the same name as
your father, and so, this is recent in one that’s
ongoing now where the father and the son have
the same name. Credit reports got merged, and
they’re in the same business, so trying to
distinguish between the two has become very
difficult. So understand your own background and
where there’s fixes that can be made because a
credit report may have been merged with
someone else, fix it.
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RW: Something that I recommend for hedge fund
managers, for example, if they have a 5 year track
record, and in year two they had a style drift or
some securities got as little bit oversized in the
portfolio, those type of issues may come up, but
you may not want to put them in your pitch book,
as that is your first impression.
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spent over a hundred ours putting it together and
making sure that we covered a lot of best
practices, and also interviewed a lot of experts in
hedge fund marketing, what we’re trying to do is
make sure that everyone who goes through our
programs, comes to our events, or reads our
books gets at least $10,000 worth of value,
whether that be a savings of $10,000 in consulting
fees, or saving $10,000 of their time, of that this
advice here helps them to raise at least $10,000,
that’s our internal goal here.
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unethical in or fudging your integrity a little bit,
but in the long-term, it will do nothing but hurt
you. It will likely, too, come back to you, probably
stronger than it did good, so just be ethical,
honest, sincere, and show integrity. You can go to
bed every night, and not have any worries.
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CHAPTER 4 Commented [AW2]: This chapter could probably use some
more expansion, though I’m not sure how long someone wants to
read about this process w/o actually hearing how we found the
MARKETING TACTICS: ACQUIRING information.
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they provide, what sort of refund they offer, etc.
These are all important factors to weigh when
choosing the right database for your needs.
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in the short run. Most quality databases will cost
more than $800 but less than $2,000.
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Other Factors to Consider When Purchasing
a Database
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database. How many leads do you need? Consider
that the data may change every 6-12 months; how
quickly can you get through the data you
purchase?
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requires you to make an educated decision that is
based on research, an understanding of where
your firm stands, and an understanding of what
you are actually purchasing.
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3 Mistakes to Avoid
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Furthermore, most companies offering a
directory do not offer a networking event for
hedge funds, private equity firms, CTA funds,
real estate investment trust, investment
banks, institutional consultants, and third
party marketers to connect and communicate
with family office professionals.
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another due to a subscription ending or data
being moved. When you purchase a directory
that is fully delivered, you do not have to
worry about the information being taken
away.
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meet your requirements, and does so within your
budget.
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APPENDIX:
RESOURCES
1. Amit, Raphael, Heinrich Liechtenstein, M.
Julia Prats, Todd Millay, and Laird P.
Pendleton (May 14, 2008). Single Family
Offices: Private Wealth Management in the
Family Context.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/ar
ticle.cfm?articleid=1964
2. Bloomfield, Keith M. and Russ Alan
Prince. “Your Own Family Office”. 2010.
Forbes Media LLC.
3. Carroll, Jon. 2001. The Functions of a
Family Office. Journal of Wealth
Management. Vol 4 Number 2.
4. Ehlern, Steen. Family offices in Europe and
the United States – A different evolution
with common objectives. 2008. Notabene.
5. Family Office Exchange (FOX). “About
Family Offices”. Retrieved April 8, 2011
from
http://www.foxexchange.com/public/fox
/family/index.asp
6. Family Office Exchange (FOX). “Frequently
Asked Questions About Family Offices”.
http://www.foxexchange.com/public/fox
/faq.asp#12 Access date: 2011 APR 8.
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7. Family Office Exchange (FOX). “Family
Office Exchange: Research on the Global
Financial Family”. 2000.
8. Foster, Lauren. Financial Times. (2007,
February 26). “Big or boutique for super
rich”. Retrieved April 12, 2011 from
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/6850b0ae-
c5cc-11db-9fae-
000b5df10621.html#ixzz1JLMSvnBz.
9. Hauser, Barbara R. “The Family Office:
Insights into Their Development in the U.S.,
a Proposed Prototype, and Advice for
Adaptation in Other Countries”. Journal of
Wealth Management. 2001. Vol 4 Number
2.
10. Investopedia. Terms, Retrieved April 12
2011 from
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/u/
uma.asp.
11. Knowledge@Wharton. “SFOs in Action:
How the Richest Families Manage Their
Wealth”. Retrieved from
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/ar
ticle.cfm?articleid=1964
12. Preqin. Preqin Research Report: Survey of
Family Offices in Private Equity. Retrieved
April 15, 2011 from
http://www.preqin.com/docs/reports/fa
mily_offices_survey_march_2010.pdf
13. Prince, Russ, Hannah Shaw Grove, Keith
M. Bloomfield, and Richard J. Flynn. The
Family Office -- Advising the Financial
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Elite. 2010. Charter Financial Publishing
Network.
14. Rothestein Kass. (2010). 'The Family
Office -- Advising the Financial Elite'
Released by Charter Financial Publishing
Network [Press release]. Retrieved from
http://www.rkco.com/Site/PDF/familiy
%20office%20afe%20release%20final%
2008-09-10.doc
15. Securities and Exchange Commission.
“Family Offices”. October 12th, 2010.
http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/201
0/ia-3098.pdf
16. The Capital Express Blog. What makes a
family office tick? Retrieved April 10, 2011
from
http://seekingalpha.com/instablog/4879
77-the-capital-express-www-
thecapitalexpress-com/28000-what-
makes-family-offices-tick-when-it-comes-
to-deciding-where-to-invest
17. Schuyler, David. “Vogel Consulting
indicative of multi-family office growth”.
The Business Journal. 10 OCT 2004.
Retrieved April 19, 2011 from
http://www.bizjournals.com/milwaukee
/stories/2004/10/11/focus2.html
18. Stephen Martiros & Todd Millay. A
Framework for Understanding Family
Office Trends. 2006. Retried from
http://www.cccalliance.com/FamilyOffic
eTrends.pdf
78
19. Economy Watch. Retried on April 15,
2011 from
http://www.economywatch.com/econom
ic-statistics/
20. CIA – The World Factbook. Retried April
20, 2011 from
https://www.cia.gov/library/publication
s/the-world-factbook/geos/ch.html
21. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Who is the FDIC? Retried April 21, 2011
from
http://www.fdic.gov/about/learn/symbo
l/index.html
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GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Accredited Investor – Normally a wealthy
investor who meets certain Securities and
Exchange Commission requirements for net worth
and income as they relate to some restricted
offerings. An accredited investors can be an
institutional investors, company directors and
executive officers, high net worth individuals,
ultra-high net worth individuals, and other
entities. Some angel investor networks or limited
partnerships accept only accredited investors, so
being accredited can be beneficial.
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Angel Investor – Angels or Angel Investors are
individuals who provide capital to one or more
start-up companies. Unlike a partner, however,
the angel investor is rarely involved in
management of the firm. Angel investors can
usually add value through their contacts and
expertise, and will, at times, have non-executive
directorships in the companies in which they
invest.
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Balanced Mutual Fund – A mutual fund whose
main objective is to create a balance of stocks and
bonds. Balanced funds tend to be less volatile than
stock-only funds, due to the fluctuation from
changes in the market observed by a mutual fund..
Additionally, shares of stock, when sold, may be
worth more or less than their original cost.
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and bond markets and consist of primary markets
and secondary markets.
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Common Trust Fund – Maintained by a bank or
trust company, this fund is managed exclusively
for the collective investment of money for trust
customers.
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preferences. Once the client has chosen a
discretionary portfolio manager, little interaction
or involvement in the portfolio is needed on their
part, making this (as opposed to non-
discretionary portfolio management) an ideal
choice for busy individuals.
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different asset classes to offset the rise and fall in
prices of each asset, offsetting losses and gains
with the intent to minimize loss.
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what the owner owes against that property for
example, the difference between the house value
and the remaining mortgage or loan payments on
a house). It also refers to ownership interest in a
corporation in the form of common stock or
preferred stock.
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services to other families/clients. A family office
offers more personalized services and attention to
clients, though with the growing trend of single
family offices turning multi-family, this
personalization and targeted attention is in
decline. (See Single Family Office and Multi-Family
Office.)
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Federal Income Tax Bracket – A range of income
that is taxable at a certain rate dependent on the
amount of income earned.
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Foreign Exchange (FX) Market – Where
currency trading is facilitated. Purposed with this
facilitation of trade and investment, FX
transactions normally involve one party (for
example, banks, currency speculators,
corporations, governments, etc.) purchasing a
quantity of one currency in exchange for paying a
quantity of another. Today, it is one of the largest
and most liquid financial markets in the world.
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way for limited partners to ensure that their
interests are aligned with those of the general
partner. Though the legal requirement of the
general partner to contribute at least one per cent
of fund capital was recently revoked by the US
Department of Treasury, this is still the usual
contribution of fund managers.
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providing investment advice. All advisers of an
advisory service must be registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission.
92
Interest Rate Risk – Risk measured by/based on
the possibility of already issued bonds losing
value due to the rise of interest rates, resulting in
a loss if they are sold before maturity.
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marketing plan, this will help everyone to keep
up-to-date with what the goals are, and how
success is measured.
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partners, as GPs assume full liability for debts.
This is a frequently used structure for hedge
funds, private equity funds, and real estate. There
are no assurances that the stated investment
objectives will be reached, however, and at
redemption, the investor may receive back less
than their original investment.
95
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any government
agency.
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usually exempt from certain income taxes. If you
sell a municipal bond at a profit, you are subject to
incur capital gains taxes. The principal value of
bonds fluctuates with market conditions. Like
other normal bonds, if these are sold prior to
maturity, they may be worth more or less than
their original cost.
97
from assets (what you own). For example, a firm
with $1,500,000 in assets and $1,750,000 in
liabilities has a net worth of ($25,000).
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historically demonstrated a very low amount of
risk of loss of principal value.
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giving necessary information to investors in order
to make informed decisions prior to investing in a
specific mutual fund, variable annuity, etc. The
prospectus should include information on the
company’s past performance and objectives,
relevant expenses (such as fees, sales charges,
etc.), any minimums on investment amounts, the
company’s risk level, and a description of the
services provided to investors in the investment
company.
100
Return on Investment (ROI) – The profit or loss
resulting from an investment transaction, usually
expressed as an annual percentage return. This
ratio helps to easily show the net benefits of a
project verses its total costs.
101
Seed Capital – Seed Capital is the money used to
purchase equity-based interest in a new or
existing company. This seed capital is usually
quite small because the venture is still in the idea
or conceptual stage.
102
Stock – A security that represents a unit of
ownership in a corporation, and signifies an
ownership position (called equity) in a
corporation. Stock (whether preferred or
common) also represents a claim on its
proportional share in the corporation's assets and
profits (referred to as dividends). Ownership in
the company is determined by the number of
shares owned by an individual divided by the total
number of shares outstanding.
103
principal value of bonds fluctuates with market
conditions, and if sold prior to maturity, a bond
may be worth more or less than the purchase
price..
104
Trustee – An individual or institution appointed
to administer a trust for its beneficiaries. This can
also be a bank or trust company that must
perform in a manner based on the conditions set
forth in a trust agreement.
105
medium-size enterprises with strong growth
potential.
106
yield is calculated by dividing the total of the
annual dividends by the current stock price. For
bonds, the yield is calculated by dividing the
annual interest by the current price. The yield is
distinguished from the return, which includes
price appreciation or depreciation.
107
WHO IS THE FAMILY OFFICES
GROUP?
The Family Offices Group (FOG) is a global
networking association for family offices and
investors, serving as a networking tool to connect
and communicate with other members in the
family office space. The FOG provides information
on family office events and conferences in the
industry, as well as information on the
investments industry and factors that affect the
family office market.
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raising tools for the investor looking to work with
family offices.
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Databases like the Family Offices Database will be
the first step in a process of relationship building
that will cut hours out of your workload, but it will
not do the work for you. We’ve spent the better
part of the past three years doing the research for
you and compiling into a user-friendly database in
Excel that is easy to export and easy to sort,
making your life easier, and allowing you more
time to focus on the important part of marketing,
which is relationship and rapport building.
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