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PNN
New Delhi [India], February 20: India is entering a defining chapter in private wealth history. According to EY estimates, nearly USD 1.5 trillion is expected to change hands in India over the next decade through intergenerational wealth transfer. Globally, UBS projects that approximately USD 83 trillion will transition across generations over the next 20 to 25 years. At the same time, the structure of wealth management itself is evolving. The number of family offices in India has grown sharply from about 45 in 2018 to nearly 300 by 2024, reflecting a significant institutionalisation of family capital. Globally, single-family offices have expanded from roughly 6,130 in 2019 to more than 8,000 in 2024. These numbers are not merely indicators of wealth growth. They point to something deeper: a transformation in how families must govern, preserve, and transition capital. For Soumik Bandyopadhyay, this moment represents as much a financial opportunity as it is a governance test. From Asset Growth to Structural Governance For many years, Indian family offices were largely investment-driven. They focused on allocating surplus capital, managing portfolios, and tracking returns. However, as wealth grows in scale and crosses jurisdictions, investment management alone becomes insufficient. Soumik Bandyopadhyay views the modern family office as a governance architecture rather than a financial desk. The challenge today is not simply generating returns but designing structures that withstand generational transition, regulatory complexity, and shifting family dynamics. Market volatility, in his view, is manageable. Structural misalignment is far more disruptive. Intergenerational transfer introduces leadership transition risks, ownership fragmentation, liquidity mismatches, and strategic divergence between family branches. Without formal oversight, these pressures can erode wealth regardless of market performance. India's Ultra-Wealth Moment India's ultra-high-net-worth demographic is expanding steadily. Estimates suggest the country currently has around 13,000 families with net worth exceeding USD 30 million, a number expected to rise materially over the coming years. This rapid accumulation creates scale. Scale introduces complexity. Many Indian business families still operate within founder-led frameworks. During growth phases, centralized control provided agility and decisive execution. But as assets diversify across operating businesses, financial investments, real estate, and global holdings, reliance on individual authority becomes a structural vulnerability. Soumik Bandyopadhyay emphasizes that growth models must evolve into continuity models. Designing for Risk Clarity One of the most overlooked elements in family wealth management is the articulation of risk. Business founders are accustomed to risk-taking. Expansion requires bold decisions. However, once capital has been built, preservation and transition require a different mindset. In many Indian families, a large percentage of wealth remains concentrated within operating companies. Economic shocks can therefore affect both the business and the family balance sheet simultaneously. Soumik Bandyopadhyay stresses that designing the future family office begins with risk mapping. Families must clearly identify concentration exposure, liquidity requirements, generational obligations, and regulatory vulnerabilities. The next generation often views capital differently. Younger members are typically more open to private equity, venture capital, global diversification, and ESG-aligned strategies. Without a structured forum for discussing these preferences, divergence can create friction. Risk dialogue must move from implicit understanding to explicit policy. Institutional Frameworks Over Informal Authority A recurring shift in Soumik Bandyopadhyay's thinking is the transition from personality-driven governance to institutionalized processes. Founder-led decision-making works well when ownership is tightly held. As families grow across generations, decision velocity slows if authority remains centralized. Future-ready family offices increasingly adopt mechanisms such as: * Clear articulation and continuous evaluation of risks between operating businesses and families * Clear separation between ownership and executive management * Defined investment and risk committees * Structured succession frameworks * Documented governance policies * Transparent communication channels These mechanisms do not dilute family legacy. They reinforce it. Institutionalization ensures that systems outlast individuals. Professional Talent and Clear Mandates Another transformation underway is the increasing professionalization of family offices. Historically, trusted business executives often managed family capital alongside their corporate responsibilities. However, this arrangement can create conflicting incentives. Business roles reward growth and calculated risk-taking. Family office roles prioritize capital preservation and risk containment. Combining the two can blur accountability. Soumik Bandyopadhyay believes the future of Indian family offices lies in clearly defined mandates supported by specialized professionals. Governance experts, risk managers, and global advisors bring discipline and clarity to complex structures. Professional oversight does not replace family leadership. It strengthens execution and objectivity. Integrating Philanthropy into Governance Design As wealth transitions, philanthropy increasingly becomes part of governance discussions. Younger family members are often keen to align capital with social impact. Structured and strategic philanthropy provides a bridge between financial continuity and shared purpose. Soumik Bandyopadhyay views philanthropy as more than discretionary giving. When it is strategically aligned and embedded within governance, it becomes a unifying force. It allows family members to collaborate across generations and builds collective identity beyond operating businesses. In many cases, structured and strategic philanthropic initiatives serve as early training grounds for next-generation leadership. Global Complexity and Cross-Border Strategy With wealth becoming geographically diversified, family offices must navigate tax systems, capital controls, regulatory environments, and geopolitical risks across jurisdictions. India's family as well as family capital is increasingly global, yet legacy structures often remain local. Soumik Bandyopadhyay advocates a balanced approach: act locally with cultural grounding, while thinking globally with structural awareness. Cross-border diversification requires disciplined compliance and documentation. Governance must anticipate and pre-empt legal variation rather than react to it. Periodic strategic reviews ensure that structures remain relevant as regulations evolve. Personalization as the Core Design Principle Despite increasing institutionalization, personalization remains central. No two families share identical history, risk appetite, or internal dynamics. Designing the future of Indian family offices cannot rely on templates. Soumik Bandyopadhyay underscores that personalization builds trust. When governance frameworks reflect real circumstances rather than theoretical models, families engage more openly. A well-designed family office is not a standard product. It is an architectural response to a family's specific journey. From Wealth Creation to Wealth Stewardship The defining feature of the coming decade will not be asset growth alone. It will be wealth transition at scale. India's rapid increase in family offices signals recognition of this reality. As billions and trillions move across generations globally, continuity depends on structured stewardship. Soumik Bandyopadhyay frames the future of Indian family offices around one central principle: institutional endurance. Governance must function independently of any one individual. Risk awareness must remain constant. Communication must be systematic. Markets will fluctuate. Generations will change. Regulatory landscapes will evolve. The families that sustain capital over decades will be those that build governance frameworks capable of adapting without fragmenting. Conclusion The expansion of family offices in India, the projected USD 1.5 trillion wealth transfer domestically, and the global transition of USD 83 trillion signal a fundamental shift in private wealth management. Soumik Bandyopadhyay believes this is not merely a financial evolution but a governance transformation. Indian family offices must move from informal, founder-led systems to structured institutional frameworks designed for generational continuity. Designing the future requires clarity of risk, professional discipline, personalized governance, and alignment across generations. In the end, family wealth is not tested in moments of growth. It is tested in moments of transition. And the quality of design chosen today will determine how confidently Indian families navigate the decades ahead. (ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by PNN. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same.)
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