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How to Manage Your Finances After Covid-19
The pandemic has triggered massive changes in investor-adviser relationships that we’re only just beginning to understand.
How high-net-worth individuals and family offices work with their financial advisers to protect and grow their money after Covid-19 is today’s most pressing issue. The pandemic will be remembered as a near cataclysmic, black-swan event that continues to shake global economies, markets and industries in ways that are still being worked out. The effects of human isolation have both worsened and changed how people relate to each other and make investment decisions.
Private wealth managers say that extended periods of restricted personal interaction and communication among family members can exacerbate existing tensions about estate succession and wealth management. Mega-rich family dynasties can quickly descend into a showcase for dysfunction, highlighting the witless cruelty of the entitled and the pathetic emotional inadequacy of the endlessly spoiled. The scheming and backstabbing between monstrous and self-entitled family members can become exposed for all to see, as if it was all in a television soap opera. As Tolstoy said in his novel Anna Karenina: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.”
Governance in a sprawling family office risks being largely based on family relationships rather than institutional policies. A private banker once told me that he asks his wealthy clients, “What is your relationship with your money?” Because how you relate to your money says a lot about your personality, and ultimately decides how succession and management conflicts will be resolved.
[caption id="attachment_210883" align="alignnone" width="1024"] (Image: Liv Bruce/ Unsplash)[/caption]
For families, the weakness is that most decisions are undergirded by emotion – and that’s unpredictable and undemocratic as a basis for a family’s long-term investment policy. The gut rules as its own tyrant. It doesn’t have to account for itself any more than divine inspiration can be questioned by believers. It’s not open to contradiction because it’s entirely personal. All decisions must flow from the instincts of the singular leader. So everyone must accommodate themselves to unpredictability. And when you’re rich, whatever you say is considered wisdom. Engaging in realistic and critical thinking is a lot more complex and challenging than resorting to clichés.
Governance risks lurk in the market for family-owned, public companies. Activist funds and proxy advisory firms hunt for opportunities to exploit the impaired structures and weakened valuations of family- owned businesses trying to appoint unqualified second- or third- generation descendants as top managers. Balancing the interests of professional managers and the desires of the next generation is an ongoing family risk. Young people love risk because they can’t imagine the consequences, while the older generation love building golden tombs and sealing the rest of the family in with them.
The pandemic has highlighted the importance of sustainability and the fragility of our entire ecosystem and relationships. Never lose sight of the primacy of preserving capital, downside protection and the importance of sustaining a collective and disciplined succession process. Building and maintaining a formal family-governance and individual portfolio-management policy requires effort, especially in a time when normal communication methods are impaired.
Many clients have been forced by the pandemic to remain at home. Travel, in-person meetings and socialising have largely ceased. While videoconferencing capabilities have existed for a long time, they were never the first choice for communication. Now with the pandemic in full swing, it has become a major lifeline, offering an opportunity to improve the dialogue and relationship between clients and their financial advisers.
Advisers have observed how commonplace mobile video-conferencing technology allows them to devote more time to clients because their daily work routine has become disintermediated. At the same time, clients want to be better informed and comforted about their investments and the markets in such an uncertain period.
[caption id="attachment_210884" align="alignnone" width="1024"] (Image: Stephen Dawson/ Unsplash)[/caption]
The pandemic ironically represents a unique opportunity for high-net-worth individuals and wealth managers to better understand each others’ goals and services.
Carefully discerning how you and your family’s life and investment objectives change over time and market conditions has never been more important. You need to maintain discipline to cultivate and maintain long term goals. Ignore short-term, emotional, reactive trades trying to catch opportunities in a volatile market. However, investors at all times need to fully understand their personal tolerance for risk and expectations of returns.
Despite resistance to change, there is little doubt the post-Covid world will offer a significantly different operating and living environment. Human communications and how technology is used to establish and maintain relationships are undergoing profound changes that have not yet been determined. That more people are more comfortable with working from home will alter the nature of the workplace.
Nonetheless, the post-Covid financial world will still demand some sort of one-on-one, relationship-driven nature in wealth advisory. Consuming information and planning portfolios entirely online has always been possible, but now mobile applications have made it more accessible and conventional. However, clients also need to experience a level of investment intimacy, sympathy and personal service, too.
The digitalisation of financial services has been reshaping the traditional banking landscape for years. But the pandemic has forced all participants to further redefine how humans interact with technology. Innovations may reduce the need for regular face-to-face engagements and force a redefinition of what constitutes a financial relationship and how people make investment decisions.
This story first appeared on Prestige Singapore
(Main and featured image: Shutterstock)
The post How to Manage Your Finances After Covid-19 appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Raffles Family Office: What wealth management will be like for the next generation of the wealthy
How RFO takes advantage of its energetic, tight-knit team to deliver bespoke services to a younger generation of high-net-worth individuals.
The post Raffles Family Office: What wealth management will be like for the next generation of the wealthy appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
Raffles Family Office: What wealth management will be like for the next generation of the wealthy

How RFO takes advantage of its energetic, tight-knit team to deliver bespoke services to a younger generation of high-net-worth individuals.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
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CSR is Here to Stay
Coravin, the wine lover's dream device that lets you pour wine without uncorking, is back with brand new models.
As fans of the smart wine preservation system, we have observed Coravin for some time and seen the brand expand with new technology every year. Now, they have extended their product lineup with the launch of new systems -- Models Three and Six. What's more, all new and existing models have been equipped with SmartClamps™, which, prior to the launch, was only available on Model Eleven. The new easy-on and easy-off clamps are designed to go over the neck of the bottle and push down firmly on the handle in one fluid motion, making the system even easier to use.
Coravin's wine access technology is all down to the hollow needle that is inserted through the cork, before the system pressurises the bottle with Argon (an inert, colourless and odourless) gas, to pour the wine out. Once poured, and the Coravin is taken off the bottle, the cork reseals naturally -- allowing wine to stay fresh for months on end, and years if needed.
The new systems also comes with a Coravin Screw Cap which allows users to enjoy new world wine (with screw caps) the same way as old world wine (cork) bottles, preserving them for up to three months.
So, with four Coravin Models in total, Model Three, Five, Six and Eleven, which model is the right one for you? Well, let's find out shall we.
Coravin Model Three
Details: Model Three is an upgraded version of Coravin's Model One and features a clean and simple, user-friendly and functional design in matte texture.
Perfect for: the everyday wine drinker.
Price: HK$2,080
Coravin Model Five
Details: Model Five is not available for retail as it has been made specifically for trade. The design is simply elegant but durable.
Perfect for: those in the industry who favour classic design with metallic accents.
Price: email for trade price
Coravin Model Six
Details: Model Six is the upgraded version of the popular Model Two Elite edition, it also features vibrant colours with chrome accents.
Perfect for: luxury style and fashion lovers.
Price: HK$3,580
Coravin Model Eleven
Details: Model Eleven is the smartest device of the Coravin family. It is the first bluetooth connected and fully automatic system. It comes with LED display, glass pour optimisation, and connection to the Coravin Moments app, which tracks system statistics and advises on wine pairings with food, music and more.
Perfect for: technology and gadget enthusiasts who love a varied wine experience.
Price: HK$6,880
The post CSR is Here to Stay appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
How Envysion is disrupting the wealth management industry in Asia
Fine art, whisky and Bitcoin are some of the alternative investments that Veronica Shim believes will transform wealth management.
The post How Envysion is disrupting the wealth management industry in Asia appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
How Envysion is disrupting the wealth management industry in Asia

Fine art, whisky and Bitcoin are some of the alternative investments that Veronica Shim believes will transform wealth management.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
Where do ultra-high networth individuals put their money?
Singaporeans are getting wealthier – and insurance providers are catering to that.
The post Where do ultra-high networth individuals put their money? appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
Where do ultra-high networth individuals put their money?

Singaporeans are getting wealthier – and insurance providers are catering to that.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
Innovative wealth management solutions from Indosuez
Asia’s oldest French bank combines local expertise with a global network to meet the increasingly complex wealth preservation, growth and transfer needs of Asia’s wealthiest families.
The post Innovative wealth management solutions from Indosuez appeared first on The Peak Magazine.
Innovative wealth management solutions from Indosuez

Asia’s oldest French bank combines local expertise with a global network to meet the increasingly complex wealth preservation, growth and transfer needs of Asia’s wealthiest families.
For more stories like this, visit www.thepeakmagazine.com.sg.
How to preserve wealth beyond 3 generations, according to wealth management expert Yash Mishra
A staggering 90 per cent of businessess fail by the third generation; MD of Taurus Family Offices shares tips to prevent this.
The post How to preserve wealth beyond 3 generations, according to wealth management expert Yash Mishra appeared first on The Peak Magazine.