From family business to holding company with family office
The beginning of our development into an owner-managed family office (FO) corresponds to what must have been a very typical initial situation: the activities of our group, which had until then been almost exclusively proprietary, were significantly reduced more than 20 years ago by our withdrawal from the electrical wholesale business, and a medium-sized group of companies with 750 employees became an entrepreneurial asset management company with around 150 employees today. The break at that time was used to drive diversification into other asset classes, but without completely abandoning the proprietary area, which explains the comparatively high headcount for a family office. Thus, to date, our portfolio includes two medium-sized companies in the field of catering wholesale and as a special service provider in the field of metal processing. Overall, however, our current setup has a clear asset management orientation, which is now managed by two representatives of the founding family in the third generation. Our focus and emphasis is based on the needs and opportunities of the time. Our current overall portfolio therefore has a clear focus on real estate — not least due to the interest rate development of the past 10 years.
Our current structure is thus certainly more heterogeneous than that of other FOs in that it integrates proprietary activities into its asset-managing structure. This list shows opportunities and risks in equal measure. Ideally, we succeed in combining the best of both worlds: In the asset management area, we accept that we are no longer necessarily in the driver’s seat, but without completely abandoning our entrepreneurial spirit. We can therefore react more quickly to special situations and exploit opportunities more flexibly than more heavily regulated institutional market participants. On the other hand, we maintain a more critical view of our proprietary activities than others, in the awareness that they are merely one of several building blocks of the overall portfolio, which has to prove itself in a sober comparison with other areas and asset classes.
Making the most of these expanded opportunities poses particular challenges for the management of such a diverse portfolio. The first question is whether it makes sense for the owner family to shoulder these challenges themselves or whether external service providers should be used. This question can only be answered individually and on the specific case. As is well known, not every full-blooded entrepreneur is automatically a good asset manager, just as not every good consultant automatically succeeds as an entrepreneur. The basic prerequisite for an owner-managed structure is, of course, that the required minimum level of economic, tax and legal know-how can be provided by the family shareholders themselves — and, in case of doubt, several times and over several generations. Every family is therefore well advised to treat its talents with care and to take an interest in family business issues at an early stage. Conversely, i.e., if internal “human resources” are no longer available in the long term, this gives rise to an explicit mandate to prepare administrative structures for the involvement of third parties.
The personal suitability of individual family representatives is of little use, however, unless there is also a corresponding level of trust in the acting persons on the part of the other shareholders. It is only in the combination of these two prerequisites that family ties prove to be the more reliable and successful “skin in the game” than purely financial involvement by external third parties can bring about. Then the much-vaunted hidden reserves of family business structures can actually be leveraged.
In the management of the FO, “owner-managed” must by no means be misunderstood as “do everything yourself”. Rather, the interface between the original tasks of the active owners on the one hand and externally brought in know-how on the other must be consciously defined. This is because the broadening of the investment horizon inevitably increases the number of playing fields to be played in parallel, which calls for a “decentralization” of the scope of information to be processed. Consistent “time management” proves to be the first cardinal virtue of “asset management”, which requires constant scrutiny and, if necessary, the implementation of a new strategy. Adjusting the current priorities in each case requires. If this does not succeed, the randomness of event-driven day-to-day business becomes the real driver of investment decisions and thus the opposite of strategic asset allocation. Because, of course, the smaller size also has disadvantages: Owner-managed FOs have to find answers to the increasingly demanding macro- and microeconomic questions that have to be taken into account in the context of investment decisions just as much as institutional capital collection agencies with their considerable resources in research. The intelligent and effective use of external sources of information while at the same time taking the cost side into account is thus also part of the core of the task.
If all this succeeds, there is a chance to “convert” the advantages of a bearer structure into an upside in asset performance in the literal sense. Fast decision-making processes, less regulation, trust on the part of the stakeholders, and a high level of identification on the part of the principals also provide a suitable setting for thinking out of the box. This is particularly useful in the asset management industry with its latent tendency towards “pseudo-academization”. The topic of ESG, whose development and implementation must be viewed critically from our point of view, is a current example of the need for intellectual independence.
Like probably most market participants, we perceive a perpetuating instability in the external environment, which does not make the task of preserving and, ideally, increasing wealth any easier. After all, the ability to plan is a fundamental element of any asset management.
But if this instability represents the new “normal,” we must accept this and thus also acknowledge that this destabilization ultimately represents a flip side of globalization, from which we have all benefited in the past and will hopefully benefit in the future. Terms such as “disruptive” and various “new theories” are more likely to describe the dilemma than to present possible solutions. The adjustment of risk management in the sense of an even more careful diversification and combination of assets that are as uncorrelated as possible remains the means of choice when it is increasingly necessary to operate on sight. The looming inflation is doing its part to keep the task challenging. Here, it will be important not to rush headlong into real assets, but to maintain sufficient liquidity despite the painful devaluation of money in order to meet the need for hedging as well as to take advantage of opportunities in a more difficult economic environment.
(re-)financing environment in the short term. And in the end, despite everything, it is important to keep an open mind for new things, even in a constantly changing environment.
About Florian Schmitt
Florian Schmitt worked as a lawyer and tax advisor in Munich for 13 years, the last seven of which he spent with the law firm Braun Leberfinger Ludwig, focusing on advising entrepreneurial families. Today, as third-generation spokesman of the Board of Management, he heads together with his cousin the holding company in which the family’s entrepreneurial activities are pooled. fschmitt@sldv.de