City
Epaper

Single family offices in Asia-Pacific to reach 3,200 by 2030, India a bright spot

By IANS | Updated: April 21, 2025 14:07 IST

New Delhi, April 21 In the Asia Pacific region, single-family offices have grown to 2,290 (surged by 28 ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 21 In the Asia Pacific region, single-family offices have grown to 2,290 (surged by 28 per cent since 2019) and the region is expected to outpace North America moving forward, growing 40 per cent to reach 3,200 offices by 2030, a report showed on Monday, adding that India is undergoing a similar evolution.

A growing number of ultra-high-net-worth individuals and startup founders in the country are turning to institutional family office structures to manage wealth and succession planning, according to a white paper by Lighthouse Canton, a global investment institution.

According to a recent industry report, the number of family offices in the country has grown nearly seven-fold over the past six years, rising from 45 in 2018 to close to 300 in 2024.

The nation’s booming startup ecosystem and generational wealth transfer are fuelling this growth, with many Indian families increasingly seeking institutional-grade investment strategies and governance solutions, said the report.

“India’s family office ecosystem is standing at a defining threshold. As families evolve in their investment outlook and prepare for generational transitions, the demand for institutional frameworks has become essential,” said Sumegh Bhatia, MD and CEO, of Lighthouse Canton in India.

This isn’t just about managing assets, but it’s about building long-term structures aligned with purpose, governance, and stewardship.

“We believe family offices in India will increasingly shape the country’s capital markets, entrepreneurial ecosystem, and philanthropic landscape,” said Bhatia.

This also underscores the growing importance of AI and digital innovation as critical tools for multi-family offices to remain competitive. As new family office patrons continue to emerge in Asia, digital transformation is expected to become indispensable by 2028.

The whitepaper explored key elements of an institutional approach for families including how these family office models can benefit families in creating structured and scalable investment and specialist services, attracting and retaining best-in-class talent and using technology effectively and efficiently to enhance and consolidate reporting for multi-asset portfolios, manage risk, and increase transparency for families.

It also explored about navigating evolving risk and regulatory requirements across multiple jurisdictions and global asset allocations.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Assembly to hold grand event today on 150th anniversary of ‘Vande Mataram’

EntertainmentMahhi Vij gets hospitalised due to high fever

International38 Chinese military aircraft, 9 naval vessels detected near Taiwan

InternationalIsrael confirms return of Tanzanian hostage Joshua Mollel

InternationalSouth African president expects G20 summit to boost global finance reform, address inequality

Business Realted Stories

BusinessAtmanirbhar Bharat is about 'resilient interdependence' not isolationism: FM Sitharaman

BusinessIndia emerges as global torchbearer linking economic growth with environmental sustainability: Dr Jitendra Singh

BusinessLIC has passed full benefit of GST rate cut to customers: CEO Doraiswamy

BusinessMarket, not SEBI, decides IPO valuations, says Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey

BusinessSpanish business delegation visits Namo Bharat corridor