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Asia's wealthiest families remain 'uncertain' of Asian region. Here's why

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 5 min read
Asia's wealthiest families remain 'uncertain' of Asian region. Here's why
Their caution comes even as Asian economies begin to bounce back, led by China and India, and as the region’s stocks rally.
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For Kuok Meng Xiong’s family office, 2020 was a bumper year with investments in technology startups like Bytedance Inc. doing well throughout the pandemic. Despite this good fortune and promises of a vaccine, the grandson of billionaire Robert Kuok remains wary about private deals in the year ahead.

“We anticipate Covid may be protracted even with the vaccine, and travel may not go back to pre-March 2020 days so the early-stage startups would be challenging,” he said, stipulating that he only spoke for his tech-focused remit at K3 Ventures Pte and not his family’s Shangri-La hotel empire.

It’s a view shared by many of his Asian family office peers. Government subsidies for jobs and loans that have helped prevent broader meltdowns are set to end in the coming months, and vaccines may take years to be fully deployed. When combined with continuing geopolitical strife between China and the US, that’s left many of the region’s wealthiest clans feeling anxious.

“The key word is ‘uncertain,’” said Ben J Benjamin, co-founder at Genesis Alternative Ventures, which provides debt funding to startups. “A lot of the pain and the shock that was brought about by Covid-19 is going to come to the fore in 2021.”

Their caution comes even as Asian economies begin to bounce back, led by China and India, and as the region’s stocks rally. It contrasts with the bullish forecasts of many capital markets specialists and Western family offices, with some even getting into risky assets such as Bitcoin. JPMorgan Chase & Co. is predicting the strongest global recovery in a decade if vaccine distribution plays out as expected.

In interviews with several family offices about their investment plans for the year ahead, one common theme emerged amid the uncertainty: be selective.

Tech Startups

Kuok, for one, sees opportunities from his base in Southeast Asia. Singapore’s goal to source 30% of its food supplies locally became especially pointed after Covid-19 shuttered international trade so he’s invested in alternative proteins, cell-based meat makers and agri-tech startups like Perfect Day and eFishery, with more to come this year.

Other focuses will have a technology bent. He likes software-as-a-service and is looking for nuanced ways to make money off “super-apps” such as Grab and Gojek as they diversify and decouple key parts of their systems. Both ride-hailing giants are setting up payments and financial services divisions.

But Kuok warned all of these would have to be approached carefully because of the challenge to roll out vaccines. Some countries like the Philippines aren’t expecting to complete their programs until 2023.

“It forces us to be very disciplined, to go back to first principles and to gain our conviction on a case-by-case basis,” Kuok said.

Debt Demand

Benjamin, whose family has been in the retail industry for two generations, predicted it would take another 12 to 18 months for economies and consumption to truly recover.

“We’ll invest where the opportunities arise but it’s only prudent in these times to keep cash as well,” he said of his investment plans.

Still, the health crisis helped venture debt firms like Genesis, which he co-founded in mid-2019 with the backing of Singapore’s Sassoon family, in part because a wide range of startups sought to borrow money to run their operations instead of diluting their own stakes by selling more shares. Benjamin said it funds less than 10% of the opportunities that come its way, with no defaults so far.

“You see quite a lot of companies looking to take advantage of growth during these Covid times,” he said. “History has shown periods of disruption such as the one we’re in now actually facilitate growth and I think technology companies have shown that in the last few months.”

Private Equity

North-East Family Office managing partner Sam Robinson, whose Denmark and Singapore-based firm manages the wealth of jewellery retailer Pandora A/S’s founders with about US$3 billion ($3.99 billion) in assets, said he was maintaining a cautious approach to investing in private equity funds throughout the region.

Even so, he expects to invest more in 2021 than he did last year with a slight lean toward funds that back technology and health-care companies, as well as undervalued firms with the potential of bouncing back over the coming years. It currently backs around 25 funds across the Asia-Pacific region.

“Right now we’re in such a weird situation where you have things that are doing better than they should be and things that are doing worse than they probably will be eventually,” Robinson said, citing government stimulus as a key reason some companies have stayed alive despite the recession.

Silver, Gold

Instead of putting money into private deals and startups, some Asian family offices are taking a different tack. AJ Capital Asset Management Chief Executive Abhinav Jhunjhunwala says he plans to ramp up investments through 2021 with precious commodities like gold, silver and their associated miners key targets. Similar bets helped his firm return “high double-digit growth” in 2020, he added.

Jhunjhunwala said silver is at a low compared to its historical highs and rising inflation would help rally gold prices -- a view backed by analysts at firms from Pictet to Societe Generale SA.

“Commodities, emerging markets, cyclicals and financials all form significant allocations for us,” he said. “The thesis is very much driven by the idea that there’ll be a continuation of both fiscal and monetary support.”

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