Markets may be near historical highs, yet many investors are increasingly focused on resilience rather than returns alone. Volatility has become more frequent, policy visibility remains limited, and geopolitical developments continue to influence capital markets.
For many family offices, the question is rarely whether markets will correct. It is more structural: how to remain invested while managing the risk of large, disruptive drawdowns, particularly late in the cycle.
This article explores how family offices think about downside risk - not through prediction, but through portfolio resilience, combining diversification, structural protection, and scenario-aware positioning.
This content is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation.
Downside risk refers to the potential for investments to lose value during adverse market conditions. For multi-generational investors, such losses can have consequences beyond short-term performance.
Family office portfolios are often characterised by:
Large drawdowns can interrupt succession planning, force asset sales at unattractive prices, or delay reinvestment and compounding. Managing downside risk is therefore less about eliminating volatility, and more about preserving long-term flexibility and optionality.
It is useful to distinguish between two concepts that are often conflated:
Diversification:
Explicit Protection:
For multi-generational capital, both approaches may play a role. The practical challenge often lies in understanding which exposures already exist - and how they interact within the broader allocation.
Instead of predicting markets, portfolios are sometimes assessed against potential stress environments.
1. Equity Market DrawdownSome portfolios may incorporate:
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2. Inflationary or Geopolitical StressAllocations sometimes examined include:
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3. Diversification Beyond Traditional MarketsExposures with distinct return drivers may include:
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4. Late-Cycle or Prolonged VolatilitySome portfolios emphasise:
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Identifying structural gaps is one step. Understanding how different strategies may complement an existing allocation is another.
Resilience is rarely achieved through a single allocation. It is typically the result of deliberate portfolio design - informed by breadth of access and clarity of structure.
Compliance Note
This material is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or a recommendation.