Philanthropy and Impact Investing In The World Of Family Offices
In 2020, more than 200 billionaires collaborated to ride the storm that was the coronavirus pandemic. Together they donated more than $5BN to foundations, NGOs and hospitals while transforming hotels into quarantine stations and redirecting production lines of cars and household appliances to meet the demand for ventilators.
Together they had an incredible and immediate impact but at the same time, another selection of Family Offices decided to fund longer-term targeted impacts instead – the most prominent cause being vaccine production. One Family Office which we will go onto detail generated $12BN, boosted German GDP and arguably saved millions of lives by funding the world’s first coronavirus vaccine.
Both subsections of the ultra-wealthy community made a monumental impact socially but just one made a financial return. Today we ask, do Family Offices always need a return on reward and is it possible to have it both ways, always?
Download your copy of our new Philanthropy and Impact Investing Report to discover:
- The history of Philanthropy, the evolution of Impact Investing and our forecasts for both futures
- Thought-leadership from Next-Gen Julian Marwitz, Family Office Principal Anders Johansson, Head of Family Office Geoffroy Dedieu and Advisors Jo Bateson and Andra Ille
- Exclusive research revealing how many Family Offices are making Impact Investments today, how many Family Offices are putting Philanthropy on their agenda and the biggest drivers behind today’s change-makers
- How to set benchmarks for both types of change and how to measure their success
- Why philanthropy is in America’s DNA and why Asia is putting governance back into the conversation around ESG and
- How to find the best talent for your journey, whichever structure you choose.
Download your copy of the report for free here and join the conversation – do you always need to make a return on reward?