Family offices across Latin America are evolving rapidly — shifting from traditional wealth preservation vehicles into proactive, multi-strategy engines, seeking both yield and stability while carrying unique regional and intergenerational complexities.
Understanding the Latin American Family Office
Latin American family offices manage significant concentrations of wealth — often across sectors like real estate, agribusiness, natural resources, and private equity. Their main objectives typically include:
- Preservation of generational capital, mitigating risks like inflation, political volatility, and currency devaluation.
- Strategic asset allocation, blending conservative positions with opportunistic investments in private markets, real assets, and ESG-aligned ventures.
- Succession and governance, addressing the challenge of aligning values across multiple heirs and ensuring long-term continuity.
Unlike most individual Latin American investors who concentrate their capital in real estate and small-and-medium businesses (SMBs), the larger family offices seek diversification and yield — but must weigh liquidity, expertise, and operational risk in less-transparent markets.
Key Drivers of Change
- Diversification Beyond TradFi
- Constrained by low-yield domestic fixed income, many Latin American family offices allocated capital into global equities, private credit, or middle-market debt — yet cautious of foreign exchange and regional political risk.
- Local Private Credit & Direct Lending
- A growing number of offices now act as direct lenders, especially in industries where traditional banking is constrained. They capture yield premiums (often in double digits, akin to U.S. private credit levels) while leveraging local market insight.
- Focus on Governance & Next-Gen Engagement
- Sophisticated governance structures — family councils, investment committees, and wealth education — are increasingly essential. These offices invest in formal frameworks to prepare heirs for stewardship, ensuring capital transcends generations without dilution.
Managing Risk in Complex Markets
Transparency and Due Diligence
Latin financial markets often lack extensive disclosures and are not as robust or high-performing as their US and European counterparts. Successful offices often rely on knowledgeable, specialist advisors to help them conduct rigorous vetting of opportunities, especially local ones.
lliquidity and Concentration Risk
Family offices typically tolerate longer lock-ups in private strategies — but require careful balance. Many cap direct-exposure to any single asset or manager to limit over-concentration.
Regulatory and Currency Exposure
Shifting regulations, capital controls, and currency instability necessitate agile investment structures. Hedging, and constant policy monitoring, are critical components.
The Path Forward
To mature responsibly, Latin American family offices should:
- Pursue diversified private strategies, balancing local yield with international stability
- Invest in governance and education, enabling thoughtful intergenerational capital stewardship.
- Establish disciplined due diligence frameworks, especially for opaque direct deals.
- Build regional alliances, pooling knowledge and access across borders.
Handal Dunaway’s Perspective
Na Handal Dunaway, we collaborate extensively with Latin American family offices — bringing global investment frameworks and local insights. Our approach integrates Crédito privado, direct lending, and governance advisory to support long-term growth and legacy preservation. We partner with families who demand clarity, structure, and strategic alignment across generations.
Family office dynamics in Latin America reflect a nuanced balance: reaching for yield and innovation without sacrificing structure and resilience. In an environment of economic flux, only those offices that combine local expertise, disciplined governance, and diversified strategies will truly endure.







