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Why Does Family Wealth Fade Away?

A lack of vision is often the answer to that question.

Many are the stories of family wealth lost. In the late 19th century, industrial tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt amassed the equivalent of $100 billion in today’s dollars – but when 120 of his descendants met at a family gathering in 1973, there were no millionaires among them.1

Barbara Woolworth Hutton – daughter of the founder of E.F. Hutton & Company, heiress to the Woolworth’s five-and-dime empire – inherited $900 million in inflation-adjusted dollars but passed away nearly penniless (her reputed net worth at death was $3,500).1,2

Why do stories like these happen? Why, as the Wall Street Journal notes, does an average of  70% of family wealth erode in the hands of the next generation, and an average of 90% of it in the hands of the generation thereafter? And why, as the Family Business Institute notes, do only 3% of family businesses survive past the third generation?1,3

Lost family wealth can be linked to economic, medical and psychological factors, even changes in an industry or simple fate. Yet inherited wealth may slip away due to a far less dramatic reason. 

What’s more valuable, money or knowledge? Having money is one thing; knowing how to make and keep it is another. Business owners naturally value control, but at times they make the mistake of valuing it too much – being in control becomes more of a priority than sharing practical knowledge, ideas or a financial stake with the next generation. Or, maybe there simply isn’t enough time in a business owner’s 60-hour workweek to convey the know-how or determine an outcome that makes sense for two generations.  A good succession planner can help a family business deal with these concerns.

As a long-term direction is set for the family business, one should also be set for family money. Much has been written about baby boomers being on the receiving end of the greatest generational wealth transfer in history – a total of roughly $7.6 trillion, according to the Wall Street Journal – but so far, young boomers are only saving about $0.50 of each $1 they inherit. If adult children grow up with a lot of money, they may also easily slip into a habit if spending beyond their means, or acting on entrepreneurial whims without the knowledge or boots-on-the-ground business acumen of mom and dad. According to online legal service Rocket Lawyer, 41% of baby boomers (Americans now aged 50-68) have no will. Wills are a necessity, and trusts are useful as well, especially when wealth stands a chance of going to minors.1,4   

Vision matters. When family members agree about the value and purpose of family wealth – what wealth means to them, what it should accomplish, how it should be maintained and grown for the future – that shared vision can be expressed in a coherent legacy plan, which can serve as a kind of compass.

After all, estate planning encompasses much more than strategies for wealth transfer, tax deferral and legal tax avoidance. It is also about conveying knowledge – and values. In the long run, nothing may help family wealth more.

Warmest Regards,

 april-signature

 

Citations.

1 – tinyurl.com/qblyk6v [3/8/13]

2 – investorplace.com/2013/08/woolworths-heiress-outspent-a-near-billion-dollar-fortune-died-penniless/#.Us8-D7SLXs8 [8/2/13]

3 – fa-mag.com/news/why-wealth-disappears-8227.html [9/7/11]

4 – forbes.com/sites/lawrencelight/2013/11/22/how-to-inherit-wealth-without-screwing-up/ [11/22/13]

  

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Looking Back at 2013

How good a year was it for the economy? Statistics tell the tale.

Was 2013 a terrific year for stocks? Absolutely. The good news wasn’t limited to Wall Street, however: the employment rate fell, the economy revved up, home prices rose and inflation pressure was minimal.

Bulls triumphed. Christmas Eve brought the Dow’s 49th record close of 2013: 16,357.55. The S&P 500 settled at 1,833.32 on December 24 – a new all-time peak – while the NASDAQ ended the day at 4,155.42. The YTD gains on Christmas Eve were stunning: DJIA, 24.83%; S&P, 28.55%; NASDAQ, 37.62%. As you read this, these indices may have climbed even higher since.1,2

GDP improved. Our economy expanded just 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2012, but things got better in 2013. The Bureau of Economic Analysis measured GDP at 1.1% for Q1, 2.5% for Q2 and 4.1% for Q3.3

The job market began to turn around. In November, the jobless rate hit a 5-year low of 7.0%. From August through November, non-farm payrolls grew by an average of 204,000 jobs per month, compared to average growth of 159,000 new jobs a month from April to July.4

Homes grew more valuable. In late November, the September edition of the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index showed a 13.3% year-over-year gain. Prices hadn’t risen so dramatically in a 12-month period since February 2006.5

The Consumer Price Index barely rose. It was flat in November, and that put yearly consumer inflation at only 1.2%; the annualized gain in the core CPI was also minor at 1.7%. As recently as the summer of 2011, consumer inflation was approaching 4%.6

The recovery seemed to acquire more momentum. After years of troubling economic developments, 2013 was refreshingly positive. If the economy hasn’t quite healed yet to where it was before the recession, indicators such as these suggest it won’t be long until that day.

Warmest Regards,

 april-signature

 

Citations.

1 – foxbusiness.com/markets/2013/12/24/stock-futures-steady-ahead-durable-goods-data/ [12/24/13]

2 – usatoday.com/money/markets/overview/ [12/24/13]

3 – money.cnn.com/2013/12/20/news/economy/gdp-report/index.html [12/20/13]

4 – cbsnews.com/news/unemployment-rate-dips-to-7-percent/ [12/7/13]

5 – tinyurl.com/jvl25lh [11/26/13]

6 – marketwatch.com/story/consumer-prices-unchanged-in-november-2013-12-17 [12/17/13]