Addepar and CNBC launched the Family Office Portfolio Tracker this week, offering quarterly transparency into how the world's wealthiest families deploy capital across $10 trillion in managed assets. The partnership marks the first time a financial media outlet has embedded live portfolio intelligence from a custody-grade platform into editorial coverage.
The tracker's initial dataset reveals a structural shift: public equities are now the fastest-growing asset class among family offices, reversing a fifteen-year trend toward alternatives. Real estate allocations, which peaked at 23% of aggregate portfolios in late 2021, have contracted for seven consecutive quarters. Addepar declined to specify exact percentage shifts but confirmed the trend is statistically significant across their 700+ family office clients managing north of $5 million each. CNBC will update the tracker quarterly, sourcing anonymized position data directly from Addepar's wealth platform, which holds custodial relationships with $6 trillion in advised assets globally.
This matters because family offices move slower than hedge funds but larger than most realize. When 700 ultra-high-net-worth families simultaneously rotate out of commercial real estate and into liquid equities, the lag shows up eighteen months later in REIT redemption queues and private credit spread compression. The timing is notable: the tracker launches as office vacancy rates in gateway cities hit 18%, the highest since 1995, and as public equity volatility has declined to pre-pandemic lows. Family offices typically rebalance on 24-to-36-month cycles, meaning this shift likely began in mid-2022 when the Fed's terminal rate became clear. The $10 trillion figure represents roughly 40% of the estimated $25 trillion managed by single-family offices worldwide, giving the tracker legitimate benchmark status.
Addepar's willingness to share aggregated data through a media partner also signals a broader transparency arms race in private wealth. The firm competes with Black Diamond, Envestnet, and Apex for custody and reporting mandates among multi-generational families who historically guarded allocation details. By anchoring CNBC's editorial calendar to quarterly data drops, Addepar gains soft distribution to allocators who read the outlet but may not yet be clients. CNBC gains a proprietary dataset it can monetize through terminal subscriptions and sponsored research. Neither party disclosed revenue-sharing terms, but industry standard for financial data licensing runs 15-to-25% of attributed subscription revenue.
Allocators should watch three follow-on developments over the next six months: first, whether Addepar's competitors respond with similar media partnerships or proprietary benchmark publications; second, whether the real estate drawdown accelerates or stabilizes in Q2 data, which would indicate whether families are tax-loss harvesting or making permanent allocation calls; third, whether CNBC layers in performance attribution, which would reveal whether the equity shift is growth-driven or defensive repositioning into dividend aristocrats.
The tracker's launch also arrives three weeks before Addepar's expected Series F raise, rumored at $400 million on a $3 billion pre-money valuation. The CNBC partnership gives the firm a public proof-of-concept for its data-as-a-service ambitions beyond wealth management software.