UBS surveyed family offices managing $2.1 trillion in aggregate assets for its 2026 Global Family Office Report and found that the majority are executing strategic portfolio realignments involving currency diversification, deeper artificial intelligence infrastructure positions, and the adoption of multi-jurisdictional legal structures. The jurisdictional layer—once reserved for estate planning edge cases—now sits alongside currency and sector allocation as a primary risk control.
The report documents that offices are moving beyond single-domicile constructs. They are establishing parallel entities in jurisdictions with differing regulatory, tax, and asset protection frameworks. This is not tax arbitrage in the legacy sense. It is structural redundancy: if one jurisdiction imposes capital controls, unexpected levies, or freezes on asset movement, the family maintains liquidity and operational continuity through entities domiciled elsewhere. The UBS data shows currency diversification rising in tandem, with offices holding baskets across dollar, euro, Swiss franc, and select Asian currencies rather than anchoring to a single reserve.
AI infrastructure allocation has moved from speculative to structural. Offices are committing capital to data center buildouts, semiconductor supply chain positions, and direct stakes in compute providers. The 12% allocation figure represents a material shift from the 3-4% venture and growth equity earmarked for technology in prior cycles. This is not thematic exposure through funds. It is direct ownership of the physical and capital layer beneath the model training economy. Family offices with generational time horizons are pricing in that compute access, not compute efficiency, will be the choke point by 2028.
The secondary effect is on service providers. MCM Partners announced a standalone family office platform in Geneva this month, led by Christophe Page, formerly of UBS Private Banking and Pictet. The timing is not incidental. As offices move assets across borders and increase structural complexity, demand for multi-jurisdiction coordination—legal, tax, custody, reporting—has outpaced the capacity of traditional private banks to deliver integrated service without conflicts. Independent platforms can span domiciles without the credit or product cross-sell that family offices increasingly resist.
Operators should watch three follow-on events. First, whether offices begin establishing entities in Singapore and Dubai at the same rate as Switzerland and Luxembourg—Q2 2026 disclosure filings will show this. Second, whether direct AI infrastructure deals begin appearing in family office co-investment syndicates alongside pension funds and sovereigns—this is already happening but has not yet been quantified in public data. Third, whether the multi-jurisdiction model leads to a bifurcation in asset custody, with families splitting holdings between onshore banks and offshore independent custodians to avoid single points of failure.
The UBS report does not separate offices by generation, but the jurisdictional diversification trend correlates with families that experienced capital controls, forced repatriations, or unexpected tax regime changes in the last fifteen years. They are building portfolios that can survive policy reversals without requiring urgent asset movement. The AI infrastructure bet is simpler: compute is the new energy, and families with century-long investment horizons are buying the infrastructure layer before it is fully priced.
The takeaway
Family offices are treating jurisdictional structure as a risk layer equal to currency and sector, while moving **12%** into AI infrastructure.
family officesjurisdictional diversificationai infrastructureubsmulti-currencywealth structuring
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