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Wealthy families cut dollar exposure, survey finds

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 2:32 AM

ZURICH, May 28 (Reuters) – The world’s richest families are trimming exposure to the U.S. dollar as geopolitical tensions and rising sovereign debt drive a broader ​rethink of portfolio risk, UBS said in a ‌report published on Thursday.

About two-thirds of family offices surveyed by the Swiss bank expect confidence in the dollar as a reserve currency to weaken over the year, UBS found. The survey was conducted between ‌January ​and late March, before the dollar ⁠started to outperform many ⁠peers.

Here are details from UBS’s Global Family Office Report 2026:

• The dollar’s depreciation in the year before the survey was conducted has prompted many family offices to ​review their portfolios, with almost half concluding they are overexposed to the U.S. currency across asset classes, according to ⁠UBS strategist Maximilian Kunkel.

• Plans ⁠to reduce exposure to dollar-denominated assets reflect ​a wider reconsideration of U.S.-centric portfolios, UBS found. Family offices plan ​to add emerging market stocks and infrastructure, while ‌trimming real estate holdings.

• “For the first time, we are feeling that family offices want to build up in Asia Pacific and, to a certain degree, also in Western Europe,” ⁠UBS executive Benjamin Cavalli said. “That mainly affects family offices outside the United States, but we are also seeing signs that a ⁠very limited part ‌of the de-dollarisation move is coming from ⁠U.S. family offices.”

• Geopolitical conflict is now ​the ‌top concern by a wide margin, prompting ​family offices to ⁠combine asset allocation shifts with multishoring strategies, UBS said. Multishoring involves establishing family office activities across jurisdictions.

• UBS surveyed 307 clients worldwide. Participating families had an average net worth of $2.7 billion.

(Reporting by Oliver Hirt. Writing by Ariane Luthi. Editing ​by Mark Potter)