HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesYou've divested your stake. Now make the money work for you. Here's how

You've divested your stake. Now make the money work for you. Here's how

January 11, 2023 / 17:21 IST

Over the last decade, there has been an increasing trend in liquidity events for family businesses and new-found entrepreneurs. With a growing and vibrant venture capital and private equity industry and buoyant capital markets, clients often ask how to prepare for a liquidity event—ie an acquisition, merger, IPO, or any other action that allows founders and early investors to cash out some or all ownership shares. Prior planning can better prepare the family for the event. I believe, before making a decision, people have to look at it with both the head and the heart.

Through our rational thinking dominated by the head, we need to evaluate four key issues—taxation on the transaction and how to optimise for tax, the jurisdiction where the liquidity is being generated, the investment vehicles we should use from a post-liquidity event perspective, and how the proceeds of the liquidity should be invested.

The softer aspects of the heart are often much harder to address and centre around good communication between all family members and a need to maintain strong family ties through the process.

In my career, I have seen two kinds of liquidity events for clients—one where a family has completely exited a business and the other where there has been a partial exit. Complete exits from a business are much harder on families, often accompanied by an identity crisis as members of the family who were actively involved in the family business. This period of thinking “what next” for the second innings can often stretch to two to three years, and it is during this period that I have seen most family principals set up their family office.