HomeNewsWorldHere's what Asia's rich are betting on as global risks grow

Here's what Asia's rich are betting on as global risks grow

People with more than $1 million of investable funds are repositioning toward private markets to shield their assets from market volatility, Lombard Odier’s 2022 study about high net-worth individuals in Asia Pacific found.

September 07, 2022 / 10:57 IST
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The Merlion Statue and Jubilee Bridge stand in front of the city skyline during the "circuit breaker" lockdown in Singapore, on Wednesday, May 20, 2020. Singapore will allow more businesses to reopen on June 2 -- increasing the active proportion of the economy to three-quarters -- after a nationwide lockdown cut transmission of the coronavirus among citizens and permanent residents. Photographer: Lauryn Ishak/Bloomberg
The Merlion Statue and Jubilee Bridge stand in front of the city skyline during the "circuit breaker" lockdown in Singapore, on Wednesday, May 20, 2020. Singapore will allow more businesses to reopen on June 2 -- increasing the active proportion of the economy to three-quarters -- after a nationwide lockdown cut transmission of the coronavirus among citizens and permanent residents. Photographer: Lauryn Ishak/Bloomberg

With growing concerns over rising inflation and market volatility, Asia’s wealthy are turning cautious.

People with more than $1 million of investable funds are repositioning toward private markets to shield their assets from market volatility, Lombard Odier’s 2022 study about high net-worth individuals in Asia Pacific found.

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They’ve increasingly shunned stocks and bonds to focus on their own companies or assets deemed safer such as gold and cash. At the same time, they’ve largely stayed clear of crypto, which has proved particularly volatile.

“APAC investors are becoming more conservative in their portfolio construction and are diverting to ‘safer’ alternative and private assets, whilst increasingly diversifying beyond their local markets,” Vincent Magnenat, Lombard Odier’s Asia head, wrote in a statement. “Allocation to digital assets is extremely low,” he added at a press briefing Wednesday.