Lead
Prince Max von und zu Liechtenstein, chairman of LGT Group, told the Bloomberg Family Office Summit in Hong Kong on March 25, 2026 that geopolitical dynamics "have accelerated a lot over the last five years" (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026). LGT, which manages approximately $490 billion in assets, is a bellwether for ultra-high-net-worth and family-office sentiment; its chairman’s public remarks are therefore notable for investors and allocators monitoring political-risk premia. The comment links a qualitative observation to a quantitative reality for many family offices: an extended period of elevated cross-border policy actions, sanctions, and state-affiliated activity that changes risk-return profiles across asset classes. This piece dissects the LGT warning with contextual data, sector implications, and a measured Fazen Capital perspective on what the remark signals for institutional positioning.
Context
LGT’s statement should be read against a backdrop of heightened policy volatility since 2021. Prince Max’s timeline—"the last five years"—frames a post-2020 era that includes pandemic-era intervention, the 2022 large-scale conflict in Europe, expanded sanctions regimes and reciprocal economic measures, and intensified technology and trade policy contestation between major powers (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026). For family offices and private banks, the practical consequences have been more frequent re-rating events for sovereign and corporate credit, abrupt FX and commodity moves, and a structural rise in the cost of hedging cross-border exposures.
LGT’s $490 billion in assets under management positions it among the largest family-owned financial groups; the scale matters because larger private banks and family offices act as both risk absorbers and conduits of capital reallocations. By speaking publicly at a family office summit in Hong Kong, Prince Max signalled that the era of intermittent political shocks is now sufficiently persistent to influence capital allocation discussions at the highest level of private wealth management (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026). That public posture differs from the historical family-office preference for private counsel: it acknowledges systemic geopolitical externalities that require public, cross-market responses.
Comparatively, the rise in political risk is not uniform across regions. Measured policy interventions—trade restrictions, foreign direct investment (FDI) screening, and sanctions—have increased in frequency in 2021–2025 versus 2016–2020, pushing some investors to prefer domicile diversification and liquid buffers. The simple empirical comparison of five-year windows underlines why a firm with LGT’s client mix would sound an alarm: where once political shocks were episodic, they now form an elevated baseline that amplifies tail risks for concentrated international portfolios.
Data Deep Dive
Three discrete, verifiable data anchors support the proposition that political risk has intensified: first, the remarks themselves were delivered on March 25, 2026 at the Bloomberg Family Office Summit in Hong Kong (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026). Second, LGT’s scale—about $490 billion of assets under management—gives the comment institutional weight because allocations at that scale influence asset-market liquidity and family-office behavior (Bloomberg). Third, the five-year window cited by Prince Max (2021–2026) coincides with several observable policy shifts, including expanded sanctions programmes and investment-screening regimes in multiple major economies.
To quantify the exposure pathways: increased sanctions and export controls have led to concentrated sector impacts—notably in high-tech components, energy midstream assets, and selected financial flows—where regulatory shocks can impose both direct valuation losses and liquidity freezes. For investors, the relevant metrics include the speed of event-driven reratings (days rather than months), the cross-border correlation of sovereign CDS spreads, and the cost and availability of currency hedges in EM markets. While these indicators fluctuate, trend measures show that cross-asset repricing following policy announcements has become faster and more correlated since 2021.
It is important to cite sources for these signals. The Bloomberg report (Mar 25, 2026) provides the direct quote and event context; central bank and sovereign-debt market data through 2025 show episodes of policy-driven repricing (various central bank releases and market data providers). For family offices and private banks, internal custody and flow data from 2022–2025 documented increased demand for liquid buffers and geodiversified custody solutions—anecdotally consistent with LGT’s apprehension and reflected in increased enquiries about jurisdictional risk from clients across Europe and Asia.
Sector Implications
Private banks, wealth managers, and family offices are the first-order sectors affected by persistent political risk; they sit at the intersection of client concentration, cross-border exposure, and fiduciary duty. For wealth-management firms, higher political risk increases the operational cost of managing multi-jurisdictional portfolios—compliance, KYC/AML, tax structuring, and sanctions screening expenses rise, compressing net margins absent fee adjustments. LGT’s public remark is therefore both a strategic signal and a potential harbinger for industry-wide margin pressure if regulatory complexity continues to grow.
The asset-management and corporate sectors face differentiated impacts. Corporates with long, global supply chains (semiconductors, critical minerals, energy infrastructure) confront higher capex risk and more stringent localization requirements in some markets. Those dynamics have direct knock-on effects on listed equities and private-market valuations, particularly in sectors where policy interventions can change market-access economics in months. Credit markets, by contrast, are more sensitive to sovereign policy shifts that alter the perceived default or sanction risk of counterparties.
Comparative analysis versus peers shows LGT’s stance is shared but not universal. Larger universal banks with diversified balance sheets can absorb compliance and restructuring costs more easily than boutique family offices; however, those larger banks also have higher political-visibility exposure. In short, the sector is split between scale advantages and reputational or political vulnerabilities. Family offices, in particular, may lack the operational depth to respond rapidly and therefore will tend to reprice risk more conservatively.
Risk Assessment
From a risk-management standpoint, the key question is how persistent the elevated political-risk baseline will be and which asset classes will price that persistence. Scenario analysis indicates three plausible pathways: episodic shocks with rapid market repricing, sustained geopolitical fragmentation prompting structural capital reallocation, and targeted sectoral policy regimes that create idiosyncratic winners and losers. Each scenario has materially different implications for liquidity, correlation, and hedging costs.
Operational risks are rising alongside geopolitical ones. Increased sanctions enforcement and export controls raise the probability of inadvertent non-compliance; that, in turn, increases legal and counterparty risk for firms handling cross-border transactions. The data point here is less a single number than a trend: enforcement actions and regulatory interventions have become more frequent post-2021, prompting firms to invest more in compliance and to seek jurisdictional diversification. For family offices that prioritize privacy and nimbleness, this forces a trade-off between operational simplicity and regulatory safety.
Market liquidity risk is another dimension. When political events trigger correlated selloffs, liquidity can evaporate in stressed markets, leading to larger-than-expected mark-to-market losses for leveraged strategies. The implication for institutional risk managers is straightforward: stress-test portfolios for rapid, policy-driven repricing events and reassess capacity for forced dislocations in markets with concentration of holders.
Outlook
Looking forward, political risk is likely to remain elevated relative to the pre-2020 baseline even if the cadence of headline events moderates. Policymakers in major jurisdictions show little appetite to roll back tools that provide strategic economic leverage—sanctions, investment screens, industrial policy—so the structural environment for political risk is persistent. For capital allocators, that translates into a need to price higher political-premia into cross-border strategies and to anticipate increased transaction and compliance frictions.
That said, the timing and magnitude of market responses will vary. Some asset classes—broad-developed-market equities and Treasury markets—retain high liquidity and deep pricing even under stress, while niche EM local-currency debt, selected commodities, and proprietary technology supply chains will likely command higher risk premia. Investors will therefore need to differentiate between liquidity-rich and liquidity-thin exposures when calibrating hedges and capital buffers.
At the institutional level, we expect continued demand for geodiversified custody, modular legal structures, and scenario-based hedging that can respond to targeted state action. LGT’s public comment is a signal that private banks and family offices will increasingly make political-risk assessment an explicit part of investment policy frameworks, rather than a peripheral consideration.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views the LGT warning as a pragmatic recognition of a permanent shift in the investment-policy landscape rather than a transient sentiment spike. A contrarian insight is that persistent political risk can create structural alpha opportunities for managers who operationalize jurisdictional expertise and specialize in fragmented market access. Where many investors retreat to broad beta, specialists with trusted on-the-ground networks and high compliance standards can monetize dislocations through selective private-credit and localized infrastructure plays.
Moreover, elevated political risk will compress the investor base for certain assets—reducing competition and potentially improving entry valuations for long-term, patient capital with robust governance. This is not an endorsement of specific trades, but a strategic observation: periods of structural complexity have historically rewarded allocators who invest in information, local legal capital, and operational resilience. That dynamic is particularly relevant for family-office capital which can tolerate longer lockups and more bespoke structuring.
Finally, for institutional allocators considering policy shifts in their investment mandates, the challenge is balancing the cost of over-hedging (which can be substantial) against the unpriced tail risk of under-hedging. Fazen Capital recommends incorporating political-risk scenarios explicitly into governance processes and linking them to liquidity, counterparty, and jurisdictional limits—steps that many family offices have begun to adopt in response to the trends highlighted by LGT.
FAQ
Q: How does LGT’s $490bn scale influence its view on political risk?
A: At $490 billion in assets under management (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026), LGT operates across multiple jurisdictions and asset classes; scale amplifies both exposure and responsibility. Larger scale means more clients with cross-border needs and higher operational complexity, increasing sensitivity to policy shocks. It also means that LGT’s public warnings can influence peer behavior and client expectations.
Q: Is political risk only relevant to emerging markets?
A: No. While EM often displays acute currency and sovereign risk, the instruments of political risk—sanctions, export controls, and industrial policy—have increasingly targeted developed-market sectors such as semiconductors, artificial intelligence inputs, and energy. Policy measures in major economies can thus produce market-moving outcomes across developed and emerging markets.
Q: What historical precedent best matches today’s dynamics?
A: The closest analogue is the early 2010s post-crisis re-regulation period, when new policy frameworks reshaped capital flows and compliance costs. Today’s difference is the geopolitical breadth—policy tools are being used more strategically across trade, technology, and finance simultaneously—creating a denser matrix of risk that persists across the economic cycle.
Bottom Line
LGT’s public warning—that political risk has accelerated over the last five years (Bloomberg, Mar 25, 2026)—is a data-backed signal that political externalities are now a persistent input for institutional risk frameworks. Institutional allocators should elevate political-risk scenario analysis within governance and operational planning.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
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