Udita Sharma
Udita Sharma
Investment Engagement Manager
Helped 500+ investors build
their investment thesis.

Global Family Offices Eye India

When the world’s most sophisticated capital looks across emerging markets today, one name stands out: India. From the US to the Middle East, family offices are converging on a single conviction: that India is where the next decade of alpha may be born.

Across geographies, the story is consistent. According to UBS’s Global Family Office Report 2025, India ranks as the top emerging market destination where global family offices will look to increase exposure in the next 12 months. This isn’t merely a regional anomaly. It’s a near-global consensus.

That alignment, from such diverse pools of capital, suggests something deeper than short-term optimism. It reflects a growing recognition that India is no longer a high-beta peripheral play, but a core part of long-term global allocation strategies.

The Numbers Tell the Story

Here’s how the intent to increase investment exposure to India stacks up:

list

Source: UBS Global Family Office Report 2025

Even family offices in emerging Asia, with plenty of regional proximity bias, are making room for India. India is the only market where more than a quarter of global family offices plan to increase exposure in the next 12 months.

This level of clarity across regions – North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia – makes it clear that India is not just an emerging market play. It’s a conviction play.

Why the Pivot Toward India?

The reasons are structural, not cyclical.

  1. Macroeconomic stability: India is expected to be the fastest-growing major economy for the next five years, supported by demographics, policy continuity, and digital infrastructure.
  2. Private market depth: From SaaS and space to healthcare and consumer tech, India’s private market is scaling rapidly, providing attractive investment opportunities.
  3. De-risking from China: For many allocators, increasing India exposure is not just about opportunity, it’s about balancing geopolitical risk.
  4. Policy and partnership tailwinds: India’s growing alignment with Western economies, along with reforms in taxation, foreign direct investment, and capital markets, has made it easier for global capital to enter and stay.

What’s notable is how these four drivers reinforce one another. India is growing with institutional discipline, technological leverage, and increasingly investor-friendly policy.

And unlike many other high-growth economies, India offers multiple points of entry: venture equity, private credit, control positions, growth capital, real assets, and increasingly, secondaries.

What This Says About Family Office Strategy

This isn’t just a bet on India. It’s a signal about how family offices allocate in volatile times:

  • They seek long-duration bets with secular tailwinds.
  • They want exposure to value creation, not just value capture.
  • They are willing to bypass traditional market heuristics in favor of market access and innovation depth.

Family offices, unlike many institutional allocators, aren’t tethered to benchmarks or fixed mandates. That flexibility is now being used to unlock asymmetric upside in geographies that combine scale with structural momentum.

They’re also leaning on their natural advantages: long-term capital, nimble governance, and the ability to write across the stack: from early-stage VC to late-stage growth to buyouts.

India fits this playbook better than most. Its private markets are fragmented but scaling, its founders are increasingly institution-ready, and its capital needs are significant.

India’s Moment, But Who’s Early?

What makes this wave of interest unique is that it is not coming late in the cycle. Today’s interest is earlier, more nuanced, and more risk-aware. Family offices are not just diversifying risk, they’re actively positioning for lucrative returns.

They’re not buying at the peak, they’re building for the turn.

Many are moving past headline growth rates and beginning to analyze India like they would a developed market: sectorally, vertically, geographically. They’re asking not just why India, but where within India.

That’s why the smart capital isn’t waiting for the IPO boom or the next unicorn to headline. It’s showing up in Series B rounds of healthcare infrastructure startups, pre-Series A spacetech bets, and platform roll-ups in Tier II logistics.

For investors with long-term time horizons and flexible capital, India offers a blend of growth exposure and innovation optionality that few other markets can match.

It’s also one of the few emerging economies where private market velocity has not compromised deal quality. Investor protections are improving. Legal infrastructure is more enforceable. And many of the top GPs operating in India today are battle-tested.

From Optional to Obvious

India used to sit in the optional bucket of many global allocators, something to look at when things were not as attractive elsewhere. That’s no longer the case.

Today, it’s becoming the counterweight. The strategic ballast. The forward hedge.

It’s where global capital goes when it’s thinking long-term.

And if you’re already bullish on private markets, frontier tech, or healthcare transformation, then you’re already bullish on India. You just may not know it yet.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why are global family offices increasing exposure to India?
A: India offers a combination of private market scale, macroeconomic strength, digital infrastructure, and policy reforms that align with long-duration capital strategies.
Q: What sectors are attracting family office investment in India?
A: Sectors like healthcare, SaaS, space, and consumer tech are drawing significant interest due to their rapid growth and private market innovation.
Q: Is India replacing China in family office allocations?
A: Not entirely. But India is increasingly being used to de-risk China-heavy portfolios, offering geopolitical balance with high-growth upside.
Q: What does this shift indicate about family office strategy?
A: Family offices are leaning into secular trends, innovation depth, and early-stage access—prioritizing value creation over late-cycle visibility.
Q: Why is the timing of this India pivot important?
A: Unlike past cycles, this move is early-stage. Capital is flowing into India before public froth, seeking long-term alpha and strategic positioning.

Udita Sharma
Udita Sharma
Investment Engagement Manager
Helped 500+ investors build
their investment thesis.

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