Saturday, May 30, 2026

When The Rich Quietly Quit Dollars

UBS has just published its 2026 Global Family Office Report, and the number to underline is 60. Sixty percent of family offices are planning the biggest strategic changes to their portfolios in five years. Globally, North America is the only region they intend to cut.

The signal in family-office money

These are not retail flows. Family offices have no clients to redeem on a bad month, no benchmark to hug, no consultant grading them quarterly. They have the longest discretion in private finance. When that money rebalances, it is rarely noise.

The detail under the headline is sharper than the headline itself. Two-thirds expect confidence in the dollar’s reserve role to fall. Nearly half say they are already overexposed to the dollar. The Swiss franc and the euro are the preferred diversification currencies. Emerging-market equities, infrastructure and gold get a top-up. The first-ranked risk for both the next twelve months and the next five years is geopolitical uncertainty.

This is not a BRICS communique or a yuan-internationalisation press release. It is balance-sheet behaviour from the deepest patient pools in private wealth, and it deserves to be read as such.

The Hormuz crucible

The timing is not coincidental. We are in the third month of the Strait of Hormuz crisis. ORF’s input-output modelling places the structural CPI ceiling for India somewhere around 4.5 percent on this shock. MUFG’s adverse-scenario USD/INR sits above 95.

More interesting than the price is the plumbing. Roughly 60 million barrels a month are reportedly settling in yuan and dirhams under wartime arrangements. That is not large next to the global oil trade. But it is the first time in this cycle that non-dollar settlement rails have moved real volume under stress, and importers have, for the first time in years, seen the cost of dollar-denominated energy clearing exposed as a strategic vulnerability rather than a piece of cheap plumbing.

India: beneficiary and victim at once

There is a comforting reading of the UBS data for Delhi. Money rotating out of North America flows naturally into emerging-market equities, and India sits at the top of that allocation pile. The eighteen rupee-invoicing arrangements the Reserve Bank has quietly enabled with trading partners are exactly the rails the world is now testing under fire.

The discomfort is that the same regime is squeezing us simultaneously. Foreign portfolio investors pulled over a billion out of Indian equities in the first four months of 2026. The current-account arithmetic is being held together by intermittent yuan-priced crude cargoes and a slowly bleeding reserves stock. Anyone telling you that a multipolar monetary order is unambiguously good news for India is selling something. It is a structurally improved bargaining position with a near-term liquidity risk. Both things are true; the policy has to address both.

Four moves that would actually matter

Commentary at this point usually retreats into “deepen capital markets”. The list that moves the needle is shorter and more specific.

Operationalise rupee invoicing properly. The Gulf bottleneck is not policy; it is correspondent banking economics and Vostro account uptake. If an Indian refiner finds it cheaper to settle a UAE crude cargo in INR than in USD, the share moves on its own. Today the friction runs the other way, and no announcement fixes that.

Resize the strategic petroleum reserve. Roughly 45 days of cover is acceptable in normal times. It is thin in a Hormuz regime, where supply losses since February have already exceeded a billion barrels globally. We can either top it up with leased commercial space and term contracts, or this becomes a recurring crisis the RBI is quietly asked to fund out of forex reserves.

More sovereign gold. Emerging-market central banks have absorbed roughly 225 million ounces of gold since 2008, and still hold about half the physical gold of advanced economies. India is underweight by every reasonable benchmark. The argument that buying more is atavistic is the wrong frame: this is now the most consensus trade in central banking, and the data has stopped being shy about it.

Clean the rails for inbound capital. If we want the rotation into Indian equities and rupee bonds to be sticky, settlement, repatriation timelines and tax certainty for non-residents must be visibly frictionless. A family office choosing between Mumbai and Rio de Janeiro (where i did my Columbia Capstone) will not decide on yield alone. It will decide on execution friction. We control that variable entirely.

The takeaway

One framing from Kent Daniel’s capital-markets course at Columbia has stayed with me longer than the lecture notes: in any market, the patient money tells you where the cycle is going long before the loud money does. The patient money right now, very politely through a UBS survey and very impolitely through gold, is saying the post-1971 dollar order is being repriced. We have something like the next decade to position for that. The Hormuz crisis is the first real stress test. If the policy answer is reduced to “buy more Russian crude”, we will have wasted the lesson.

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