Women changing the wealth landscape in the Middle East

Between 20% and 40% of wealth in the region is held by or for women

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The term ‘Middle East’ only gained wide currency last century and no-one quite agrees what it covers.  According to a (Wikipedia) research, it encompasses 17 countries from Cyprus to Yemen via Israel and Turkey.

Attempts to generalise can be misleading and embarrassing, write Alex Ruffel, partner, and Kate Caldwell, consultant at law firm Irwin Mitchell.

What is clear is that there is a vast amount of wealth in the region – recent estimates suggest that the Middle East has around $3.1trn of investible assets – and that a significant and increasing proportion, estimated between 20% and 40%, of it is held by, or for, women.

Female shift

Historically, private wealth in the Middle East has often been viewed as family, as opposed to individual wealth, and run centrally with strategic management led by male family members.

While decisions and actions are often highly influenced by female family members, such influence is informal and usually not visible.

We are now seeing increasing participation and visibility of women in entrepreneurship, in the strategic management of family wealth and in growth of their own independent investment portfolios parallel to but separate from family wealth.

The causes for this are complex but include sophisticated and advanced education (for example, more than half of all graduating students in Saudi Arabia are women and Middle Eastern women study across the world), liberalisation of society, increasing globalisation and a shift of wealth between generations that encourages reassessment of who and how it is managed.

Industry evolution

Women in the Middle East have been patchily served in the private wealth market.

Cultural and religious practices can limit their access to advisers in a male-dominated industry: US or European-style networking may not be an option and women may often feel happier dealing with a female adviser, particularly in relation to their private assets.

This is starting to change and there has been a growth in bank and boutique advisory services concentrating on female investors, although it still has a long way to go.

The global lifestyle of many high net worth Middle Eastern families can also mitigate any shortage of local advisers: an Omani female investor may very well have an English lawyer, a Swiss banker and a Guernsey trustee.

No fuss

Apart from access to advisers, is there any difference between the wealth management needs and priorities of female investors in the Middle East?

While there are many highly knowledgeable and sophisticated female investors and entrepreneurs in the region, there is often an experience gap caused by historic factors.

They particularly value clear, honest advice that makes no assumptions about their knowledge while avoiding patronising them.

Battling investment stereotypes

We are seeing greater willingness to take risks and move out of cash and real property into private equity and newer sectors, such as green energy.

This is driven by several factors: a growing female entrepreneurial sector; increasing confidence in their own investment decisions; sometimes a well-established family business that allows for greater adventurousness in dealing with the cash that it generates; and recognition that diversification into different geographic regions and sectors is key when the Middle East faces serious threats to its stability.

The idea of female investors as risk-averse is often wide of the mark, especially for female entrepreneurs, who have usually had to take significant risks to succeed in societies that can be oriented against them.

Wider options

Asset protection and succession are also key concerns of many female investors and this can be reflected in both the choice of investments and the structure in which they are held.

Sharia law generally means unequal division of assets between male and female children and parents may wish to invest in assets that are not governed by it.

Alex Ruffel

Real property in the UK has (almost) always been a desirable investment but has particular interest for investors who wish to ring-fence specific assets for daughters – as Sharia law does not apply to such property, owners can leave it as they wish accordance with English or Scottish law.

Use of trusts can also address privacy and security considerations. A trust can provide a protected pot of assets that has limited vulnerability to foreign laws and judgements and whose value and terms are not public information.

This is of particular value in a region where some areas have relatively high divorce rates (the rate in Kuwait reached 60% in 2017) and whose financial settlements on divorce are very far from the 50:50 starting point in, for example, the UK.

Trusts can also continue past the death of their creator, ensuring that, for example, daughters’ inheritances remain protected.

Not going to stop 

Kate Caldwell

Active philanthropy, often focusing on women’s education and health in the Mena region, is also a priority but there is greater interest in not simply donating but putting a proper governance structure is in place for charitable projects with which they are involved so that the donors are involved in decision-making and the projects are sustainable.

This in turn requires a proper investment strategy for any endowments.

As women’s role and visibility in the Middle East develops, we are seeing a significant change in the relationship that women have with private wealth – their control over it is growing and this trend is only likely to continue.

This article was written for International Adviser by Alex Ruffel, partner, and Kate Caldwell, consultant at UK-based law firm Irwin Mitchell, which specialises in legal and wealth management services.

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