Why Do Family Fortunes Disappear? - How Money Works - YouTube

Channel: How Money Works

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John D Rockefeller was the richest American to ever live, as well as being the founding
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member of the three-comma club as the worlds first billionaire.
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At the height of his fortune a few years before his death he was worth an estimated 1 billion
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dollars which may not sound like much compared to todays tech bro’s, but this was back
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in a time where the USA’s annual GDP was only 39.1 billion dollars.
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This meant that his fortune was 3% of America’s GDP.
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Adjusted for inflation to 2020 dollars this would give ol John D here a fortune of 450
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billlion dollars.
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Or more than Elon, Bill, and Jeff combined.
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But where is this fortune today?
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Of course John himself died almost a century ago but if there was any fortune that was
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going to indefinitely set up future generations surely it would be this one right?
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The same goes for most of these historic magnates, the fortunes of everybody from carnage, to
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the medici have more or less faded into total obscurity, outside of maybe a few names plastered
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on random buildings… (buildings that they don’t even own mind you)…
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Now you might think you already know the answer, oh these fortunes get split up amongst children
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and then children’s children and then children’s children’s children until it was spread
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so thin amongst latter generations that it became almost totally irrelevant.
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But that’s not entirely true…
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What’s more is that the real reason for the fall of these financial empires can tell
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us a lot about how money works as it has been passed down through generations and history.
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So to address the standard explanation for this phenomenon of missing fortunes we need
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to address that yes, wealthy couples that have more than one child will normally split
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that money up evenly between them all.
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Of course, exceptions exist, but this is the standard operating procedure.
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Our good old friend John D Rockefeller here actually had 5 children which meant even his
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astronomical fortune was split up relatively quickly, this was before considering the charitable
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contributions that were written into the business titans well.
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Obviously that one fifth share still made these children unbelievable wealthy, but adjusted
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for inflation they wouldn’t even top the forbes list, In fact they would only barely
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make the top ten (the poor things).
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This process only got worse as time went on, today there are over 70 direct Rockefeller
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heirs, and this isn’t even a particularly old dynasty.
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When we think of really old money like the medici’s and the Rothschilds there are now
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thousands of direct heirs.
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But as we have said, this shouldn’t actually matter.
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Sure people make more people, but money makes money a lot faster.
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Lets take old man Rockefeller again, he was almost 100 when he died and passed this money
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down to children who were relatively elderly in their own right.
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In fact tragically by the time of his death 2 of his children had already passed away
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which actually changes this maths quiet a bit.
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As tragic as this was it actually makes for a good example because on average global billionaires
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today tend to have around 3 children on average.
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Now when this fortune gets divided by 3 and handed down its not done so in the form of
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cash, it is almost entirely in the form of family trusts that will hold onto a broad
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selection of assets, go and watch our video on what to do if you get rich to understand
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how to set one of these structures up for yourself.
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Now the thing with assets is that they tend to appreciate in value.
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Shares in the largest oil companies in the world and a broad portfolio of high profile
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real estate would have done very well in the years following John D’s death in 1937.
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Between that time and 1960 when john Rockefeller junior died 23 years later, the S&P 500 was
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up 1,000% even after inflation.
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This would mean if johns children were just broadly invested in American markets, which
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they were, and lived on less than the modern equivalent of a billion dollars a year, which
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they did, they would be many times wealthier when they died than when they received their
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inheritance.
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Even the prolific respawn rate of the Rockefeller family couldn’t outpace pretty basic market
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returns, and this is ignoring the privileges these children would be given like access
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to highly lucrative directorships, political appointments and world class educations that
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would enable them to bring in healthy incomes in their own right.
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To keep things simple, if we took the Rockefeller fortune of around 1 billion dollars in 1937
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and just kept it broadly invested until today then we can follow market returns to show
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that this fortune would have ballooned to over 4.2 trillion dollars.
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Which would mean even spread out evenly amongst the 25 direct living beneficiaries today,
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they should each be the richest people in the world.
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This is also ignoring that they were primarily invested into oil, which up until recently
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has outperformed the general market as a whole.
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This should go doubly for older and (arguably) wealthier families like the Medicis and Rothschilds,
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who have had even more time for this wealth to compound on itself, but of course it hasn’t.
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So what gives then, where did this money actually go?
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Well 4 things, it got given away, it got taken from them, and it got too hard to keep tabs
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on, and it just didn’t grow like you would expect it to.
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Rockerfeller senior gave a good chunk of his fortune away during his lifetime and an even
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larger chunk after his death.
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These donations went on to fund schools, museums, national parks, and an extensive list of other
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charitable ventures.
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This work was continued by his living children who each in turn gave away close to half of
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their fortunes.
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This meant that money was not being re-invested and was instead only really maintain it’s
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principle.
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Most of Rockefeller’s grandchildren were worth about 3 billion dollars which is obviously
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still a huge amount of money but goes to show the families wealth was only ever managed
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to keep up with inflation with the rest going primarily to charitable and political projects.
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While it looks like each of these grandchildren have a fortune three times larger than their
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grandfather you must remember 3 billion dollars today buys a lot less than 1 billion dollars
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a hundred years ago.
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Then next issue is that it got taken from them.
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Everything from estate and capital gains taxes to divorce settlements have further cut down
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these funds.
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Beyond that, it has been really hard to keep tabs on this wealth.
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For obvious reasons the family is not bragging about their fortunes to Forbes magazine like
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some other intergenerational tycoons.
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Since this wealth is now so diversified and split up amongst multiple family offices managing
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thousands of trusts there really is no way to saying who owns what unless they tell you,
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which they won’t.
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Of people like bill Jeff Bezos don’t speak openly about the details of their fortune
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but it’s pretty easy to work out since it is primarily tied up in a public company and
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a series of high profile business ventures and properties.
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But for people like David Rockefeller, or David Rothschild there is no list of everything
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they own and owe, which is probably for the best.
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I am sure YOU wouldn’t want those kinds of details to be accessible about your own
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finances, and the same expectation of privacy should extend to these guys as well even though
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they are obviously many times wealthier.
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How many times?
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Well they aren’t going to say.
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And finally we have the reason I made this video in the first place…
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Investing has never been as lucrative as it was in the past 150 years.
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The Medici’s rose to prominence in the 12th century, this was at the start of the renaissance
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which once again saw art and science flourish in Europe, but despite this the economy of
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this region didn’t really grow very much.
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Even by the most generous estimates the wealth of Europe barely grew at all between the middle
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ages and the start of the industrial revolution.
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Most people were content to live a life the same as their parents before them and their
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children after.
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The idea of technical innovation and capital investments wasn’t really a thing.
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Because of this the logic that we have used for money making more money by being invested
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into the market does not hold true past about the mid 1800’s.
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This mean that humans making more humans did spread the family fortune without the chance
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for money making money to catch up.
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This may very well become the reality again, we have become very comfortable with the idea
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of constant compounding growth in an ultimately finite world, so there is the very real possibility
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that these pas decades have been more of an anomaly rather than something we should take
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for granted…
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Either way what if you were an aspiring financial monarch that wanted to establish a financial
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dynasty that lasted throughout the ages?
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Well curiously enough there are actually institutions that specialise in exactly this…
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For a pretty significant fee wealth management companies will structure family fortunes in
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such a way that they should remain intact almost indefinitely.
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These companies will write wills and suggest investment strategies for long term sustained
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growth.
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They will also take a very hands on approach to educating younger generations to make sure
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they are ready to properly steward the fortune when the time comes.
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They will also normally suggest a structure where the majority of the wealth gets passed
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to a single child over it being split evenly and diluted.
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For good measure why not make this your eldest son to really get a modern monarchy vibe going.
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Now of course people this kind of structure has been made possible in recent decades,
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(thanks to a robust financial system and a world fuelled by innovation), but it’s also
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become pretty unpopular.
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Things like the Giving Pledge have seen a good portion of the worlds richest people
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agree to give a majority of their fortunes away to charity when they pass away.
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These two plans are obviously not compatible with one another, so it looks like once again
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giving money away may prevent us from all being slaves to the 17th generation of Bezos
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overlords.
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What a shame….
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Now all of these rich people giving away their life’s work to these charities probably
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want to make sure that this money is going to get used for worthy causes, especially
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considering they won’t be alive to oversee it.
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This might not be as easy as you think because some charities like the one we explored in
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our last video operate more to fill the pockets of the people running, rather than to forward
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the good of humanity.
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Go and watch that video if you are interested, and if you enjoyed this video please consider
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liking and subscribing to keep on learning how money works.