Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm <p><em>The Journal of Wealth Management </em>(JWM) is the only peer-reviewed journal devoted exclusively to original research and practical guidance for high-net-worth investors and family offices. The JWM addresses the investment concerns of wealthy families and keeps practitioners abreast of the latest investment strategies in private asset management. Themes of the JWM include generating high after-tax returns while mitigating volatility, balancing tax and risk concerns, optimizing asset allocation and money management selection, determining hedge fund allocation and employing effective performance measurement techniques, and using estate planning to enhance cross-generational wealth concerns. The JWM offers a unique and in-depth view into the world of wealth management. <em>The Journal of Wealth Management</em> addresses the investment concerns of wealthy families and provides insights on the latest investment strategies in private asset management.</p> <p>In the late 1990s, a surge in high net-worth individuals lead to an increase in private investment needs. At the time, the majority of investing research was written about institutional portfolio management. In order to establish a platform for research and to meet the growing need for information on taxable portfolio management, <em>The Journal of Wealth Management</em> was launched in the spring of 1998 as <em>The Journal of Private Portfolio Management</em>, with Jean Brunel as the Founding Editor. Read the inaugural Editor's letter of the Journal <a href="https://jwm.pm-research.com/sites/default/files/IIJ%20assets/pdfs/JWM_Vol_1_Issue_1_Letter.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">here</a>. Later, the Journal was renamed <em>The Journal of Wealth Management </em>as it is today. </p> en-US <p><strong> </strong><strong> </strong></p> <p><strong>­COPYRIGHT AGREEMENT</strong></p> <p>Author: _____________________________________________________________________________________(the “Author)</p> <p>Address &amp; Phone: _________________________________________________________________________________________</p> <p>Article Title: _________________________________________________________________________________ (the “Article”)</p> <p>Journal: <em>The Journal of ________________________________________________________________________ </em>(the “Journal”)</p> <p> </p> <p>Please indicate type of work:</p> <p>□ Author’s own work □ Work of the US government □ Work made for hire</p> <p>The Author hereby submits the Article to Pageant Media Ltd./“Portfolio Management Research” (PMR) for publication in the Journal. The signing of this document represents and warrants that (i) he or she is authorized to assign the copyright in and to the Article and (ii) neither the Article nor this Copyright Agreement violates any rights of any other party. The Author hereby assigns and transfers to PMR the copyright in and to the Article, throughout the world. All other intellectual property rights relating to the Article shall remain with the Author<em>. </em>The Author understands that PMR shall have the right to use the Article without restriction in any manner and in any media now known or hereafter invented or developed. If PMR intends to make any changes to the content of the published article, it is required to seek prior written permission from the Author.</p> <p>PMR grants to the Author the following non-exclusive rights:</p> <ol><li>The right to post on internal or external-facing websites the Article’s title and abstract together with a link to the published Article on PMR’s website. In connection with such posting, the Author shall include a copyright notice in substantially the following form: “© [year of publication] PMR. All rights reserved.”</li><li>The right to use charts, tables, and figures from the article on presentation slides, but not in articles, book chapters, or similar formats consisting primarily of text content.</li></ol> <p>The Author shall remove any and all pre-publication versions of the Article from all websites (including SSRN and ResearchGate).</p> <p>The Author understands and agrees that, except as provided above, any use, reproduction, or dissemination of the article is strictly prohibited, unless agreed to in writing by PMR. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Author shall not (i) post the Article to any file-sharing service (including SSRN and ResearchGate), (ii) distribute the Article at any academic or industry conferences or similar events, (iii) include the article in an academic course pack or similar compilation, or (iv) allow the article to be reprinted as a chapter in a book. <strong>In the event that the Author violates the foregoing restrictions on use, reproduction, or dissemination of the Article, the Author agrees to pay PMR damages equal to PMR’s then applicable rate for unrestricted distribution rights for the Article for the duration of the violation.</strong></p> <p>The Author shall not publish or disseminate any update, sequel, or other work based on or derived from the Article unless such update, sequel, or other work contains at least one-third new content.</p> <p>The Author warrants that the necessary written permission to reproduce, in the Article and in the Journal, for both print and electronic versions, any text, exhibits, or other material from the original copyright owner or appropriate authorities. The Author confirms that the article is an original work, does not infringe upon the intellectual property of a third party, and cannot be construed as plagiarizing another published work. The Author maintains that the Article contains no statement that is abusive, defamatory, libelous, obscene, fraudulent, does not infringe upon the rights of others, is unlawful, or is in violation of applicable laws.</p> <p>Any alterations to this agreement will be considered null and void unless agreed to in writing by PMR.</p> <p>______________________________________________________ ____________________<br /> Author’s signature Date</p> <p>______________________________________________________ ____________________<br /> Company representative’s signature* Date</p> <p>If work made for hire</p> <p>*If left blank Authors signature will be accepted automatically as company representative</p> <p> </p> <table border="1" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="708"><tbody><tr><td width="270" valign="top"><p>If the Article has been published or submitted for publication before in any form, please note where <br /> and when:</p></td> <td width="438" valign="top"><p>p</p></td></tr></tbody></table> <p>For expanded explanation of how you can use pre/post publication versions of your article please visit <a href="https://www.pm-research.com/permissions-and-reprints">https://www.pm-research.com/permissions-and-reprints</a></p><p> </p> paul.bouchey@gmail.com (Paul Bouchey) sophie.shorland@pm-research.com (Sophie Shorland) Mon, 15 Jun 2026 14:33:44 +0000 OJS 3.2.1.3 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Scenario-Based Forecasts: Using Narratives and Human Judgment to Derive Expected Return, Volatility, Asymmetry, and Fat Tails https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/13945 <p>Goal-based investing defines risk as the probability of an investor not attaining a goal. This definition captures both contextual information about the investor and distributional properties of investments that fall outside of the scope of Modern Portfolio Theory. Specifically, it can accommodate asymmetrical and “fat-tailed” distributions. In addition, it is a more intuitive definition of risk than volatility. This article introduces a forecasting method to leverage these two advantages. The proposed approach requires that humans create scenario-based forecasts. From these, computers derive a full probability distribution and consequently, such parameters as expected return and volatility. These yield inputs for portfolio optimization. Lastly, forecasting skill can be measured directly using proper scoring metrics. Scenario-based forecasts are intuitive, scalable across investors, and transparently determine portfolio positions. Essentially, they attempt to leverage both the large amount of information embedded in human forecasts and the computationally efficient methods of academic finance and quantitative investing. On a more philosophical level, the human element removes the dependency on historical data and inductive logic that plagues quantitative modeling, and, thus, avoids the “Black Swan” problem.</p> William Wynne Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/13945 Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000 Interpreting Omega Ratio for Goals Based Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/13985 <p>Goals-Based Wealth Management (GBWM) presents a distinct challenge for performance measurement, as conventional investment strategies are typically evaluated based on risk-adjusted returns without explicitly considering the achievement of specific financial goals. Traditional portfolio performance metrics focus on maximizing returns relative to volatility, based purely on the investor risk profile. They often neglect whether these strategies effectively meet the investor's predefined objectives. Consequently, strategies specifically designed to satisfy financial goals (for example, goal probability optimization using dynamic programming) may appear to under-perform in some cases when assessed through the traditional lens, despite their alignment with the investor's long-term priorities.</p> <p>In response to this gap, we propose a risk-sensitive adaptation of the omega ratio that simultaneously accounts for both the probability of goal attainment and the returns generated by a diverse range of investment strategies. We demonstrate that the Risk-Sensitive Omega (RSO) provides a continuous spectrum of preferences between goal achievement and realized returns. The weighting can be determined either by an investor’s risk preferences or by selecting the optimal balance that maximizes the RSO for each individual strategy. By evaluating each strategy at its ideal trade-off between goal probability and returns, we establish a more holistic framework for comparing the performance of competing strategies within the GBWM context, bridging the gap between traditional risk-return assessments and goal-focused investing.</p> Harshad Khadilkar, Sukrit Mittal, Sirisha Gorjala, Hungjen Wang, Anand Radhakrishnan, Deep Srivastav Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/13985 Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000 The Evolving Family Office Landscape: Predictions and Challenges https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/14081 <p>Approximately a decade ago, we set forth a “landscape” article with five family office predictions that highlighted several key trends to watch in the coming years. First, we present the four previous predictions, which are all essential parts of preserving family wealth, especially generational wealth which continues to be a dominant factor in the family office landscape and then add some new predictions. In this article we also examine the latest developments, including heightened investment sophistication, family-driven decision-making, and the push for strong governance systems that not only preserve but also unify families across generations.</p> Barbara Hauser, Kirby Rosplock Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/14081 Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000 Rethinking Office REITs: Risk and Return After COVID https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/14203 <p>This study evaluates the performance of Office Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) based on monthly returns from January 2010 to December 2024, with a particular emphasis on the post-COVID-19 period. Once considered reliable components of diversified portfolios, Office REITs have faced growing structural headwinds due to remote work trends, declining occupancy rates, and weakening lease fundamentals. Using Sharpe, Sortino, and Omega ratios, the study finds that Office REITs have consistently underperformed both equity and broader REIT benchmarks, especially since 2020. Across all models, Office REITs produced persistent and statistically significant negative alpha, indicating underperformance not explained by standard risk factors. In addition, downside risk metrics such as Value at Risk (VaR) and Conditional VaR highlight the sector’s heightened exposure to extreme losses. The study underscores the need for reassessment of office-specific real estate exposure amid shifting economic and workplace dynamics.</p> Davinder Malhotra Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/14203 Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000 THE DOLLAR’S REIGN: HOW AMERICAN’S CURRENCY CONQUERED AND RULES THE WORLD https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/14651 <p>This paper traces the historical evolution of the U.S. dollar’s rise as the global reserve currency and examines its continued dominance in shaping trade, capital markets, and wealth management. By situating current debates, U.S. deficits, geopolitical realignment, and digital currency innovation, within a longer historical arc, it distinguishes cyclical volatility from structural pressures. For family offices and wealth managers, this perspective clarifies the practical implications of dollar dynamics for portfolio allocation, risk management, and cross-border wealth preservation. While outright displacement remains improbable, a gradual move toward monetary multipolarity is plausible, underscoring the need for disciplined currency management and resilient portfolio design.</p> Edward NW Aw Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/14651 Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000 Tax-Efficient Investing in Private Markets https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/15063 <p>Tax-efficient investing can be a crucial yet often overlooked investment strategy for maximizing long-term wealth accumulation. Traditional investment analysis and strategy focus on pre-tax returns and typically ignore the negative impact taxes may have on overall returns and long-term wealth accumulation. Failing to consider after-tax performance can significantly erode investment gains over time. In an industry dominated by large investment managers catering to non-taxable institutions (pensions, endowments, foundations), many family offices and ultra-high-net-worth investors (“UHNWI”) lack access to tax-sensitive solutions, particularly in private markets.</p> <p>This paper introduces a comprehensive framework for tax-efficient investing in private markets, emphasizing the importance of risk-adjusted after-tax returns, standardized tax-impact metrics, and the concept of Tax Alpha (see Arany, Wickremasinghe, Oberoi, &amp; Hollo 2024). While public markets may provide substantial opportunities for tax efficiency (e.g. tax-loss harvesting, direct indexing), private market investments may offer more structured, controlled and targeted opportunities to pursue tax efficiency for other portions of a portfolio. Building on this foundation, this paper takes a deeper analytical approach to defining various return metrics in tax-efficient investing and provides concrete examples of how investment returns may be calculated through a tax-efficient lens using Tax Benefit Harvesting<sup>TM</sup>.</p> <p>The objective is to provide a “common yardstick” for measuring returns for investments with varying degrees of tax efficiency and comparing them to non-tax-efficient investments. The methods outlined herein may be used across the investment spectrum, from public stocks/bonds to private markets (private equity, private credit, real estate, infrastructure, etc.). By integrating a tax-efficient portfolio strategy, tax-efficient investment structuring, and deliberate investment selection, investors may improve after-tax returns without taking on incremental risk<a href="#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1">[1]</a>, ultimately building a more effective approach to wealth preservation and accumulation.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><a href="#_ftnref1" name="_ftn1">[1]</a> All mentions of “no additional risk” or “no incremental risk” throughout this paper assume comparing two separate investments that have equivalent risk profiles.</p> William Lesik Copyright (c) 2026 Journal of Wealth Management https://iij.journals.publicknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jwm/article/view/15063 Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 +0000