For much of the last three decades, investors could build portfolios around a relatively simple assumption: the world’s economic centre of gravity was concentrated in a handful of developed markets, led overwhelmingly by the United States and, later, increasingly influenced by China’s rise.
Today, that assumption is, increasingly, being challenged.
One of the most important trends I see through our work with internationally minded wealthy families is the growing recognition that the global economy is becoming more multi-polar.
Economic influence is becoming less concentrated and more widely distributed across several powerful regions, each with distinct strengths, opportunities and growth drivers.
Family offices are often among the first investors to identify these shifts. Their investment horizons are measured in decades rather than quarters. They are less concerned with short-term market noise and more focused on the long-term forces likely to shape wealth creation over the next generation.
Increasingly, many of the world’s wealthiest families are viewing the global economy through the lens of five major centres of influence: the United States, China, India, the Gulf and Southeast Asia.
None of these regions is replacing another. The emergence of a multi-polar world is not about decline in one place and rise in another. It is about the growing importance of multiple centres of economic activity operating simultaneously.
1. US
The United States remains the world’s largest economy and continues to dominate many areas of AI and tech innovation. Its capital markets remain the deepest and most influential globally.
2. China
China continues to play a central role in global manufacturing, trade and industrial supply chains. Despite economic challenges and shifting investor sentiment in recent years, its importance to the global economy remains substantial.
Yet investors are increasingly looking beyond a framework that views the world primarily through a US-China prism.
3. India
India is becoming impossible to ignore. Having already overtaken the UK as the world’s fifth-largest economy, it is widely expected to become the third-largest before the end of this decade. The IMF forecasts growth of more than 6% this year, making it one of the fastest-growing major economies in the world.
Its expanding middle class, accelerating digital transformation and growing role in global supply chains are attracting attention from investors seeking exposure to long-term structural growth.
4. The Gulf
The Gulf is also undergoing a profound transformation.
For many years, international investors largely viewed the region through the lens of energy markets. Today, the picture is far more complex. Sovereign wealth funds across the Gulf control more than $4 trillion in assets. Cities such as Dubai and Abu Dhabi have established themselves as important global financial centres, attracting entrepreneurs, businesses, investment firms and internationally mobile wealthy families.
The UAE’s position as one of the world’s leading destinations for millionaire migration reflects the scale of that transformation.
5. Southeast Asia
Southeast Asia is another region drawing increasing attention.
Countries including Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines are benefiting from favourable demographics, expanding consumer markets and growing foreign direct investment. Multinational companies seeking to diversify manufacturing operations are helping drive investment into the region, while a population of more than 680 million people creates one of the world’s most significant consumer and labour markets.
Taken together, these developments help explain why family offices are reassessing traditional assumptions about geographic allocation.
The numbers reinforce the trend. According to IMF projections, emerging and developing economies are expected to account for around 70% of global growth over the coming years. The World Bank estimates that emerging and developing economies already represent close to 60% of global GDP when measured by purchasing power parity.
Many wealthy families are asking an increasingly important question: are portfolios built for the world of the past 30 years properly positioned for the world of the next 30?
In many cases, the answer appears to be no.
Concentration risk has become a more prominent discussion. Investors are paying greater attention to where future growth is likely to emerge, where demographics are supportive, where capital is flowing and where governments are implementing reforms that could support long-term economic expansion.
This does not mean abandoning established markets. Far from it.
The United States remains indispensable. China remains highly influential. Family offices aren’t replacing these exposures; they’re complementing them with investments linked to regions that may play a larger role in global growth and wealth creation in the decades ahead.
The emergence of a multi-polar world is not a short-term investment theme. It is a structural shift that is already influencing how some of the world’s largest pools of private capital are being deployed.
