Navigating uncertainty: the sensible case for South Africans to keep options open


The world seems to have entered an era of permanent upheaval. Pandemics, geopolitical conflicts, trade barriers, travel and supply chain disruptions, safety and security disturbances, volatility around energy prices and the availability of materials, have created unprecedented uncertainty.

The relative predictability that once underpinned planning for many high net worth individuals and internationally active businesses has been eroded. It’s now clear that strategy is no longer about optimising a smoothly functioning world but about navigating a highly uncertain one. This added complexity will favour those who plan rather than those who react.

Expatriates are often significantly more vulnerable to financial, economic and operational volatility than local residents, due to their reliance on cross-border income, visas, currency fluctuations and lack of a stable ‘home-base’ safety net.

Data from the United Nations and Statistics South Africa’s mid-year population estimates suggest more than one million South Africans now live overseas. The UK, Australia and the US account for more than half this diaspora, according to the survey, followed by the United Arab Emirates, New Zealand and Canada.

A more complicated environment


Escalating tensions and disruptions have understandably made South African expatriates take a closer look at how exposed their affairs might be. While many favoured expat destinations around the world have shown strong resilience, there have still been practical knock on effects – disruption to international commerce, supply routes and travel – and an accompanying increase around risk.

At the same time, the global regulatory environment has continued to move quickly. Rules around beneficial ownership, tax and money laundering are more stringent than even a few years ago and are being more actively enforced, particularly for internationally connected structures.

Put simply, it means the planning focus today should be less on speed and more on ensuring that arrangements are set up properly. It also means that structures set up some time ago may benefit from a fresh look.

No room for complacency


The unprecedented uncertainty has given many Sovereign client pause for thought about the resilience of their current arrangements. The kind of questions we are being asked include: “Are my assets and interests too dependent on one jurisdiction?” or “If something changes – even temporarily – do I have room for manoeuvre?”

These are sensible questions, particularly for those responsible for protecting family wealth across generations or overseeing complex international businesses.

Why having options matters


Having options can often be misunderstood. It doesn’t mean losing confidence in your current place of residence or planning an exit. In most cases, it simply means ensuring interests are not unnecessarily limited to a single area.

It’s about being prepared, staying agile and globally positioned. It’s about expanding your footprint across multiple jurisdictions, using residency and structures to ensure that your wealth, family and businesses are better protected from changing circumstances or events.

For private clients, this might involve reviewing where trusts are based, how their succession planning is structured, whether assets are all held under one legal system by default or to determine if a trust is required for wealth protection. For corporate groups, it can mean looking again at holding company arrangements, board governance or how operating risk is separated from valuable assets.

The aim is not to complicate matters, but to de-risk and inject more flexibility into the structure. When assets, decision making and personal residence are not all tied to the same place, structures tend to cope better with change – whether that change is regulatory, political or simply the natural evolution of a family or business.

A calm review, not a dramatic one


The most productive conversations we are having with clients are not driven by urgency or alarm. They are quiet, considered reviews of existing arrangements, often prompted by a simple sense‑check rather than reacting to a specific event. This can allow you to identify weaknesses, inefficiencies and potential exposures to risk.

In many cases, that review provides reassurance that everything is still fit for purpose. In others, it highlights small adjustments that can strengthen resilience and flexibility or simplify governance over the longer term.

A sensible next step


At Sovereign, our role is to help clients think beyond what is happening today and focus on where they want to be over the long term. In periods of uncertainty, this often means revisiting existing arrangements – not to make change for the sake of it, but to minimise risk and make sure that they still reflect current realities and future goals. Often, the most valuable outcome is simply knowing that, whatever happens next, you’re not locked into one path – you have options.

Contact Rone Silke

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