The July 10, 2026 edition of MoneyWeek highlights a defining moment for global wealth: the world is moving from an era of industrial expansion into an era shaped by artificial intelligence, geopolitical competition, currency shifts, and the restructuring of global capital.
For ultra-high-net-worth families and family offices, the central question is no longer simply “Where should we invest?”but rather:
“How do we preserve, grow, and transfer wealth when technology, governments, and markets are changing faster than any previous generation has experienced?”
The answer requires a long-term mindset: combining financial intelligence, technological understanding, family governance, and disciplined stewardship.
The magazine’s cover story asks a fundamental question: Will AI put us out of a job? The broader answer is more nuanced: AI will likely eliminate some tasks, transform many careers, and create entirely new industries.
For family offices, AI should not be viewed merely as a cost-cutting tool. It should be viewed as a strategic asset class.
The largest family fortunes of the next generation may not come only from owning traditional assets such as:
They may come from owning:
The next generation of wealth creation may resemble the rise of oil, electricity, and the internet — where the greatest fortunes were created by owning the infrastructure that powered the transformation.
One of the most important warnings from MoneyWeek is that AI still requires oversight. The magazine notes that AI-generated information can be unreliable and that investors must continue conducting their own research rather than blindly trusting automated recommendations.
For wealthy families, this creates a new principle:
A family office should use AI to:
But final decisions must remain guided by:
The winning families will not be those who replace people with machines.
They will be those who combine human wisdom with machine intelligence.
A major theme throughout the issue is that AI depends on massive computing power.
The magazine highlights Meta’s move toward creating an AI infrastructure business, selling access to computing capacity and AI models as demand for AI resources accelerates.
For family offices, this creates a significant investment theme.
The future AI economy requires:
A modern family office should think beyond investing in AI companies.
It should consider investing in the AI ecosystem.
The infrastructure supporting AI may become as valuable as the applications themselves.
The magazine highlights the rise of cheaper Chinese AI models, including DeepSeek, which have gained market share because they provide AI services at dramatically lower costs than some American competitors.
This creates several implications:
Lower costs could allow:
to access powerful AI tools.
Countries increasingly want control over their own AI capabilities.
For wealthy families, this means:
The future investment map will not only be about countries with cheap labour or natural resources.
It will increasingly be about countries with:
The magazine examines the Japanese yen’s decline, noting that the currency has fallen significantly due to the gap between Japanese and American interest rates.
Historically, wealthy families often focused primarily on asset allocation.
Today, they must also consider:
A family holding assets globally may experience very different outcomes depending on currency movements.
A weaker currency can:
The lesson:
The magazine highlights rising demand for tungsten, a critical mineral used in military applications, as nations increase defence spending and secure supply chains.
This represents a broader investment theme:
The next decade may see increasing importance in:
For family offices, natural resources are returning as a core wealth-preservation category.
The opportunity is not simply owning commodities.
It is owning:
The issue discusses rising tensions between China and Japan, defence spending, maritime security, and global supply chain vulnerability.
For decades, globalization encouraged families to seek efficiency.
The next era may reward resilience.
Family offices should increasingly ask:
Capital is becoming more strategic.
The magazine notes that Europe’s defence boom has cooled but that military technology, maritime security, and advanced systems remain important investment areas.
A major shift is occurring:
The world is moving from a purely digital economy toward a combination of:
The next generation of family wealth may come from owning companies that solve civilization-scale problems.
The magazine’s editorial discusses the “wisdom of crowds” and warns that markets can become irrational when investors simply follow popular narratives.
This is one of the oldest lessons in wealth management:
Successful family offices usually avoid:
Instead, they focus on:
The greatest challenge for wealthy families is not creating wealth.
It is ensuring that wealth creates:
AI changes the environment, but the fundamentals of legacy remain unchanged.
Future generations need:
Assets that produce sustainable income.
Knowledge, education, and innovation.
Strong relationships and leadership abilities.
Reputation and trusted networks.
A clear understanding of purpose and responsibility.
The MoneyWeek July 2026 issue reveals five major investment themes for UHNW families:
The next technology fortunes may come from owning the foundations of AI.
Energy and minerals are becoming national security assets.
Currency and geopolitical risks require broader thinking.
Technology must strengthen decision-making, not replace judgment.
The greatest family asset remains the ability to make wise decisions across generations.
Every generation faces a transformation:
But history shows that technology alone does not preserve wealth.
Families endure because they combine:
Innovation with wisdom. Growth with discipline. Capital with purpose.
The future belongs not to those who fear the machines — but to those who understand how to responsibly harness them.