20 April 2024

Security Risks Get Wealthy Families’ Attention

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Wealth advisers say their rich clients are increasingly asking for help securing homes, vetting household staff, setting up security for travel and guarding personal and financial information online. ACE Private Risk Services, a unit of insurer ACE Group, refers its high-net-worth clients to the Guidry Group, a Montgomery, Texas-based firm that conducts everything from household-staff background checks to social-media security assessments and stalker deterrence. The referral is free or discounted based on the property-insurance premiums ACE clients pay, says David Spencer, who runs the insurer’s premier-client group.

American International Group’s Private Client Group assigns a dedicated risk manager to its clients who pay $250,000 or more in annual insurance premiums. The group has planned and carried out the transport of a client’s artwork from one place to another, and last summer hired a security team to accompany a family who were taking a cruise on their yacht from Mexico to Brazil for the World Cup.

Chicago-based Hillard Heintze works with clients of private banks and wealth advisers and does detailed household-staff screenings for $4,000 and up. The firm, which was founded by a former U.S. Secret Service agent and a former Chicago police superintendent, also will sweep a home for hidden audio or video monitoring devices for about $2,000 a room or $10,000 for a whole house. It also devises family emergency plans for $7,500, including “go packs” filled with food, money, clothing and a satellite phone.

One of the services offered by New York-based Risk Control Strategies is analyzing travel itineraries and making security recommendations. Demand has been growing, the firm says.

In 2011, it reviewed 141 itineraries at a cost of $750 each. Last year, it looked over 491. So far this year, it has done 549. One of the biggest concerns: arranging reliable local ground transportation to minimize the risk of kidnapping.

Families that run their own investment offices have another issue: how to secure financial information from the prying eyes of cybercriminals. Data encryption and round-the-clock system monitoring for intruders can run anywhere from $20,000 to $50,000 a year.

In an annual survey released this year by Bank of America’s U.S. Trust private-banking division, 69% of high-net-worth people said they were concerned about the security of their financial information. In households with more than $10 million of financial assets, 40% of survey respondents said they had made changes to protect their assets.

In September, UBS’s private U.S. wealth-management division, which works with people who have $10 million or more, rolled out a new online-security program from MetLife that tracks a family or individual’s online information—everything from personal, financial and medical information to a child’s social-media usage.

For $495 a year for a family, or $245 for an individual, the MetLife Defender software will detect and remove or block suspicious activity, continually monitor credit, check on a child’s social-media activity for cyberbullying or predatory activity, and pay to fix credit or reputational issues that arise online.

At Citigroup, whose Citi Private Bank unit is geared toward those with $25 million and up, clients around the country have flocked to lunch and dinner seminars to hear Federal Bureau of Investigation agents and other law-enforcement officials talk about Internet security and how to prevent online fraud.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

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