CNBC and Addepar announced a joint Family Office Portfolio Tracker on Thursday, targeting the estimated 5,300 single-family offices managing north of $6 trillion in global assets. The product aggregates anonymized holdings data from Addepar's platform—used by roughly 700 family offices—and layers CNBC's editorial interpretation for a public-facing dashboard updated quarterly. First dataset covers Q1 2026 positioning.
The tracker's debut release shows public equities now represent 37% of average family office portfolios, up from 31% in Q4 2023, while direct real estate holdings fell to 22% from 28% over the same period. Private equity held steady near 18%. The shift marks the first time since pre-pandemic that listed stocks claimed the largest single allocation bucket among ultra-high-net-worth families, reversing a decade-long tilt toward illiquid alternatives that defined the 2010s wealth-office playbook.
Three forces converge here. Liquidity preference returned after the 2022-2023 private equity markdowns exposed lag risk in quarterly NAV reporting—families that needed to raise cash for tax bills or acquisitions learned the cost of illiquidity when funds gated redemptions. Public market velocity jumped with the AI-infrastructure rally, delivering 26% annualized returns in mega-cap tech while most PE funds still carry 2021 entry marks. And the 203 family offices that opened since January 2024 skew younger, second-generation principals more comfortable with index overlays and direct indexing than their fathers were with farmland and timber. The Addepar dataset shows families with sub-$500 million AUM hold 43% equities, suggesting new entrants drive the composition shift as much as reallocation by legacy offices.
The product launch itself is a tell. CNBC monetizes the attention; Addepar cements platform stickiness by making anonymized data a public-good input—family offices that contribute holdings get benchmarking context without revealing specific positions. That creates a reporting flywheel: the more offices adopt Addepar for the tracker's network effects, the richer the dataset becomes, which pulls in marginal adopters. Addepar's parent company, Franklin Templeton, paid $4.5 billion for the platform in 2023 betting on exactly this SaaS-plus-data moat. The tracker is distribution dressed as journalism.
Operators should watch whether Tiger 21, Agreus, and the Institute for Private Investors adopt tracker metrics in their own benchmarking—if peer groups start citing the CNBC-Addepar numbers in quarterly reviews, the dataset becomes the de facto standard by mid-2027. Also watch Addepar's June user conference for pricing changes; platform seats currently cost $30,000 to $80,000 annually depending on complexity, and network-effect products typically reprice upward once critical mass locks in. Franklin Templeton reports Q2 earnings July 28th—any comment on Addepar net-new family office wins will clarify traction velocity.
The real tell is not that public equities rose—it is that families are now comfortable having their aggregate positioning documented in a public, repeating dataset. That behavior change was unthinkable in 2019.