MULTIGENERATIONAL FAMILIES

Guiding Generations, Preserving Legacies

We believe that true wealth encompasses more than financial capital—it reflects a family’s values, vision, and legacy. For multigenerational families, sustaining this wealth requires thoughtful planning, open communication, and experienced guidance.

At Evercore Wealth Management, our integrated services—including wealth advisory, estate planning, and fiduciary support—are designed to preserve family assets, reinforce governance, and empower the next generation to be responsible stewards of their family’s legacy.

wealth management and trust services

Integrated Generational Wealth Planning

We develop strategies designed to minimize tax exposure while helping families preserve and transfer wealth in a way that honors their long-term vision and family values.

Family Governance & Education

We facilitate structured family meetings to promote communication, transparency, and alignment. We also provide financial education and mentorship to prepare future generations for responsible wealth stewardship.

Estate & Succession Planning

We help structure estate and philanthropic plans that reflect your family’s intentions and values, ensuring smooth leadership transitions and lasting charitable impact.

Our insights on MULTIGENERATIONAL FAMILIES

Penguins standing together on rocky terrain

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February 10, 2025

Over $100 trillion in assets will be transferred within 25 years in the United States.1 At 77 years old, I have to consider that my

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September 30, 2024

Every family struggles at times to connect. There’s so much at stake: relationships between parents and grown children,

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March 22, 2022

In preparing the next generation of young children and grandchildren to be happy and productive members of society, we

Heating Up: Investing Amid AI and Geopolitical Uncertainties

April 7, 2026

Artificial Intelligence Disruption and Market Volatility

Optimistic vs. Pessimistic Scenarios for AI and the Economy

It’s not the change; it’s the pace of change that is causing discomfort among investors. In these conditions, the best course of action can feel the most challenging – stay the course.

The social and economic questions around artificial intelligence are not yet answerable. Some AI experts predict great power by the next decade – a world in which computers represent the bulk of global intelligence. Others believe AI will never live up to its promise and that the massive capital spending on data centers will ultimately be wasted investment.

It is certainly reasonable to entertain an optimistic outlook. In the past, the creative destruction of new technology eliminated entire job categories and companies, but in the end, improved productivity and created more and better-paying jobs, more exciting businesses and higher living standards. We lost Kmart, Sears and JCPenney to the rise of the internet, along with a host of dot-com start-ups, but gained Amazon and eBay, while legacy powerhouses like Walmart, Home Depot and Costco thrived. We expect similar outcomes this time around, with both the losers and long-term winners coming from the old economy and the new.

However, AI appears to be so powerful, so pervasive and improving so fast that it is also reasonable to consider pessimistic scenarios in which jobs are eliminated far more rapidly than new jobs are created. And the economic impact of job losses could be more negative if they are concentrated among higher-paid knowledge workers.

Speed of AI Adoption and Its Impact on Markets

Speed is also a factor. For example, AI chatbots have already broken records for mass adoption, although most corporations and consumers  so far appear to be using the technology in relatively limited cases. If adoption continues to deepen and broaden and the pace picks up, both the positive and negative impacts will intensify.

No one really knows how this is going to pan out, so the market is reacting with increasingly wild swings. As of writing, the aggregate level of the stock market has not been negatively affected for long by AI concerns, but under the surface there is unusual turmoil across individual stocks and sectors as various future scenarios are considered.

Geopolitical Shifts and Investment Strategy

As for geopolitics, we are witnessing a seismic shift as China and the United States compete for economic supremacy – and the leadership of the United States redefines its role in the world and its relationships with longstanding allies. Proxy regional conflicts are breaking out and trade relations are shifting.

The market has so far responded only in a limited and measured way to most of these events, apart from the plunge on the so-called Liberation Day, and even that was short-lived. The resilience of the U.S. economy and corporate profit growth, remain more significant to investors than the uncertainty caused by erratic foreign policy.

As fundamental investors, we continue to believe that assessing the current and long-term business prospects of companies is paramount. This includes understanding the depth and breadth of a business’s economic moat, or sustainable competitive advantage. This may be harder to assess than in the past, making an investor’s view of the quality of management – their judgment and agility in decision-making, especially around capital allocation – more important than ever.

Pairing fundamental investing in public and private companies with tax-aware or tax-managed passive investing is also appropriate. Today’s index investor is likely to eventually gain exposure to both legacy company winners and new economy winners, including those private companies like Anthropic, OpenAI and SpaceX, which are expected to go public and be added to the S&P 500 in the coming years.

It is also important to make the necessary structural changes to portfolios without excessive trading. We are constantly reviewing our individual holdings and public equity, public credit and private market managers to assess management’s ability to adapt to the rapid changes. We are rebalancing our international weightings to increase diversification and take advantage of the relatively lower valuations as the earnings outlook improves.

It’s also important to note that we expect the earnings growth rate of the international markets to rival that of United States for the first time in many years, and for the gap in valuations to narrow.

In this era of high uncertainty, it is essential that an investment portfolio be not just well diversified but also resilient. The two hallmarks of a resilient portfolio are an adequate level of cash equivalents to cover any spending requirements and low levels of debt both at the portfolio level and on the balance sheets of the various investments. Our portfolios are designed to withstand market stresses while positioned to benefit from the resulting opportunities.

John Apruzzese is the Chief Investment Officer at Evercore Wealth Management; Brian Pollak is the Chair of the firm’s Investment Policy Committee. They can be reached at, respectively, [email protected] and [email protected].

Q1 2026 Market Outlook

April 6, 2026

Uncertainty in the market, the rapid evolution of artificial intelligence, and geopolitical volatility are a lot for investors to process. With this instability comes the need for a diverse and resilient portfolio designed to withstand a range of economic and market outcomes.

We believe that the underlying strength of the U.S. economy, ongoing innovation, and the continuing growth and improving breadth in corporate earnings may provide a solid foundation for long-term returns.

Click here to view our latest market update.

Please contact us at [email protected] if you would like to learn more.

Market Review and Outlook

February 3, 2026

How much longer can the U.S. consumer hang on? Is there an AI bubble forming? In this video, Brian Pollak, Partner and Portfolio Manager, aims to answer these pressing questions and more. For our latest Market Review and Outlook in full, click here.

Key Questions:

  1. Why has geopolitical turmoil not impacted markets? Will it?
  2. What about U.S. fiscal and monetary policy and debt?
  3. Was 2025 the beginning of the end of U.S. market dominance?
  4. How are we allocating assets?

connect with a WEALTH AND FIDUCIARY ADVISOR.