Inside India's Family Office Boom: New Wealth, New Rules
First-generation founders are institutionalising their wealth with the discipline of pension funds — and reshaping venture capital in the process.

India's business story in 2026 is being written on two tracks at once. On the surface, record profits, buoyant markets and a busy IPO calendar. Beneath it, a quieter rearrangement of how capital, talent and ambition move through the country.
For years, the country's largest firms optimised for scale and market share. The next cycle looks different. Boardrooms are talking, in unusually candid terms, about return on capital, energy transition, and — for the first time in a generation — the genuine possibility of building world-class institutions from India, for the world.
A new geography of growth
Tier-2 cities are pulling in factories and back offices. Coastal states are pitching themselves as export corridors. Bengaluru is quietly funding the country's most ambitious AI research. Even Mumbai's private bankers are relearning their craft as first-generation founders institutionalise wealth at a scale India has never seen.
"The next decade will be won by companies that treat capital, culture and compliance as one problem — not three."
The IBI newsroom will be reporting from all of it — the earnings calls, the factory floors, the funding rooms, and the offices where policy quietly becomes practice.
Rohan reports on wealth management, private banking and alternative investments across India and Southeast Asia.


