&w=3840&q=100)
Zara founder's global deal spree shields his $104 billion from tax
The Inditex SA founder's family office, Pontegadea, snapped up a five-star Paris hotel, a Florida apartment block and a building on Barcelona's iconic Diagonal Avenue as part of transactions totaling more than $500 million in the past three months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The A Coruna, Spain-based firm is also in talks to buy an office building in Miami for $275 million, lining up a further addition to Europe's biggest real estate empire owned by an individual investor.
'For Pontegadea the choice is simple: redeploy every euro of that Zara dividend or watch eight-figure cash bleed away every year,' said Marc Debois, founder of FO-Next, an advisory firm for family offices. 'This is liability management, not trophy-hunting.'
Dividend Payouts
Pontegadea's assets have swelled from the dividend payouts over the years, shaping it into one of the world's largest – and most active – family offices. Many of these firms are becoming increasingly influential in global business thanks to the wealth at their disposal and the need for reinvestment.
Pontegadea had net assets of €34.3 billion at the end of last year, up 10.6% from 12 months earlier, according to registry filings published this month. Ortega's Inditex stake, though, still makes up the bulk of his wealth. At least a fifth of individuals among the world's 500 biggest fortunes now have a family office that help to oversee fortunes totaling more than $4 trillion, according to the index.
In Europe, Ortega trails only LVMH founder Bernard Arnault on Bloomberg's list of richest individuals.
Ortega founded the company that grew into Inditex in 1963. The son of a railroad worker, the billionaire never had his own office while he worked at the retailer, preferring to be alongside employees in the main design area. He stepped down as chairman in 2011 and was replaced by long-time executive Pablo Isla. His only child from his second marriage, 41-year-old Marta Ortega, took over in 2022.
Sandra, 56, the daughter from his first marriage, controls the shares that her late mother held in Inditex. She doesn't have a role in the business and has diversified her own fortune into real estate, pharmaceuticals and hospitality. Her $12.4 billion net worth makes her Spain's richest woman, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Through Pontegadea, Amancio Ortega owns iconic properties such as New York's Haughwout Building, the Southeast Financial Center in Miami and London's The Post Building. He also controls prime residential and commercial real estate in cities from Toronto to Seoul — buildings that count Facebook, Amazon.com Inc., Zara, and even rival Hennes & Mauritz AB among tenants.
In addition to real estate, Pontegadea can invest in energy infrastructure or stakes of at least 5% in publicly listed companies to reduce the threat of Spain's wealth taxes. The family office acquired major holdings in Spanish gas transportation operator Enagas SA in 2019 and, two years later, a Portuguese rival.
For its infrastructure bets, Pontegadea has repeatedly turned to buyout giant KKR & Co Inc., underscoring the scale of the family office's investing operations. In 2018, it joined the Wall Street firm in becoming a shareholder in Telefonica SA's tower unit and the firms have since closed at least two further deals, including Pontegadea buying a 20% stake in KKR-controlled Dutch parking operator Q-Park during December. Pontegadea is also in talks with firms including KKR to acquire the Sabadell Financial Center building in Miami.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economic Times
24 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Divorce in the air, marriages for the rich built on ‘trust'
Synopsis As prenuptial agreements lack legal standing in India, affluent families are increasingly utilizing private family discretionary trusts to safeguard assets during marital breakdowns. This trend, initially favored by the ultra-rich, now extends to the upper-middle-class, offering protection against financial risks associated with divorce and ensuring family wealth remains secure, especially in inter-caste or inter-religious marriages. TIL Creatives Representative Image Mumbai: With prenuptial agreements still not legally enforceable in India, the rich are finding new ways to shield themselves from the financial blow of a marital breakdown. The 'private family discretionary trust' is one such arrangement being repurposed to meet this need. A Delhi-based garment exporter, whose son's marriage soured very soon, said, 'Thanks to the trust we'd set up before the wedding, his business interest and family home remained untouched.'Similarly, a leading jeweller in Mumbai placed all real estate assets in a discretionary trust, naming his son as beneficiary. When the son filed for divorce, the wife could lay no claim on the properties she once thought she'd co-own. 'By definition, a trust protects the interest of the beneficiaries through the trustee ' said Rajat Dutta, founder of Inheritance Needs Services. 'In case a borrower defaults in financial obligations to lenders, then the assets in the trust cannot be attached by the lender, though the borrower is one of the trustees and also one of the beneficiaries,' said trend, once limited to the ultra-high net worth individuals in India, is now spreading to the upper-middle-class, as people look to protect their earnings and save the family from litigation, especially in case of a divorce. The trust also protects women. According to a lawyer, a woman who often had to deal with her husband's irrational demand for financial support, was able to protect her financial assets as they were in the trust which her father had created for his daughter and her to legal experts, this arrangement is also being adopted by traditional, business-oriented families which want to protect their enterprises, and parents of non-resident Indians who are in mixed marriages. SHIELDING SONS, SIDE-STEPPING BIAS Ashvini Chopra, head of family office solutions at Avendus Wealth Management, said many families are setting up trusts to shield the males from financial exposure after marriage, more so if it's not within the same caste and structured prudently, allow families to ensure that the male child technically doesn't own any asset and is just a beneficiary, thereby reducing the scope of a claim in case of a divorce.'Indian parents being possessive of family wealth wish to protect inherited wealth and de -risk future perceived risks of breakups' said Dutta of Inheritance Needs said that trust deeds are now being drafted keeping potential divorce in mind—a shift from their traditional inheritance-focused intent. In some recent highprofile divorces, judgments have varied widely, largely because there's no clear legislative framework—like a prenup—to guide settlements. Citing a case, a Mumbai-based family lawyer said, "A family business was nearly halved after a divorce settlement. Had the assets been placed in a properly drafted discretionary trust, they would have been out of legal reach.'A Mumbai-based estate planner spoke of a wealthy retired bureaucrat from Delhi who, on learning that his son wished to marry a divorcee with a girl child, put his entire wealth in a also a future-facing angle to this trust trend.


Time of India
38 minutes ago
- Time of India
Divorce in the air, marriages for the rich built on ‘trust'
Mumbai: With prenuptial agreements still not legally enforceable in India, the rich are finding new ways to shield themselves from the financial blow of a marital breakdown. The 'private family discretionary trust ' is one such arrangement being repurposed to meet this need. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Select a Course Category others Artificial Intelligence Degree MBA Technology Cybersecurity Public Policy Product Management CXO Design Thinking healthcare Data Science Others Data Science Project Management Management Operations Management Digital Marketing Finance Data Analytics PGDM Healthcare MCA Leadership Skills you'll gain: Duration: 16 Weeks Indian School of Business CERT - ISB Cybersecurity for Leaders Program India Starts on undefined Get Details A Delhi-based garment exporter, whose son's marriage soured very soon, said, 'Thanks to the trust we'd set up before the wedding, his business interest and family home remained untouched.' Similarly, a leading jeweller in Mumbai placed all real estate assets in a discretionary trust, naming his son as beneficiary. When the son filed for divorce, the wife could lay no claim on the properties she once thought she'd co-own. 'By definition, a trust protects the interest of the beneficiaries through the trustee ' said Rajat Dutta, founder of Inheritance Needs Services. 'In case a borrower defaults in financial obligations to lenders, then the assets in the trust cannot be attached by the lender, though the borrower is one of the trustees and also one of the beneficiaries,' said Dutta. The trend, once limited to the ultra-high net worth individuals in India, is now spreading to the upper-middle-class, as people look to protect their earnings and save the family from litigation, especially in case of a divorce. The trust also protects women. According to a lawyer, a woman who often had to deal with her husband's irrational demand for financial support, was able to protect her financial assets as they were in the trust which her father had created for his daughter and her children. According to legal experts, this arrangement is also being adopted by traditional, business-oriented families which want to protect their enterprises, and parents of non-resident Indians who are in mixed marriages. SHIELDING SONS, SIDE-STEPPING BIAS Ashvini Chopra, head of family office solutions at Avendus Wealth Management, said many families are setting up trusts to shield the males from financial exposure after marriage, more so if it's not within the same caste and religion. Trusts, structured prudently, allow families to ensure that the male child technically doesn't own any asset and is just a beneficiary, thereby reducing the scope of a claim in case of a divorce. 'Indian parents being possessive of family wealth wish to protect inherited wealth and de -risk future perceived risks of breakups' said Dutta of Inheritance Needs Services. Experts said that trust deeds are now being drafted keeping potential divorce in mind—a shift from their traditional inheritance-focused intent. In some recent highprofile divorces, judgments have varied widely, largely because there's no clear legislative framework—like a prenup—to guide settlements. Citing a case, a Mumbai-based family lawyer said, "A family business was nearly halved after a divorce settlement. Had the assets been placed in a properly drafted discretionary trust, they would have been out of legal reach.' A Mumbai-based estate planner spoke of a wealthy retired bureaucrat from Delhi who, on learning that his son wished to marry a divorcee with a girl child, put his entire wealth in a trust. There's also a future-facing angle to this trust trend. Economic Times WhatsApp channel )


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigns after ‘kiss cam' scandal during Coldplay concert
US tech company Astronomer's CEO Andy Byron has resigned from his role after he was apparently caught on a big screen embracing a female co-worker, Kristin Cabot, the firm's chief people officer during a Coldplay concert, a clip that has since gone viral on social media. A statement by the New York-based tech company stated that Andy Byron has tendered his resignation, and the Board of Directors has accepted it. The development comes a day after the company said that CEO Byron had been placed on leave and the Board of Directors had launched an internal investigation into the viral incident. JUST IN: Astronomer CEO Andy Byron has resigned from the company after a Coldplay concert Kiss Cam spotted him hugging the company's HR chief — Morning Brew ☕️ (@MorningBrew) July 19, 2025 The viral clip showed Byron and Cabot hugging on a jumbo screen at the arena at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts on Wednesday as Coldplay's Lead Singer Chris Martin asked the camera to scan the crowd for his 'Jumbotron Song'. As soon as the camera pans towards the couple, they ducked it and ran away from each other. Singer Martin said 'Either they're having an affair or they're just very shy.' The company, in a statement on Saturday said, 'As stated previously, Astronomer is committed to the values and culture that have guided us since our founding. Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability, and recently, that standard was not met.' Astronomer said that it would begin a search for a new CEO amid Byron's resignation and till then, Pete DeJoy, who is Astronomer's cofounder and chief product officer would serve as the interim CEO of the company. The LinkedIn account of Andy Byron no longer remains public and he has also been removed from the leadership page of the company following the resignation announcement. The page lists DeJoy as the CEO. However, Byron still remains on the company's website as a member of the board of directors, CNN reported.