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Family Offices: The Quiet New Power Brokers in Global Mining – and Mongolia’s Opportunity

Sep 5, 2025

Serdar Karliev, Senior Advisor

“The most powerful mining deals of the next decade may not be struck in the banking boardrooms of Toronto or London, but across the dinner tables of dynastic families in Geneva or Dubai.” - Serdar Karliev

In the evolving world of finance, one type of investor has quietly become a decisive force in natural resources: the family office. Once seen as niche investment vehicles managing the fortunes of wealthy dynasties, family offices are today among the most active backers of mining ventures from gold in West Africa to lithium in South America.

Unlike institutional investors, family offices operate with patience, flexibility, and generational vision. They are not bound by quarterly reporting cycles, and they see mining not as a speculative trade but as a way to build enduring wealth. Mining offers what many families crave: hard assets, diversification, inflation protection, and, above all, legacy.

Why Family Offices Invest in Mining

Globally, families are drawn to mining projects for several reasons:

  • Long-term value creation: Mining projects often span decades, perfectly aligned with intergenerational wealth strategies.
  • Hard asset exposure: Families want real, tangible stores of value beyond financial markets.
  • Diversification & risk hedging: Commodities offer protection against inflation, currency volatility, and geopolitical uncertainty.
  • Collaborative models: Many family offices now co-invest with other families across borders, spreading risk while opening global networks.

This trend has already reshaped the landscape: Canadian and European families pooling capital for African gold projects, Gulf families investing in critical minerals, and Asian dynasties entering uranium and copper. The “family-to-family” co-investment model is becoming one of the most powerful, if discreet, currents in mining finance.

Mongolia: A Unique Case

For Mongolia, this global trend is more than a curiosity — it is a call to action. The country is endowed with copper, coal, uranium, gold, and rare earths, resources critical to the global energy transition. But there is a distinctive local dynamic: most of Mongolia’s mining licenses are not held by multinational corporations, but by wealthy local families.

This creates both opportunity and constraint. Families in Mongolia control the resource base, but developing these projects at scale requires patient capital, international expertise, and credibility on the global stage. Mining is capital-intensive; infrastructure, technology, and exploration demand funding that cannot be shouldered by a single family alone.

Why Mongolian Families Should Team Up

The solution is not to sell out, but to team up — first with each other, and then with foreign family offices. By creating joint investment platforms, Mongolian families could:

1.    Aggregate fragmented licenses into investable packages.

2.    Leverage global family networks in USA, EU, GCC and APAC that are already active in mining.

3.    Negotiate stronger terms with sovereign wealth funds and global mining companies.

4.    Build intergenerational legacies, ensuring Mongolia’s mineral wealth translates into durable prosperity.

For global families, Mongolia offers a compelling story: untapped deposits, a strategic location between China and Russia, and the chance to partner directly with those who control the resource base — without the bureaucracy of state-to-state negotiations.

The Legacy Moment

What’s at stake here is bigger than capital. If Mongolian families form alliances with Western and Asian peers, they won’t just unlock projects; they’ll enter the global circle of dynastic investors shaping the future of natural resources.

Just as Gulf families globalized their oil wealth, Mongolian families could globalize their mineral wealth. The alternative — fragmented licenses, underdeveloped projects, and missed opportunities — would squander a historic moment.

As family offices become the new power brokers in mining, the real question is not whether Mongolia has the resources, but whether its families will seize the chance to partner across borders and secure a seat at the global table.


About Serdar Karliev:

Serdar Karliev is a corporate finance and business development professional with 20+ years in mining, oil and gas, and power sectors across frontier and emerging markets. Originated and executed USD 15B+ in cross-border transactions. Blend of sell-side investment banking expertise and corporate leadership in early-stage exploration projects. Oxford-trained, FSA-qualified, fluent in Russian and English.

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