Creighton Hardy, a wealth management advisor at WestPac, argues that these families are not under-advised but rather un-coordinated. While clients frequently employ a team of specialists—including CPAs, attorneys, and wealth managers—each professional typically operates in a silo. This results in four separate opinions that fail to address the primary threat to a client's balance sheet: the single business or stock position where most of their net worth resides.
Most investors mistakenly treat concentration as a portfolio issue, but Hardy defines it as a structural failure. When tax, protection, and investment decisions happen independently, the design of the overall financial architecture is neglected. For business owners, the common error is waiting for a company exit to build personal wealth. WestPac advocates for building assets in parallel through defined benefit plans and cash balance plans, which move capital off the business balance sheet without disrupting cash flow.

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