Jurisdictional choice has always mattered in fund structuring. What has changed is why it matters.
In today’s more fragmented and uncertain economic environment, jurisdiction is no longer simply a technical or operational decision. It has become a core risk allocation choice, with fund managers increasingly asking not only what works today but what will stand up in five years’ time, to investors, boards and regulators.
This shift reflects a broader transformation across private markets, driven by evolving investor expectations, product innovation and structural complexity – and Jersey’s position as a mature international finance centre (IFC), anchored by regulatory credibility, cross-border connectivity and structuring expertise, maps closely to this direction of travel.
Investor dynamics
Investor composition is playing an increasingly influential role in structuring decisions. Family offices and high-net-worth individuals are expanding their exposure to alternatives, already allocating more than 40% of portfolios to private markets (UBS, Global Family Office Report 2025), with many planning further increases.
At the same time, managers are diversifying their capital base beyond traditional institutional investors. This is leading to blended investor pools, each with different priorities around governance, liquidity, transparency and fee structures.
The result is a key challenge for managers who are now looking at how to reconcile differing investor expectations without slowing execution.
From standardisation to precision
Alongside investor change, innovation in products and strategies is expanding the structuring toolkit.
Growth in areas such as co-investment and continuation vehicles, carry and incentive structuring, and tokenisation and digital asset representation have all significantly increased both choice and complexity.
Rather than standardised fund models, managers are increasingly deploying bespoke, multi-layered structures, including non-fund vehicles where appropriate. Co-investments alone now account for a significant share of deal activity, reflecting demand for more tailored exposure.
This is not complexity for its own sake. It is precision, aligning structures more closely with the specific needs of different capital pools.
The rise of digital structuring
Tokenisation and digital investing are also gaining traction, with the convergence of traditional private markets with digital asset infrastructure offering the potential for improved liquidity, transparency and operational efficiency.
These benefits point to an ability of this digital trajectory to achieve cost efficiencies, at a time when many managers are facing pressure from rising operational costs – and managers are alive to this opportunity. Seventy per cent of UK and US private fund managers surveyed for a Jersey Finance-commissioned study undertaken by IFI Global, for instance, said they are considering incorporating stablecoins into their operational development.
Jersey has been at the forefront of this evolution, developing expertise early in the tokenisation space and supporting innovative structures that combine traditional legal certainty with digital capabilities. This positions Jersey’s IFC strongly as digital representation of assets becomes more mainstream.
Certainty and efficiency
As structuring becomes more tailored, execution risk becomes a critical consideration. Managers are prioritising jurisdictions that can deliver:
- Speed to market
- Regulatory clarity
- Cost efficiency
- Long-term certainty
The ability to execute structures efficiently while maintaining flexibility is increasingly a differentiator.
These trends are highly relevant to Jersey’s position as an international finance centre. Jersey’s longstanding strengths, including political stability, a pragmatic regulatory framework and deep industry expertise, are increasingly aligned with what managers require in this new environment.
Importantly, Jersey’s flexible approach to defining and regulating funds allows for greater structuring optionality, particularly for co-investment vehicles, single-asset structures and other bespoke arrangements.
Jersey is also focused on enabling new fund structures to be launched efficiently, evidenced by recent steps taken by the authorities to significantly streamline the regulatory environment. The Jersey Private Fund (JPF) regime is another case in point, enabling rapid time to market – and last year enhancements were made to the regime, including introducing 24-hour authorisation. This is critical as managers look to deploy capital quickly in competitive, often time-sensitive alternative strategies.
Combined with its experience across global markets and ability to pool capital seamlessly across time zones, and its continued focus on innovation, this enables Jersey to play a central role whether as a primary domicile or as part of a broader multi-jurisdictional structure.
Ultimately, structuring is not becoming more complex for the sake of it; it is becoming more targeted. As asset management becomes faster, more liquid and more digitised, the challenge for managers is bringing together different investor requirements in a way that remains robust, efficient and future proof.
Being able to draw on a jurisdictional platform that can combine regulatory agility, structuring flexibility and global connectivity can deliver strategic advantage without sacrificing institutional credibility.
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