Arthur Féry did not arrive at Centre Court by accident.
His father, Loïc Féry, built Chenavari Investment Managers from the ground up in London in 2008, growing it into a credit investment firm with $5.8 billion in assets under management. His mother, Olivia, is a former professional tennis player and a longtime member of the All England Club, where she played on those same courts with Arthur since he was a child.
Two high-performing parents. A world-class environment. Early access to excellence in two different fields.
And then Arthur enrolled at Stanford on a tennis scholarship, became the top-ranked singles player on the college circuit, and spent years developing in relative anonymity before walking onto the most famous grass court in the world.
The access did not make him. The work did.
What Family Offices Get Wrong About Next–Generation Development
The instinct in family offices and high-net-worth families is to focus on what can be given. The list is long:
- Elite education and university placement
- Introductions to the right networks and rooms
- Capital, opportunity, and a seat at the table
- Access to advisors, mentors, and industry contacts
These things matter. None of them is sufficient.
What the Arthur Féry story illustrates is a principle that every family office patriarch and matriarch already knows from their own career but often struggles to transfer deliberately: the trait that compounds most reliably across a lifetime is not intelligence, not access, and not pedigree.
It is the willingness to outwork the room even when nobody is watching.
Grit is not a personality trait. It is a developmental outcome. It emerges when a young person is placed in an environment where effort is required, failure is survivable, and excellence is modeled consistently by the people around them.
Olivia Féry did not just talk to Arthur about tennis. She played with him. On those courts. For years. Loïc Féry did not just fund a life of comfort. He built something, and Arthur watched him do it. The environment was the curriculum.
The Question Every Family Office Should Be Asking
Most family offices have sophisticated frameworks for evaluating investment risk. Very few have an equally rigorous framework for evaluating and developing the humans who will eventually steward what those investments built.
The next generation does not need more access. They need structured development — specifically:
- Coaching to identify what they are genuinely built for, separate from family expectation
- Career clarity that distinguishes passion from obligation
- Executive presence and communication skills to lead in rooms their parents prepared but cannot enter on their behalf
- The resilience frameworks to perform under sustained pressure
That is not a conversation most families are equipped to have internally. The stakes are too high and the relationship is too close.
What Arootah’s Executive Coaching practice does for next-generation leaders in family offices and alternative investment firms is create the structure that makes genuine development possible. Not grooming a successor. Not installing a figurehead. Developing a leader who can carry the legacy forward in a way the family is proud of for the next three decades.
Arthur Féry is the story everyone is watching at Wimbledon this summer. The story worth paying attention to is what his parents invested in before the tournament started.
What are you investing in for the next generation of your firm?
Executive Coaching for next-generation family office leaders — connect with our team











