-
Villarreal add to Athletic misery, Oviedo survival hopes boosted
-
Peter Magyar: former govt insider promising system change
-
Inter close in on Serie A title after comeback triumph at Como
-
Exit stage right: Hungary's Orban 16-year rule draws to an end
-
Rose fights for Masters win with McIlroy, Young in hunt
-
Orban concedes 'painful' defeat to conservative Magyar in Hungary polls
-
Garcia warned after Masters meltdown
-
Delays mar vote as crisis-hit Peru picks ninth president in decade
-
Irish government announces tax cuts after fuel cost protests
-
Salt and Kohli in the runs as Bengaluru beat Mumbai in IPL
-
Rosenior admits Chelsea in 'difficult place'
-
Man City must respect Arsenal in title showdown: Guardiola
-
McIlroy begins Masters final round as repeat drama looms
-
Sinner sinks Alcaraz to win Monte Carlo Masters, returns to No.1
-
Stuttgart hammer Hamburg to go third in Bundesliga
-
De Zerbi suffers debut defeat as Spurs crisis deepens, City rampant
-
Delays mar voting as crisis-hit Peru picks ninth president in decade
-
Man City rout Chelsea to close gap on leaders Arsenal
-
Lille ease back into third in Ligue 1 with Toulouse win
-
After unsuccessful US-Iran talks, what next for Trump?
-
Galactic 'Super Mario' rules N. America box office for second week
-
Koch pips Vos to win Paris-Roubaix Femmes
-
Trump orders US Navy to block Hormuz Strait after Iran talks fail
-
Spurs win would 'change everything': De Zerbi
-
Holders Bordeaux-Begles see off Toulouse to reach Champions Cup semis
-
De Zerbi suffers debut defeat as Spurs crisis deepens
-
Sinner beats Alcaraz to win Monte Carlo Masters, returns to No.1
-
'No other way': Mideast prepares for more fighting as talks fail
-
Napoli draw at Parma gives Inter chance to put one hand on Serie A title
-
At US-Iran talks, Pakistan's field marshal takes centre stage
-
Spurs rue bad luck as relegation fears deepen
-
Napoli's title defence dented by draw at Parma
-
Andreeva opens clay court season with title in Linz
-
Van Aert finally wins Paris-Roubaix cycling Monument
-
Trump orders US Navy to block Hormuz after Iran talks fail
-
France scrum-half Lucu extends Bordeaux deal to 2029
-
McIlroy fights for repeat as last-round Masters drama begins
-
Buttler keeps form as Gujarat ease past Lucknow in IPL
-
Trump orders US naval blockade of Strait of Hormuz
-
Polls open as Peru picks ninth president in a decade
-
US-Iran talks fail as world urges respect for truce
-
Ukraine, Russia accuse each other of Easter truce violations
-
Cape Town mayor elected to lead S.Africa's second-largest party
-
Justin Bieber reconnects with fans on Coachella's second day
-
Crippa, Demise claim Paris marathon victories
-
Union Berlin appoint first female coach after Baumgart sacking
-
Legendary Indian singer Asha Bhosle dies aged 92
-
Finance minister favourite as Benin votes for president
-
Imagine Dragons frontman chases childhood video game dream
-
Teenage sprint star Gout powers to 200m win in blistering 19.67sec
Alex Chiniborch on Why and How Family Offices Are Returning to Gold
MIAMI, FL / ACCESS Newswire / November 17, 2025 / In a financial landscape defined by volatility and shifting priorities, family offices - the stewards of generational wealth - are returning to one of history's oldest and most reliable assets: gold.

For Alex Chiniborch, founder of Alluca Group, this renewed appetite for tangible value is no surprise. It's the logical outcome of a world rediscovering the importance of permanence in an age of speculation.
A Shift Back to Tangible Trust
Over the past decade, family offices diversified heavily into high-growth sectors - from venture capital and private credit to digital assets and tech startups. But as global markets have grown more unpredictable, many portfolios now hold exposure to volatility rather than stability.
"Family offices are not chasing trends anymore," explains Chiniborch. "They're refocusing on the fundamentals - assets that outlast market cycles and geopolitical headlines. Gold has always been that benchmark."
This shift isn't about nostalgia. It's about strategy - a return to what can be held, verified, and passed down. Gold offers what no algorithm or derivative can: the reassurance of true ownership and the confidence that it retains value across generations.
The Alluca Group Perspective

Under Chiniborch's leadership, Alluca Group has emerged as a leader in this modern gold revival - offering family offices a structured, compliant, and transparent pathway to physical ownership.
Earlier this week, the firm completed a $100 million transaction representing one ton of physical gold in partnership with a private family office. The deal marked the first phase of a larger 10-ton initiative, valued at $1.25 billion, and established a new benchmark for institutional-grade gold investment.
What makes Alluca's approach distinctive is its architecture. Every ounce of gold acquired under its framework is audited, insured, and custodied through top-tier institutional partners - merging old-world reliability with modern accountability.
"Gold shouldn't be difficult to own," says Chiniborch. "It should be as structured as any regulated asset class - but with the integrity that comes only from something real."
Why Family Offices Are Leading the Revival
Unlike hedge funds or retail investors, family offices think in decades, not quarters. Their goal isn't speculation - it's preservation. The move back to gold, therefore, is not a retreat but a return to principle.
This resurgence also reflects a deeper reality: growing distrust in paper-based systems and over-leveraged economies. Inflation, rising debt, and currency devaluation have made even the most sophisticated investors question where real value resides.
According to Chiniborch, the current shift isn't driven by fear, but by foresight. "The smartest capital isn't reacting to chaos," he says. "It's positioning for stability."
The Method Behind the Movement
Alluca Group's model provides family offices with gold exposure that is secure, compliant, and operationally effortless. Through multi-jurisdictional custodianship, insured holdings, and transparent reporting, the firm offers an institutional-grade experience that fits seamlessly within modern wealth frameworks.
Each allocation is treated as a partnership, not a transaction - an approach that has earned Alluca growing credibility among private wealth managers and fiduciaries worldwide.
"Our clients value discretion and discipline," notes Chiniborch. "They want assurance that their assets are safe, visible, and verifiable - not hidden behind promises."
This philosophy has made Alluca Group a trusted partner for those seeking to blend traditional security with modern oversight.
A New Definition of Modern Wealth
For Chiniborch, the return of family offices to gold signals more than a market trend - it's a philosophical correction. In the pursuit of innovation, the world momentarily forgot that true value doesn't vanish; it simply gets overshadowed.
Gold, he believes, is the bridge between heritage and the future - a foundation of trust in a system increasingly built on speculation. And Alluca Group's mission is to preserve that foundation by giving it structure, compliance, and credibility.
As the 10-ton initiative progresses, Alluca Group is not merely facilitating gold ownership - it's redefining what responsible wealth management looks like in the 21st century.
Because for those who think in generations, not quarters, real wealth will always weigh something.
Miami, Florida
Alex Chiniborch
[email protected]
SOURCE: Alex Chiniborch
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
P.Hernandez--AT