Updated:
Inversiones Consolidadas
Andrónico Luksic Craig founded Inversiones Consolidadas in 1988 to manage the private capital of Chile's Luksic family, whose wealth stems from...
Inversiones Consolidadas
Andrónico Luksic Craig founded Inversiones Consolidadas in 1988 to manage the private capital of Chile's Luksic family, whose wealth stems from controlling stakes in two publicly traded pillars: Antofagasta plc, one of the world's largest copper producers, and Quiñenco S.A., a holding company with interests in banking (Banco de Chile), beverages (Compañía Cervecerías Unidas), and manufacturing. The office, run alongside president Rodrigo Terré and general manager Rodrigo Swett, operates from Santiago's Las Condes district and functions as the direct investment arm distinct from the family's listed-company holdings. The office deploys across a deliberately broad mandate — spanning early-stage venture, growth equity, public markets, and physical real estate — with a geographic footprint that reaches from domestic Chilean startups to direct investments in North America, Europe, and Asia. Sector priorities include fintech, energy transition, agri-food technology, and climate technology, with confirmed investment stages ranging from pre-seed to buyout. The venture portfolio has included Chilean fintech and logistics startups sourced through the office's membership in the Asociación Chilena de Venture Capital, while direct co-investments extend to natural resources and infrastructure-aligned plays consistent with the family's industrial heritage. Away from the core office, the Luksic network maintains a distinct hospitality and real-asset footprint, notably a collection of Croatian hotels — the Grand Villa Argentina, Hotel Croatia Cavtat, and the Plava Laguna portfolio — managed by Andrónico Luksic's son Davor Luksic Lederer. The family's Chilean holdings include the Walnut Agricultural Project in the Metropolitan Region, the Valle de Elqui estate near Pisco Elqui, and a residential and commercial real estate portfolio that stretches to Back Bay, Boston. In September 2023, the broader Luksic group was linked to international discussions around copper-supply consolidation, reinforcing the resource-driven liquidity that feeds the family office's investment pipeline. The Luksic architecture — a listed-conglomerate anchor feeding a discreet single-family office, with a parallel private-asset portfolio in Europe — resembles few other groups in Latin America. The family's public-company boards provide perpetually regenerating liquidity and deal flow, while Inversiones Consolidadas itself runs lean: a tight team under Terré and Swett that can move across asset classes without the fundraising cycle constraints of a traditional private equity manager.
General information
Firm type
Single Family Office
Year founded
1988
AUM
$500M (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
Latin America
Country
Chile
City
Santiago
Corporate office
Santiago, Chile
Principals
Andrónico Luksic Craig
Founder and Principal
Rodrigo Terré
President
Rodrigo Swett
General Manager
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Inversiones Consolidadas?
Founder and principal Andrónico Luksic Craig oversees the office's strategic direction. Day-to-day investment management and operations fall to president Rodrigo Terré and general manager Rodrigo Swett, who together form the senior leadership team executing across venture, real estate, and public-markets mandates.
Where does the underlying wealth come from?
The fortune originates in the Luksic family's controlling stakes in Antofagasta plc, one of the world's major copper producers, and Quiñenco S.A., the conglomerate whose holdings include Banco de Chile, CCU, and industrial assets. These two entities generate the dividend streams and capital events that Inversiones Consolidadas reinvests. Andrónico Luksic Craig holds his wealth alongside his siblings Paola Luksic Fontbona and Jean Paul Luksic Fontbona, though the family office is his vehicle.
Is Inversiones Consolidadas structured as a single family office or does it operate more like a venture firm?
It is a single family office, not a fund manager raising outside capital. The office invests the principal's own balance sheet directly into startups, growth-stage companies, real estate, and public securities. While it is a member of the Asociación Chilena de Venture Capital and maintains an active early-stage practice domestically, it does not manage third-party LP commitments.
Does Inversiones Consolidadas participate in fund commitments or only direct deals?
The office's known activity centers on direct investments: direct co-investments, SPVs, direct private equity, natural resources, and direct real estate. There is no public record of Inversiones Consolidadas acting as a limited partner in third-party venture or private equity funds in a material way, though its ACVC membership suggests familiarity with the Chilean fund landscape.
What investment stages does the office target?
The office spans the spectrum from pre-seed and seed-stage Chilean startups through growth equity and late-stage deals, and extends into buyout transactions. This stage flexibility reflects the single-family-office advantage of permanent capital rather than a fixed fund-return timeline.
How is Inversiones Consolidadas related to Quiñenco and Antofagasta plc?
Quiñenco S.A. and Antofagasta plc are the listed holding companies that generated the Luksic family's wealth. Inversiones Consolidadas is a separate private entity controlled by Andrónico Luksic Craig that invests the family's distributed dividends and capital gains. The relationships create deal flow — the office benefits from the industrial and resource networks of the listed entities — but the investment mandates are legally and operationally distinct.
Does the Luksic family maintain philanthropic structures, and how are they separated?
Yes, the family operates several foundations including Fundación Luksic, Fundación Amparo y Justicia, the Luksic Scholars Foundation, and the Emian Foundation. These philanthropic vehicles are legally separate from Inversiones Consolidadas and focus on education, justice reform, and social development in Chile, with the Scholars Foundation supporting academic exchange between Chile and institutions abroad including Harvard and Oxford.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
Need institutional-grade insight on family offices?
Altss delivers:
Prefer a guided tour?
We’ll walk you through: