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Inversiones Petrohué
Inversiones Petrohué manages the generational wealth of the Sarquis Said family, rooted in the consolidation and eventual sale of a controlling position...
Inversiones Petrohué
Inversiones Petrohué manages the generational wealth of the Sarquis Said family, rooted in the consolidation and eventual sale of a controlling position in Blumar S.A., a major Chilean seafood producer. The firm, based in Concepción, reflects the shift from operating-company concentration to a diversified family office structure. Rodrigo Sarquis Said, who remains chairman of the publicly traded Blumar entity (per public record), runs the office alongside his brother Gonzalo, a director and chairman of Banco Falabella, and General Manager Carlos Hurtado Rourke. The office allocates across a broad mandate spanning private equity, real estate, natural resources, infrastructure, private credit, and hedge fund commitments. Direct co-investments and special purpose vehicles sit alongside a fund-of-funds program targeting global managers. On the direct side, the firm's footprint is concentrated in Chile, where it holds agricultural land in the Curicó Valley's Villa Prat area, a portfolio of Santiago commercial real estate through Sinergia Inmobiliaria — a vehicle co-owned with the Kassis and Cueto families — and stakes in the Nueva Las Condes office complex. The wealth-origin fishing fleet remains berthed in Talcahuano. The team operates with a lean structure, relying on Carlos Hurtado Rourke to direct investment execution. Adjacent vehicles include a philanthropic arm channeled through Alimentos Biobío Solidario, Enseña Chile, and Fundación San Agustín. Rodrigo Sarquis Said also participates in industry governance as a director of ASIPES, the Chilean fishing industry trade association, and maintains ties to alumni networks through the Old Grangonian Club. In May 2024, the office continued to deepen its partnership model, maintaining active co-investment relationships with the Santa Cruz family, long-term partners in the original Blumar control group (per public record). What distinguishes Inversiones Petrohué from Chile's typical single-family offices is the durable co-investment syndicate it retains. Rather than liquidating after the Blumar transition, the Sarquis family maintained aligned capital pools with the Cueto and Santa Cruz families in real estate and operating assets. This creates a permanent, closed-network deal flow channel — a structural advantage for sourcing Chilean direct investments without competing in broad auctions.
General information
Firm type
Single Family Office
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
South America
Country
Chile
City
Concepción
Corporate office
Concepción, Chile
Principals
Rodrigo Sarquis Said
Founder
Gonzalo Sarquis Said
Director
Carlos Hurtado Rourke
General Manager and Investment Director
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at Inversiones Petrohué?
Carlos Hurtado Rourke serves as General Manager and Investment Director, executing the investment strategy under the direction of principals Rodrigo Sarquis Said and Gonzalo Sarquis Said. Rodrigo Sarquis Said, the family office founder, remains chairman of Blumar S.A., the publicly traded fishing company from which the family's core wealth originated (per public record). This dual operating-company and family-office governance gives the principals ongoing industry exposure while delegating day-to-day asset allocation to Hurtado Rourke.
How does Inversiones Petrohué source proprietary deal flow?
The office sources directly through long-standing Chilean business relationships, most notably its co-investment syndicate with the Cueto, Kassis, and Santa Cruz families. These families jointly own Sinergia Inmobiliaria, a real estate vehicle, and share a history dating back to the control bloc of Blumar S.A. This network provides access to off-market real estate and private company investments within Chile that rarely reach broad auction processes.
Does Inversiones Petrohué participate in fund commitments or only direct deals?
The office pursues a hybrid model. On the direct side, it holds agricultural land in the Curicó Valley, commercial real estate in Santiago's Nueva Las Condes submarket, and retains interests tied to the original Blumar fishing fleet. Separately, it runs a fund-of-funds and hedge fund allocation program, deploying into external managers globally while also making direct co-investments and participating in special purpose vehicles.
What investment stages and asset classes does Inversiones Petrohué typically target?
The firm operates across a broad mandate that includes private equity, infrastructure, natural resources, private credit, real estate, and hedge fund strategies. Geographically, its direct investments concentrate in South America, primarily Chile, while its fund commitments reach global managers. Sector focuses include AgriTech and FoodTech, energy transition, circular economy, PropTech, and mobility — aligning with both the family's industrial heritage in fisheries and a forward-looking diversification strategy.
How is Inversiones Petrohué related to Blumar S.A.?
Rodrigo Sarquis Said is the founder of Inversiones Petrohué and remains chairman of Blumar S.A., the Chilean seafood company whose founding and growth generated the family's wealth. While the family no longer holds the same controlling stake it once did, the relationship endures through board representation and the retention of fishing fleet assets in Talcahuano. The family office became the primary vehicle for diversifying the liquidity generated from Blumar's development (per public record).
Does Inversiones Petrohué maintain philanthropic structures, and how are they separated?
Yes, the family's philanthropy runs through dedicated entities including Alimentos Biobío Solidario, which addresses food security in Chile's Biobío region, and support for Enseña Chile and Fundación San Agustín. These vehicles operate separately from the investment office's capital deployment, consistent with the single-family office model where charitable giving is structurally distinct from return-seeking assets.
Where does the underlying wealth come from?
The Sarquis family's wealth originates in the Chilean fishing industry. The family was a controlling shareholder of Blumar S.A., a major producer and exporter of seafood and fishmeal headquartered in Santiago, with operations including fishing fleets based in Talcahuano. The transition from concentrated operating-company ownership to a diversified family office structure represents a classic generational liquidity event common among Chilean industrial families (per public record).
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.
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