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John Tse Appointed Director of Information Services, Starting May 5, 2026

HK

John Tse Appointed Director of Information Services, Starting May 5, 2026
HK

HK

John Tse Appointed Director of Information Services, Starting May 5, 2026

2026-05-04 16:00 Last Updated At:16:44

Appointment of Director of Information Services announced

The Government announced today (May 4) that Mr John Tse Chun-chung will take up the appointment as Director of Information Services on May 5, 2026, following an open-cum-in-service recruitment exercise.

Commenting on the appointment of Mr Tse, the Secretary for the Civil Service, Mrs Ingrid Yeung, said, "Mr Tse has extensive experience in public administration, is highly skilled in handling media and public relations, and possesses outstanding leadership and management capabilities. I am confident that under his leadership, the Information Services Department will strive to promote public understanding of government policies and positions, and tell the world about the good stories of Hong Kong."

Mr Tse joined the Government in 1999 and served in various positions both at frontlinedepartment and policy bureau. He was seconded to the Chief Executive's Office under civil service appointment terms to serve as the Communications Secretary in August 2022, and has been serving as Information Co-ordinator since June 2024. In February 2026, the Home and Youth Affairs Bureau conducted a selection process, including an open-cum-in-service recruitment exercise, for the post of Director of Information Services. Following the selection process, Mr Tse has been identified as the most suitable candidate. The Government appointed Mr Tse as the Director of Information Services under the civil service appointment terms, effective on May 5.

Mr John Tse Chun-chung will take up the appointment as Director of Information Services on May 5, 2026. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

Mr John Tse Chun-chung will take up the appointment as Director of Information Services on May 5, 2026. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

Survey on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises' Credit Conditions for First Quarter 2026

The following is issued on behalf of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority:

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) published today (May 4) the results of the Survey on Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs)' Credit Conditions for the first quarter of 2026. According to the survey, SMEs' credit conditions remained broadly stable.

Regarding SMEs' perception of banks' credit approval stance relative to six months ago, excluding respondents who answered "no idea/don't know", 73 per cent perceived a "similar" or "easier" credit approval stance in the first quarter of 2026, up from 70 per cent in the previous quarter (Chart 1 in the Annex). 27 per cent perceived a "more difficult" credit approval stance, compared to 30 per cent in the previous quarter. The perception of a more difficult credit approval stance may not necessarily reflect actual difficulties faced by SMEs in obtaining bank credit as the perception could be affected by a number of factors, such as media/news reports, business conditions and opinions of relatives and friends.

Among respondents with existing credit lines, 0 per cent reported a "tighter" banks' stance, down from 1 per cent in the previous quarter (Chart 2 in the Annex). In this survey, a tighter stance on existing credit lines denotes a range of possible measures or arrangements, such as reducing unused and used credit lines, raising the interest rate, imposing additional collateral requirements, or shortening loan tenor. Therefore, respondents' indication of banks' stance on existing credit lines may not directly reflect banks' supply of credit to SMEs.

The survey also gauged the results of new credit applications from SMEs. 2 per centof the respondents reported that they had applied for new bank credit during the first quarter of 2026. Among the respondents who had already known their application outcomes, 91 per centreported fully or partially successful applications, up from 77 per cent in the previous quarter (Chart 3 in the Annex).

Owing to small sample sizes of SMEs with existing credit lines (12per centof surveyed SMEs) and with new credit applications (2per cent of surveyed SMEs) during the quarter, the results could be prone to large fluctuations, and hence should be interpreted with care.

About Survey on SMEs' Credit Conditions

In light of the importance of SMEs to the Hong Kong economy and concerns about potential funding difficulties facing SMEs over the past few years, the HKMA has appointed the Hong Kong Productivity Council (HKPC) to carry out this survey, starting from the third quarter of 2016. This survey is conducted on a quarterly basis, covering about 2 500 SMEs from different economic sectors each time. The results of this survey can help monitor the development of SMEs' access to bank credit from a demand-side perspective.

The results of this survey should be interpreted with caution. Similar to other opinion surveys, views collected in this survey may be affected by changes in sentiment due to idiosyncratic events that occurred over the survey period, which can make the results prone to fluctuations. Readers are advised to interpret the results together with other economic and financial information. In addition, views collected are limited to the expected direction of inter-quarter changes (e.g. "tighter", "no change" or "easier") without providing information about the magnitude of these changes.

Detailed tables and technical information of this survey are published on the website of the HKPC (smecc.hkpc.org).

Source: AI-found images

Source: AI-found images

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