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FS: Celebrating HKTA's 35th Anniversary of Advancing Hong Kong as a Leading International Financial Centre

HK

FS: Celebrating HKTA's 35th Anniversary of Advancing Hong Kong as a Leading International Financial Centre
HK

HK

FS: Celebrating HKTA's 35th Anniversary of Advancing Hong Kong as a Leading International Financial Centre

2026-06-03 15:50 Last Updated At:06-04 11:12

Speech by FS at at HKTA 35th Anniversary Conference

Following is the speech by the Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, at the HKTA 35th Anniversary Conference today (June 3):

Ka-shi (Chairman of the Hong Kong Trustees' Association, Ms Lau Ka-shi), members of the Hong Kong Trustees' Association (HKTA), distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,

Good afternoon. It is a pleasure to join you today to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the Hong Kong Trustees' Association.

Let me begin by offering my warmest congratulations to the HKTA - to your leadership, your members, and everyone who has contributed to building this institution and its strong reputation over the years.

Hong Kong's growth as an IFC

Looking back over the past 35 years, Hong Kong, as an international financial centre, has undergone a remarkable transformation. In particular, over the past decade or so, alongside our country's high-quality development, Hong Kong's financial centre status has been elevated to a new level.

Take our stock market as an example. Over the past 10 years, market capitalisation has more than doubled, from around $23 trillion to over $47 trillion. Bank deposits have increased by about 80 per cent, or $9 trillion, to reach over $19 trillion.

Asset and wealth management, an area closely connected with everyone here today, has grown from $18.2 trillion to more than $35 trillion. MPF (Mandatory Provident Fund) assets have also almost doubled, from around $800 billion to about $1.5 trillion.

Last week, Hong Kong was named the world's largest cross-boundary wealth management centre. It was also projected that Hong Kong's growth in this area would continue to lead the world over the next five years.

Hong Kong has indeed been moving up rapidly in the IFC league table. In the Global Financial Centres Index, our score is now only two points behind New York and one point behind London. A decade ago, the gap was around 40 points.

Our growth is not merely a story of scale. It is a story of constant reinvention. Through the reforms to our listing regime, deepening of the Connect schemes, and stronger connectivity with Southeast Asia and the Middle East, Hong Kong has been expanding its role as a bridge between the Mainland and the world. In the face of trials and tribulations, Hong Kong has remained resilient, and emerged stronger.

The trust industry is an integral part of this success. You provide the fiduciary backbone that underpins the sustained and smooth operation of MPF schemes, private trusts, family offices, philanthropic structures and other arrangements. You safeguard assets, protect beneficiaries, uphold governance, and reinforce confidence in Hong Kong as a trusted place to manage, preserve and pass on wealth. You are an indispensable institutional infrastructure safeguarding our financial security.

Going forward, I believe three major trends will bring more capital flows, more cross-boundary activities, and stronger demand for the services of our trust industry.

First, the growing demand for diversification and reallocation in an increasingly fragmented geo-economic environment. Global capital is looking for safe harbours. Investors are looking for markets that are stable, reliable and predictable, while offering opportunities and investment returns.

Second, the global wave of innovation and technology. China's technological innovation will be one of the most compelling long-term themes in the investment world. Capital that believes in the growth potential of China and Asia, and in this region's capacity for innovation, will increasingly look to this part of the world for opportunities.

And third, our country's high-level two-way opening up under the National 15th Five-Year Plan. Hong Kong will serve as a hub for more Mainland companies going global, while attracting more capital and enterprises from around the world to access Mainland opportunities through our platform.

The "Finance+" strategy

These trends are also the very basis upon which we proposed the "Finance+" strategy in the Budget this year.

The goal is clear. We want to capitalise on these major trends to grow a bigger pie, empower different industries, and create more opportunities for the financial services sector.

This means advancing further in areas where we have enduring competitive strengths.

Hong Kong has a mature and sophisticated fundraising market. Our IPO (initial public offering) performance has been strong. We have a vibrant venture capital and private equity sector. Yet, we are working to build an even more comprehensive financing chain, a richer product offering and a more vibrant financial ecosystem, so that we can unleash fully our development potential.

On products, we support the introduction of more diverse and innovative investment products and risk management tools to satisfy different investors' needs and appetites.

Bonds are a good example. We are working to attract more national governments, international institutions and companies to issue bonds of various tenors and currencies here. We are also developing a one-stop, multi-asset class post-trade securities infrastructure. That will cover both Mainland and Hong Kong equity and debt securities, facilitating cross-product collateralisation to enhance market liquidity.

Exchange-traded products (ETPs) are another example. In 2024, there were fewer than 200 listed ETPs in Hong Kong, with an AUM (asset under management) of about $460 billion. Today, the number has grown to more than 240, with AUM reaching around $650 billion, a 40 per cent increase in just two years' time.

So are gold and commodities. We are strengthening this market by expanding warehousing capacity, enhancing settlement arrangements, and supporting product innovation through digitalisation, tokenisation and development of derivatives.

Together, these initiatives are opening up new horizons for Hong Kong's financial markets, broadening the range of opportunities for investors and creating new room for growth across the financial services sector.

For the trust industry, our efforts to facilitate re-domiciliation are highly relevant. Since last year, 37 companies have moved their place of incorporation to Hong Kong, while preserving their legal identity and business continuity. They include some of the world's leading insurance companies.

Later this year, we will introduce a bill to enhance our tax regime for funds and family offices.

These send a clear message. Hong Kong is an open and welcoming home for family offices, trusts, funds, talent and enterprises.

A word to the trust industry

Ladies and gentlemen, I believe the trust industry is well placed to benefit from the "Finance+" strategy. But to capture these opportunities, three priorities are important.

First, uphold the highest standards of integrity and professionalism. Trustees have a special role because you often stand at the centre of long-term relationships involving families, beneficiaries, investors and institutions. That trust carries tremendous responsibilities.

Second, strive for excellence and embrace technology and innovation. Technology is transforming investment products, compliance, administration, reporting and risk management - in short, every aspect of your operations. Embracing technology is no longer optional.

At a more fundamental level, artificial intelligence (AI) and digitalisation are reshaping the very foundations of the trust business - from what constitutes an asset, to how ownership and control are established and exercised, how fiduciary duties are discharged, and how business is conducted. For trustees, this poses new challenges in custody, valuation, cross-boundary regulatory compliance, daily administration and cyber security.

But it also creates new opportunities. For example, as assets become more digital, the market will need greater legal certainty, stronger governance and trusted fiduciary oversight. These are areas where Hong Kong has clear strengths, and where our trust industry can play an important role in safeguarding assets for families, pension members and investors.

Our task, together, is to harness cutting-edge technology while staying true to the timeless principles of prudence and loyalty, so that the trust business remains an anchor of confidence in an increasingly digital market.

Third, invest in talent. More complex rules, more cross-boundary work, new technologies and new product types will increase demand for experienced trustees, risk managers, compliance professionals, lawyers, accountants, and wealth planners.

We need people who can discharge fiduciary duties in the age of technological and digital transformation. We need people who understand family succession, public accountability and cross-boundary regulation in the age of AI. And we need people who understand both the Chinese Mainland and the world - people who can bridge the two and contribute to both.

I am pleased to note that the HKTA has long been committed to professional training, which is essential to building a deeper and more resilient talent pool for Hong Kong.

On our part, the Government is committed to building a stronger asset and wealth management ecosystem and the trust industry. We will continue to work with the industry to further enhance the competitiveness of Hong Kong as a centre of excellence for the trust industry.

Closing

Ladies and gentlemen, for 35 years, the HKTA has demonstrated leadership, professionalism and commitment to excellence.

The next 35 years will be even more exciting. The global geo-economic balance is shifting. Technological innovation is accelerating. Wealth in Asia is fast building up and clients are becoming more sophisticated and demanding. Families, enterprises and investors will need better structures, better governance and better advice.

But the foundation of success will remain true and the same: professionalism, integrity and trust.

I am confident that the HKTA will continue to bring the industry together, lead with vision, and contribute to the next stage of Hong Kong's success as an international financial centre.

The Government will be your partner every step of the way.

Once again, my heartfelt congratulations to the HKTA on your 35th anniversary. Here is to the next 35 years.

Thank you very much.

The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, attended the HKTA 35th Anniversary Conference today (June 3). Photo shows Mr Chan (front row, fourth right); the Chairman of the Hong Kong Trustees’ Association, Ms Lau Ka-shi (front row, fourth left); the Chief Executive Officer of the Insurance Authority, Mr Clement Cheung (front row, third right), and other guests at the conference. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, attended the HKTA 35th Anniversary Conference today (June 3). Photo shows Mr Chan (front row, fourth right); the Chairman of the Hong Kong Trustees’ Association, Ms Lau Ka-shi (front row, fourth left); the Chief Executive Officer of the Insurance Authority, Mr Clement Cheung (front row, third right), and other guests at the conference. Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, speaks at the HKTA 35th Anniversary Conference today (June 3). Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

The Financial Secretary, Mr Paul Chan, speaks at the HKTA 35th Anniversary Conference today (June 3). Source: HKSAR Government Press Releases

CHP investigates severe paediatric case of COVID-19 infection

The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) of the Department of Health today (June 10) is investigating a severe paediatric case of COVID-19 infection, and appealed the public to observe good personal and environmental hygiene at all times to prevent influenza and other respiratory illnesses. The CHP reminds high-risk individuals to receive initial doses or booster doses of COVID-19 vaccination at appropriate times to minimise the risk of severe disease and death.

Case details

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The case involves a 19-month-old boy with good past health. He developed a fever, runny nose, cough, shortness of breath and stridor on June 4. He was taken to a private clinic for medical attention on the next day (June 5) and was referred to the Accident and Emergency Department of Kwong Wah Hospital, where he was admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit for treatment. His respiratory specimen tested positive for the SARS-CoV-2 virus upon laboratory testing. The clinical diagnosis was COVID-19 complicated with croup. He remains hospitalised and is currently in critical condition.

The CHP's preliminary investigation revealed that the boy had not received COVID-19 vaccine and had mostly stayed in Hong Kong throughout the incubation period. His three household contacts remain asymptomatic so far.

Government's COVID-19 Vaccination Programme

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"Scientific evidence shows that COVID-19 vaccines are effective in reducing the risk of severe disease and death. Although COVID-19 has become a common respiratory infection in Hong Kong and around the world, certain high-risk individuals, especially young children, who have not received their initial dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and have not developed immunity through natural infection, face a higher risk of serious complications if they become infected. I would like to specifically remind the public that individuals who have not yet received their initial dose of the COVID-19 vaccine (including children aged six months or above) should get vaccinated as soon as possible, while high-risk individuals (particularly the elderly and those with underlying comorbidities) should also receive booster dose at appropriate times for effective protection against COVID-19." said the Controller of the CHP, Dr Edwin Tsui.

"According to the latest surveillance data, while the overall local activity of COVID-19 still remains at a relatively low level, slight increases have been recorded continually since early May. The COVID-19 activity levels fluctuate, with an upsurge period generally occurred approximately every six to nine months in recent years. Each upsurge is associated with changes in predominant circulating variants and a decline in community herd immunity. It has been nearly a year since the end of the last periodic upsurge of COVID-19 activity in Hong Kong, and it cannot be ruled out that the overall COVID-19 activity will rise further in the coming one to two months," he added.

The shelf life of the vaccines provided under the Government's COVID-19 Vaccination Programme (the Programme) is going to expire. A new batch of vaccines will arrive in Hong Kong successively in the fourth quarter of 2026. During this transition period, eligible individuals will not be able to receive free COVID-19 vaccines through the Programme for a short period. As such, those in need are advised to make appointments as early as possible. Existing vaccination services will continue until the following dates:

  • Individuals aged 6 months to 11 years: Vaccination services will be available until July 10, 2026.
  • Individuals aged 12 or above: Vaccination services will be available until September 5, 2026.
  • Apart from vaccination, in order to prevent COVID-19, influenza, and other respiratory illnesses as well as transmission in the community, the public should maintain strict personal and environmental hygiene at all times and note the following:

  • Patients can wear surgical masks to prevent transmission of respiratory viruses. Therefore, it is essential for persons who are symptomatic (even with mild symptoms) to wear a surgical mask;
  • High-risk persons (e.g. persons with underlying medical conditions or persons who are immunocompromised) should wear surgical masks when visiting public places. The general public should also wear a surgical mask when taking public transport or staying in crowded places. It is important to wear a mask properly, including performing hand hygiene before wearing and after removing a mask;
  • Avoid touching one's eyes, mouth and nose;
  • Practise hand hygiene frequently, wash hands with liquid soap and water properly whenever possibly contaminated;
  • When hands are not visibly soiled, clean them with 70 to 80 per cent alcohol-based handrub;
  • Cover the mouth and nose with tissue paper when sneezing or coughing. Dispose of soiled tissue paper properly into a lidded rubbish bin, and wash hands thoroughly afterwards;
  • Maintain good indoor ventilation;
  • Avoid sharing personal items;
  • When having respiratory symptoms, wear a surgical mask, consider to refrain from going to work or school, avoid going to crowded places and seek medical advice promptly; and
  • Maintain a balanced diet, perform physical activity regularly, take adequate rest, do not smoke and avoid overstress.
  • For more information on the COVID-19 Vaccination Programme and the latest recommendations on vaccine use, please refer to the CHP'swebsite.

    Source: AI-found images

    Source: AI-found images

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