HONG KONG, June 17 (Reuters) – Hong Kong investment products such as insurance and high-yield time deposits are seeing resurgent demand from wealthy Chinese who are aiming to shield returns from a domestic economic and property sector downturn and also a weaker currency.
The trend became evident last year but has accelerated in recent months after China relaxed investment rules for the ‘wealth connect’ programme in February, Hong Kong wealth managers said.
It is sparking a scramble among financial firms in Hong Kong to seize the opportunity and should help the city burnish its status as a wealth hub that has been hit in recent years by pro-democracy protests, Beijing’s tighter control, and geopolitical tensions.
Those factors had pushed clients and wealth managers to foray into or expand in rival Singapore.
“There are about 45 million affluent individuals in China, and increasingly they want more international exposure, education, and protection,” said Maggie Ng, HSBC’s (HSBA.L), opens new tab Hong Kong head of wealth and personal banking.
“There is an increasing demand to manage wealth outside of China.”
Launched in late 2021, ‘wealth connect’ allows residents of nine cities in the southern province of Guangdong, which borders Hong Kong, to buy investment products sold by banks in Hong Kong and Macau, while allowing residents of the two offshore centres to do the same in the world’s second-largest economy.
Under the programme, investments by mainland investors into Hong Kong and Macau hit a record monthly high of 13 billion yuan ($1.8 billion) in March, up nearly eight times from February, data from the Chinese central bank showed.
Inflows in April grew 70.5% from the preceding month to 22.3 billion yuan, the data showed, while northbound investments in April by Hong Kong and Macau residents were just 14 million yuan, largely unchanged since the programme was launched.
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