How could China's investment curbs shift wealth between Singapore and Hong Kong?
Rules taking effect on 1 July allow reviews of deals tied to national security.
Concerns that China’s tighter outbound investment rules will hurt Singapore banks’ wealth management business are overdone, according to Maybank Research Pte. Ltd.
“For Singapore banks, the direct impact should be limited,” Thilan Wickramasinghe, an analyst at Maybank Research, said in a report.
He said Singapore banks have limited exposure to wealth generated within Mainland China. Their focus is on offshore Chinese clients with businesses, assets, or family offices in Singapore, Hong Kong, and other overseas markets.
China's outbound investment rules taking effect on 1 July will subject some overseas investments to national security reviews, Freshfields LLP said in a June blog post. The review covers overseas restructuring, sale of overseas assets, and some technology and data transfers.
Wickramasinghe said Singapore banks could benefit if some clients spread assets across multiple financial centres rather than concentrating them in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong banks face a more mixed outlook. Tighter controls could weigh on cross-border investment activity in the near term.
Hong Kong banks could benefit if more clients use regulated channels for overseas investments, Wickramasinghe said.
Questions to ponder:
- How will wealthy Chinese clients adjust their offshore investment strategies?
- Could Singapore gain market share if clients diversify booking centres?
- Will tighter rules drive more wealth through regulated banks?