Hong Kong wants more Chinese fintech firms to operate in Philippines
Philippines lags ASEAN peers
By Derco Rosal
At A Glance
- InvestHK, the investment promotion arm of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government, said it would like to see more Hong Kong-registered financial technology (fintech) firms in the Philippines, which needs to ramp up its promotion efforts and work on building investor confidence.
HONG KONG — InvestHK, the investment promotion arm of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) government, said it would like to see more Hong Kong-registered financial technology (fintech) firms in the Philippines, which needs to ramp up its promotion efforts and work on building investor confidence.
King Leung, global head of financial services, fintech, and sustainability at InvestHK, said during a roundtable discussion at Hong Kong FinTech Week 2025 that Hong Kong “would like to see a much higher” number of its fintech firms setting up in the Philippines.
This comes against the backdrop of the Philippines receiving relatively low foreign direct investments (FDIs) from Hong Kong in 2024.
According to the Hong Kong Fintech Ecosystem Report published in March, only 1.9 percent of Hong Kong-registered fintech companies had operations in the Philippines—trailing behind its Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) peers.
“Mainland China and Singapore are the top choices for business operations of fintech companies registered in Hong Kong, followed by Malaysia and the United Kingdom (UK),” the report read.
Among ASEAN member economies, 37 percent of Hong Kong fintech firms were in Singapore, 20.4 percent in Malaysia, 11.1 percent in Thailand, 7.4 percent in Indonesia, and 6.5 percent in Vietnam.
Leung said on Monday, Nov. 3, that the Philippines has seen “pretty good developments when it comes to financial information and digital payments,” adding that Chinese investors usually look first at ASEAN countries when they plan to expand.
Sought for his opinion on the bottlenecks that slow FDI flows into the Philippines, Leung spoke generally, noting risks in investment returns and the need to enhance the promotion of investment opportunities present in any country.
“It’s more of a promotion—getting more investors to be more aware of the opportunities in the Philippines. That’s why we are definitely working to collaborate with, let’s say, the Philippines’ fintech association, with which we have some relationship,” Leung said.
Leung added that countries need more collaboration, such as during events like the Hong Kong FinTech Week, “so that opportunities in the Philippines can be more widely known among investors based in [Hong Kong].”
“When the capital is here, particularly the Chinese capital, they will give opportunities to investors. It’s just more of an awareness question,” he further said.
Leung concluded that investment would ultimately boil down to access to capital, talent, and technology.