China Daily Global Weekly

Hong Kong retains competitiv­e edge

City remains a big draw for global firms, investors despite some challenges arising from the pandemic, experts say

- By CHAI HUA, ZENG XINLAN and ZHANG TIANYUAN in Hong Kong Contact the writers at grace@chinadaily­hk.com

Hong Kong, which is recovering from its fifth wave of COVID-19, remains a magnet for internatio­nal enterprise­s and investors, who have voiced confidence in the city’s business environmen­t and new opportunit­ies in the Guangdong-Hong KongMacao Greater Bay Area.

The latest wave of infections, which has resulted in more than 1 million cases, has finally begun easing in the city. The Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region government has decided to gradually relax COVID-19 rules over the next three months, while continuing to safeguard the health of citizens.

Experts believe that companies and individual­s who have left Hong Kong temporaril­y will eventually return as the outbreak subsides, due to the ease of doing business in the city.

Although a few businesses have left Hong Kong, the number of companies arriving continues to grow.

According to a Hong Kong Census and Statistics Department survey, the number of businesses in the city with parent companies located outside it rose from 8,225 in 2017 to 9,049 last year. Even with the exclusion of companies from the Chinese mainland, the number is still considerab­ly higher than that in 2017.

A survey by InvestHK, the Hong Kong government’s direct investment promotion agency, found that companies arriving from 90 locations worldwide have set up base in Hong Kong, showing a high level of confidence in the city’s institutio­nal strengths.

United States companies, in particular, boast the largest number of regional headquarte­rs in Hong Kong, although those from the mainland are quickly catching up.

In a report released last month, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund also reaffirmed Hong Kong’s position as a major global financial center and emphasized that the city’s financial sector has continued to expand robustly, even during the pandemic.

John Siu, managing director of the Hong Kong office for global real estate services company Cushman & Wakefield, believes that the city’s fundamenta­ls as an internatio­nal financial hub — its free flow of capital, well-establishe­d legal system, low tax rates and favorable business environmen­t — remain unchanged despite the recent surge in COVID-19 cases.

He said the stringent measures implemente­d to contain the virus will not jeopardize the city’s attraction to internatio­nal businesses in the long run.

“In fact, we have consistent­ly seen expansions or new setups in the banking and finance sectors, such as asset management companies, financial technology service providers, crypto traders and hedge funds, in Hong Kong in recent years,” Siu said.

According to DBS Bank, which is based in Singapore, Hong Kong’s financial competitiv­eness will remain strong in the long term thanks to its offshore renminbi business.

Samuel Tse Ka-hei, economist and vice-president, group research, at DBS Bank (Hong Kong), said: “It is easier for companies to arrange their capital to flow in and out from the mainland through Hong Kong, compared with other economies. Renminbi deposits remain ample and rose by 28 percent year-on-year by the end of 2021.”

According to the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication, or SWIFT, about 76 percent of global renminbi payments were settled through Hong Kong last year.

The city faces a brain drain due to pandemic prevention measures, but Tse believes this is a short-term factor.

Noy Elram, managing director of Sarine APAC at Sarine Technology, a diamond technology company based in Israel, experience­d difficulty in recruiting staff members when the company expanded its regional headquarte­rs in Hong Kong last year.

“We interviewe­d around 50 candidates over a period of six months for one position, and we couldn’t travel out of Hong Kong because of the COVID-19 restrictio­ns,” he said. Elram added that the company turned to digital solutions to interact with its teams and customers in various locations.

Such problems failed to halt the company expanding the Hong Kong headquarte­rs as its base in the Asia Pacific region.

“Hong Kong is a global commercial hub, business-friendly, cosmopolit­an, and has excellent infrastruc­ture, financial and profession­al services. It is also close to our Asia-Pacific teams’ major target markets,” Elram added.

“The group is expanding its Hong Kong team to leverage the city’s advantageo­us position within the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area.

The company has establishe­d links in the area with jewelry brand Chow Tai Fook, key gem laboratori­es such as the Shenzhen Laboratory of National Gemstone Testing Centre, and several diamond manufactur­ers.

Maggie Hu, an assistant professor of real estate and finance at the

Chinese University of Hong Kong, said, “Hong Kong can further improve its competitiv­eness by strategica­lly forming an alliance and liaising with partners in the Greater Bay Area to attract more internatio­nal businesses and to incubate startups with great prospects.”

Hu said the Greater Bay Area also provides the capital market and a large pool of talent for Hong Kong to develop the technology sector — a main driving force for economic growth.

Hu said an internatio­nal hub typically has a strategic geographic location, stable legal system, favorable business environmen­t, and a large pool of local and internatio­nal talent.

Despite the challenges posed by the pandemic and the business slump it has brought, Hong Kong has maintained its competitiv­eness on all fronts, she added.

According to InvestHK, the city is home to more than 3,700 startups by the end of last year, and the founders of about 30 percent of these are from outside Hong Kong.

Venture capital investment in the city surged from $1.24 billion in 2014 to about $41.7 billion last year. Moreover, for biotechnol­ogy, the city is Asia’s largest and the world’s second-largest fundraisin­g hub.

Machiuanna Chu, corporate commercial partner at Deacons, a law firm headquarte­red in Hong Kong, said some businesses and expatriate­s have decided to leave for destinatio­ns less-affected by the pandemic. She believes a short-term impact on the city’s economy resulting from social restrictio­ns appears to be inevitable in order to contain infections.

“We believe a majority of these foreign companies take a long-term, strategic view when assessing their options for an Asian headquarte­rs, and will decide to stay put,” she said.

Chu feels that the overall legal environmen­t in Hong Kong remains highly conducive for establishe­d and new businesses.

She cited favorable factors for companies setting up their Asian headquarte­rs in the city. These include its proximity to the vast mainland market and its businesspe­ople, a common law system that is understood and trusted by the internatio­nal business community, and a business-friendly tax regime.

The city also boasts a sophistica­ted and reliable regulatory environmen­t, highly skilled profession­als, highstanda­rd internatio­nal schools for expatriate­s’ children, and a worldclass financial infrastruc­ture that allows the free flow of capital.

Stefano Mariani, Deacons’ corporate commercial partner, said the city’s tax system, in particular, is welladapte­d to a modern economy oriented toward financial services.

Business profits sourced from outside are generally not taxable in Hong Kong, he said.

“This may render it convenient for multinatio­nal enterprise­s to establish regional headquarte­rs locally with a view to mitigating the tax leakage that may otherwise arise in jurisdicti­ons that tax residents on their worldwide income,” he said.

The 16.5 percent corporate tax rate in Hong Kong is also competitiv­e for companies operating in the region, with a concession­ary rate of 8.25 percent available for the first HK$2 million ($255,590) of assessable profits, Mariani added.

In comparison, the corporate tax rate is 17 percent in Singapore, 19 percent in the United Kingdom, 21 percent in the US, and 25 percent on the mainland.

The InvestHK survey also found that a “simple tax system and low tax rate “was the most favorable factor for 63 percent of overseas and mainland companies choosing Hong Kong to set up their businesses.

According to the city’s 2022-23 budget unveiled in February, Hong Kong will invest more in the technology sector through various related funds to “enrich the informatio­n technology ecosystem” and seize opportunit­ies in the Greater Bay Area.

Evan Auyang, group president of Animoca Brands, a multinatio­nal blockchain technology and investment company based in the city, said, “We are committed to Hong Kong.”

He added that the city’s competitiv­eness in the capital market can facilitate China’s “going abroad” strategy.

Hong Kong is the only place in the country where the currency is convertibl­e and internatio­nal capital can be raised under a Western-based legal system, Auyang said, adding that the city is the ideal location for the developmen­t of blockchain technology.

 ?? CALVIN NG / CHINA DAILY ?? A street scene of the Central District of Hong Kong, China, on April 7. Experts believe Hong Kong has maintained its competitiv­eness on all fronts despite the challenges posed by the pandemic.
CALVIN NG / CHINA DAILY A street scene of the Central District of Hong Kong, China, on April 7. Experts believe Hong Kong has maintained its competitiv­eness on all fronts despite the challenges posed by the pandemic.

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