Singapore Wealth-Tech Firms Expand to Hong Kong as First Overseas Market
En resumen
- Chocolate Finance launches in Hong Kong as the latest Singapore wealth-tech firm to expand overseas, offering 3.8% annualised returns on idle cash with no minimum balance.
- CEO Tim Jones cites HK$4 trillion in idle bank savings and Hong Kong's role as a regional wealth hub as key reasons for choosing the city as first market beyond Singapore.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Chocolate Finance is the latest Singapore-based wealth-tech firm to expand to Hong Kong, following a trend of Singapore fintech companies seeking larger markets abroad. The firm offers competitive returns on idle cash to attract retail investors who currently keep substantial savings in low-yielding bank accounts.
Singapore wealth-tech firms are increasingly using Hong Kong as their first major overseas expansion market, betting that the city's large pool of idle savings, deep wealth base and role as a regional financial hub will support the scaling of their retail investment platforms. The latest entrant, Chocolate Finance, launched in Hong Kong last month with a product targeting retail investors' idle cash. It offers 3.8 per cent annualised returns on the first HK$100,000 (US$12,763) with no minimum balance, no lock-up period and daily interest accrual. CEO Tim Jones said the firm chose Hong Kong as its first overseas market because of the amount of idle savings in the banking system. He estimated about HK$4 trillion was sitting in local bank accounts, comprising HK$1 trillion in current accounts and HK$3 trillion in savings deposits. "On average that's about HK$500,000 per person sat in a bank account doing nothing," he said. Beyond the deposits, Jones said Hong Kong's role as a wealth-management hub made it a natural first step outside Singapore, where the firm built and tested its product. He also pointed to the city's high adoption of digital financial services as supportive of a fully app-based model. Chocolate's expansion path also reflects a practical constraint. Singapore's domestic market is smaller, limiting how far platforms can scale at home, while Hong Kong offers a larger and more liquid pool of retail wealth without requiring a major shift in product design or regulatory approach.
Preguntas abiertas
- How will traditional banks respond to this competition for deposits?
- What regulatory framework applies to these wealth-tech platforms in Hong Kong?
- Will other Singapore fintech firms follow the same expansion path?





