Financial Services

Company Profile

Axon Technology Limited is dedicated to the construction of smart city, combining artificial intelligence (AI), big data, cloud computing, Internet of Things (IoT) and other technology system solutions and operational services.

Since founded, Axon Technology Limited has continuously invested in technological innovation and product research and development, has a first-class R&D team, and has worked closely with other technology companies to establish a collaborative team to build a perfect market network of the company. Its business has gradually penetrated into urban public safety, data center, transportation, medical, construction and education. Provide high quality service to customers in tourism, finance and other fields.

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Company Profile
Company Profile

Cutting through the Complexity Machine learning, NLP and predictive analytics can make huge, complex data sets more meaningful, and are incorporated into our daily research and investment process. We aim to apply ML algorithms with historical transactions and other market data to search for best investment opportunities. 

Strengths and expertise 
We start our team’s journey in mainland China with a passion that we want to change the world with our service. We are inspired to be an innovative leader introducing you to new and convenient way to invest in mainland China. Our headquarter is located in Asia’s finance capital city, Hong Kong. We are supported by both governments in mainland China and Hong Kong.  

Development 
The world Bank describes the pace of growth of China as the fastest sustained expansion by a major economy in history. However, annual economic growth has not always translated into comparable growth in domestic stock markets. In 2020, China plans to lift restrictions on foreign ownership. Combined with a simpler process for onshore investments, this creates an entirely new investment opportunity - an opportunity that can no longer be ignored. 

Product service 
Deeper Understanding - Our investment managers are all over a decade of on-the-ground Chinese market experiences. We incorporate critical analysis, unique insight, and rigorous risk management procedures into the full range of investment styles, resulting in better investment products oriented toward long-term performance and gains.

Project Experience
Southeast Asia
Fin-tech
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Company Profile
Company Profile

Munich Re founded in 1880 stands for exceptional solution-based expertise, consistent risk management, financial stability and client proximity. In the financial year 2018, Munich Re (Group) achieved a profit of €2,275m on premium income of €49.1bn. It operates in all lines of insurance, with more than 41,000 employees throughout the world. 

Reinsurance 
With premium income of €31.3bn from reinsurance alone, Munich Re is one of the world's leading reinsurers. We offer a full range of products, from traditional reinsurance to innovative solutions for risk assumption. Especially when clients require solutions for complex risks, Munich Re is a much sought-after business partner. Our roughly 12,000 staff in reinsurance possess unique global and local knowledge. Munich Re attaches great importance to its client service, which regularly receives top ratings. 

Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) 
Munich Re provides services in all relevant BRI countries and has (re-) insurance specialists on the ground. Our main focused segments in 2019/2020 include Property insurance, Engineering insurance, Project Cargo Insurance, and Credit Insurance (for more details, please refer to the attached BRI presentation). 

Project Experience
Africa
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure
Australasia
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure
Central and Eastern Europe
Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure
Latin America
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas)
South Asia
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure
Central Asia
Power and Energy, Transport and Logistics Infrastructure
Southeast Asia
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure, Telecommunications, Water and Waste Management, Manufacturing (industrial parks, logistics parks, machinery), Urban Development
Northeast Asia
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure, Telecommunications, Water and Waste Management, Manufacturing (industrial parks, logistics parks, machinery), Urban Development
Chinese Mainland
Power and Energy, Natural Resources (including oil and gas), Manufacturing (industrial parks, logistics parks, machinery), Transport and Logistics Infrastructure, Urban Development, Water and Waste Management
Middle East
Power and Energy, Transport and Logistics Infrastructure
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Company Profile

Activities 

Refinitiv is one of the world’s largest providers of financial markets data and infrastructure, serving over 40,000 institutions in over 190 countries. It provides leading data and insights, trading platforms, and open data and technology platforms that connect a thriving global financial markets community - driving performance in trading, investment, wealth management, regulatory compliance, market data management, enterprise risk and fighting financial crime. Refinitiv has had a long presence in Asia dating back 160 years, with extensive footprint in the Asia Pacific region. It generates revenue in 35 countries with 6,300 customers in Asia.  Refinitiv has a Belt & Road Infrastructure Database providing insight and analysis on projects. 

History 

Refinitiv is the former financial and risk business of Thomson Reuters after being bought by Blackstone in 2018. Refinitiv has had a long presence in Asia Pacific, with the first Reuters news story datelined in 1858 in Hong Kong. Soon after it was furnishing market prices and quotes to British merchants in China leading to the establishment, in 1913, of a China news service. Refinitiv reopened its China offices in 1956 and has supplied financial information to the Chinese government since 1980. At the beginning of 2019, Refinitiv launched BRI Connect, part of a suite of tools enabling the global investment community to identify investment opportunities around China’s Belt & Road Initiative through access to trusted, holistic information including macroeconomic, project, market, financing, geopolitical and operational risk data.

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Company Profile

Incorporated in 1918, The Bank of East Asia, Limited (“BEA”) is a leading Hong Kong-based financial services group listed on The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong with total consolidated assets of HK$839.5 billion (US$107.2 billion) as of 31st December, 2018.

BEA provides a comprehensive range of corporate banking, personal banking, wealth management, and investment services to customers throughout Greater China and beyond via an extensive network of nearly 200 outlets covering Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, Mainland China, Southeast Asia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. For more information, please visit www.hkbea.com.

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Company Profile
Company Profile

FinEX Asia is a global asset management firm that provides professional and institutional investors with direct access to high quality assets worldwide. We leverage core competencies in technology, risk management, and global networks to achieve superior returns and drive key insights that simplify the asset management experience. We offer carefully structured fund products and elite advisory services to individual and institutional investors while engineering fund management solutions for financial institutions. FinEX Asia is headquartered in Hong Kong and is registered under SFC license# AFQ783.

Project Experience
North America
Technology, Fin-tech
Southeast Asia
Technology, Fin-tech
Northeast Asia
Technology, Fin-tech
Chinese Mainland
Technology, Fin-tech
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Peter Wong, Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited

 

Friction over trade between the world’s two largest economies naturally captures the attention of the business and investment community. The fact that cross-border trade within Asia is already much bigger than Asia’s exchange of goods and services with the U.S. or Europe makes fewer headlines, but is no less important.

 

It begs the question of what kind of networks, relationships and institutions will shape the future of international trade – and the answer to this question is beginning to emerge.

 

In partnership with China, which we expect to become the world’s biggest economy by 2030, a growing number of countries are rejecting economic isolation and beginning to work together to develop a new kind multilateralism.

 

While this process is in its infancy, I believe that a more collaborative approach to connecting economies that is built around growth in Asia has the potential to be the world’s biggest driver of cross-border trade and investment in the decades ahead.

 

Such a dynamic would clearly be an historic opportunity for business and investors everywhere. In order to outline how this could take shape, it is worth considering some context.

 

Asia’s growth over the past half-century has been remarkable. What holds back the world’s most populous region from achieving even greater prosperity is not ambition, entrepreneurialism or a skilled workforce: it is connectivity. This means physical infrastructure such as railways and ports as well as the many other ways that trade is facilitated, such as customs arrangements, digital links and as people-to-people connections.

 

The shift towards a more connected global economy is already underway – and the catalyst is China. In 2013, President Xi Jinping stated China’s intention to “forge closer economic ties, deepen cooperation and expand development space in the Eurasian region.”[1] This was the origin of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which has been widely regarded since that time as a series of infrastructure projects – and which has raised concerns that those projects created “debt traps” for developing countries and that the BRI was essentially closed to non-Chinese businesses.

 

The BRI was never intended as a simply philanthropic aid initiative; the pragmatic calculation behind it is that helping other countries to grow will contribute to China’s own growth. But this can only work when there is broad international engagement with the BRI.  The Second Belt and Road Forum for International Co-operation, held in Beijing in late April, marked the launch of BRI 2.0.

 

“We need to be guided by the principle of extensive consultation, joint contribution and shared benefits,” President Xi told 36 national leaders and some 5,000 delegates – including myself – at the Forum.[2]

 

China’s commitment to a more transparent BRI addressed concerns about debt sustainability and exclusivity, winning support from countries such as Malaysia that had previously expressed concerns. It also enables a new wave of international collaboration and recognizes that the BRI cannot thrive without it.

 

This approach is proving effective. Our discussions suggest that at least 100 countries are now involved in the BRI, which reaches as far south as New Zealand, as far west as the UK, and as far north as the Polar Silk Road.

 

International engagement like this makes a great deal possible.

 

It broadens the spectrum of financing available for BRI projects. Developing Asia alone requires estimated infrastructure investment of USD1.7 trillion a year.[3]  China’s ability to mobilise hundreds of billions of dollars of financing through its policy banks is unique, but meeting needs on this scale will require global private sector capital from institutional investors, commercial banks and multilateral lenders.

 

International support also opens the door for more companies to participate in the BRI. A high quality, more inclusive BRI is good news for global firms in engineering, project design, professional services and many other sectors. It’s especially meaningful for firms from countries like Japan, France, Australia, Italy and Singapore that have signed “third-party market co-operation” agreements with China under which their firms will partner with Chinese companies to build infrastructure in emerging markets.

 

And in the supply chains for BRI projects, there should also be more opportunities for local companies and workers, ensuring that the BRI’s benefits are more broadly distributed in the markets it touches.

 

Six years since its inception, the BRI has proved itself to be a powerful catalyst for growth in cross-border trade and investment. According to official data, the value of trade in goods between China and other Belt and Road countries in 2018 reached 1.3 trillion US dollars, growing by 16.4 per cent year on year.[4]

 

The BRI is also strengthening forms of connectivity that go well beyond physical infrastructure, demonstrating that it was always about more than transportation and energy projects. For example, the value of goods going through China Customs’ e-commerce platform rose by 50 per cent last year, while China signing mutual visa exemption agreements for different types of passports with 57 Belt and Road countries. [5]

 

As it energizes business and investment, the BRI is bringing together networks of trade and investment that are beginning to reveal the outlines of the new multilateralism. This system already has some institutions – such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank – and is beginning to develop its own standards, such as the Green Investment Principles for Belt and Road. However, the BRI is a multi-decade strategy and it will need to involve more institutions and standards to ensure its long term success.

 

Indeed, these are still early days in the evolution of a new network built on ancient routes that has China and Asia at its centre, but which extends to the rest of the world. International participation in the BRI is going to be vital, both for the success of the Initiative itself and as an opportunity for companies and investors everywhere. China’s progression to BRI 2.0 brings that international participation – and the new multilateralism that comes with it – one step closer. While trade tensions may be with us for a while yet, this new phase for BRI is a reason to be optimistic about the future of global trade and investment.

 

(end)

More articles from The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited

03 Aug 2020 The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited
By Mukhtar Hussain, Head of Belt and Road Initiative and Business Corridors, Asia-Pacific, HSBC Belt and Road Initiative offers solid framework for countries big and small to overcome the economic damage caused by pandemic The Covid-19 pandemic has caused a crisis for every economy. At the same time, it has also created an opportunity for the Belt and Road Initiative to prove its value as an international partnership that serves the international good. Amid a fragmented global response to the virus, this network of 138 countries is uniquely positioned to channel trade and investment to developing countries that lack the resources to revive their own economies. China cannot do this by itself, though: no country can. If the initiative is to deliver on its potential to support global recovery, it must be a collective effort. It must also live up to the high standards it has set itself for transparency and sustainability. The International Monetary Fund estimates that some U
By Mukhtar Hussain, Head of Belt and Road Initiative and Business Corridors, Asia-Pacific, HSBC Belt and Road Initiative offers solid framework for countries big and small to overcome the economic damage caused by pandemic The Covid-19 pandemic has caused a crisis for every economy. At the same time, it has also created an opportunity for the Belt and Road Initiative to prove its value as an international partnership that serves the international good. Amid a fragmented global response to the virus, this network of 138 countries is uniquely positioned to channel trade and investment to developing countries that lack the resources to revive their own economies. China cannot do this by itself, though: no country can. If the initiative is to deliver on its potential to support global recovery, it must be a collective effort. It must also live up to the high standards it has set itself for transparency and sustainability. The International Monetary Fund estimates that some U
24 May 2019 The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited
15 May 2019   Policies targeting key priority areas have been instrumental in China’s economic transformation over the past 40 years, according to HSBC Group Chairman Mark Tucker. Mr Tucker was speaking at the sixth annual HSBC China conference in Shenzhen – a city that embodies the impact of targeted policies. Shenzhen’s Special Economic Zone was first established in the 1980s to stimulate private-sector businesses. It has helped the city grow from a small fishing village into “a bustling metropolis…and the birthplace and home of China’s leading tech companies,” Mr Tucker said. Other policies supporting the country’s continued development include opening up China’s capital markets, the Greater Bay Area and the Belt and Road Initiative, according to Mr Tucker. The Greater Bay Area is designed to foster closer economic ties between Hong Kong, Macau and cities in mainland China including Guangzhou and Shenzhen. The Belt and Road Initiative supports
15 May 2019   Policies targeting key priority areas have been instrumental in China’s economic transformation over the past 40 years, according to HSBC Group Chairman Mark Tucker. Mr Tucker was speaking at the sixth annual HSBC China conference in Shenzhen – a city that embodies the impact of targeted policies. Shenzhen’s Special Economic Zone was first established in the 1980s to stimulate private-sector businesses. It has helped the city grow from a small fishing village into “a bustling metropolis…and the birthplace and home of China’s leading tech companies,” Mr Tucker said. Other policies supporting the country’s continued development include opening up China’s capital markets, the Greater Bay Area and the Belt and Road Initiative, according to Mr Tucker. The Greater Bay Area is designed to foster closer economic ties between Hong Kong, Macau and cities in mainland China including Guangzhou and Shenzhen. The Belt and Road Initiative supports
01 Sep 2017 The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited
Peter Wong, Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited In the wake of more isolationist political thinking in the West, with many developed economies turning inward, China is reaching out, seeking stronger trade and investment links with its economic partners. China’s Belt and Road initiative (BRI) is a prime example of this reaching out policy. Under the initiative, China aims to trigger demand for materials and goods at home by investing in strategic infrastructure projects abroad, growing economic ties along its old Silk Road to Europe and along newer maritime links in and around Asia and as far away as Africa, covering all potential points in-between. At its heart, the plan is to enhance global supply chains primarily through debt-financed infrastructure projects, across more than 60 countries. China expects annual trade with these countries to be worth US$ 2.5 trillion within a decade [1] – up from US$ 1 trillion in 2015
Peter Wong, Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited In the wake of more isolationist political thinking in the West, with many developed economies turning inward, China is reaching out, seeking stronger trade and investment links with its economic partners. China’s Belt and Road initiative (BRI) is a prime example of this reaching out policy. Under the initiative, China aims to trigger demand for materials and goods at home by investing in strategic infrastructure projects abroad, growing economic ties along its old Silk Road to Europe and along newer maritime links in and around Asia and as far away as Africa, covering all potential points in-between. At its heart, the plan is to enhance global supply chains primarily through debt-financed infrastructure projects, across more than 60 countries. China expects annual trade with these countries to be worth US$ 2.5 trillion within a decade [1] – up from US$ 1 trillion in 2015
21 Jul 2017 The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited
By Gordon French, Head of Global Banking and Markets, Asia Pacific, HSBC Perhaps it’s inevitable that interest in China’s Belt and Road Initiative tends to revolve around the railway lines, ports and highways that will be constructed in its name. These are the most visible manifestations of the “Belt and Road,” and they evoke beguiling images of the ancient land and sea routes along which silk was once transported from Xi’An to St Petersburg, or tea from Guangzhou to Rotterdam. But sometimes it is the financial dimension of infrastructure in Asia that stands out – because of the sheer scale of what is required. The Asian Development Bank expects emerging Asia to need about US$26 trillion of infrastructure investment between 2016 and 2030. That amounts to US$1.7 trillion a year – and that’s just in Asia, while the Belt and Road encompass Africa and Europe as well. [1] Financing this colossal need for transport, telecoms and energy infrastructure across more t
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15 May 2017 The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited
Peter Wong Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited   To really understand what the “Belt and Road” initiative is all about, it’s best to stop thinking of it as being purely about “roads” and infrastructure “belts.” True, “Belt and Road” will involve building a lot of highways, railways, bridges and other infrastructure – the physical building blocks that will facilitate greater trade flows not just with China’s immediate neighbours, but also with countries as far afield as Europe, Africa and the Middle East. The overall goal is to facilitate regional trade and cooperation by smoothing the passage of goods and services across borders. China expects its annual trade with the more than 65 countries along the “Belt” and “Road” routes to surpass USD2.5 trillion in the next decade, up from about USD1 trillion in 2015.[1] This will bring a welcome boost at a time of anaemic global trade growth
Peter Wong Deputy Chairman and Chief Executive, The Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited   To really understand what the “Belt and Road” initiative is all about, it’s best to stop thinking of it as being purely about “roads” and infrastructure “belts.” True, “Belt and Road” will involve building a lot of highways, railways, bridges and other infrastructure – the physical building blocks that will facilitate greater trade flows not just with China’s immediate neighbours, but also with countries as far afield as Europe, Africa and the Middle East. The overall goal is to facilitate regional trade and cooperation by smoothing the passage of goods and services across borders. China expects its annual trade with the more than 65 countries along the “Belt” and “Road” routes to surpass USD2.5 trillion in the next decade, up from about USD1 trillion in 2015.[1] This will bring a welcome boost at a time of anaemic global trade growth
Company Profile

Zurich Insurance (Hong Kong) is the Hong Kong branch of the global multi-line insurer, Zurich International Life (“Zurich”). Headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland, Zurich serves in more than 210 countries and territories with a wide range of property and casualty, and life insurance products and services. With the development of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Bay Area, Zurich Insurance (Hong Kong) firmly believes that Hong Kong’s insurance industry will gain unprecedented cross-border cooperation opportunities, and support Hong Kong as a regional project and personal risk management center.

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Company Profile

Alter Domus is a fully integrated fund and corporate services provider, dedicated to international private equity & infrastructure houses, real estate firms, multinationals, private clients and private debt managers. The company offers tailor-made administration solutions across the entire value chain of investment structures from fund level down to local Special purpose Vehicles. Founded in Luxembourg in 2003, Alter Domus has continually expanded its global services offer and today counts 39 offices and desks across five continents. Our Hong Kong office is also located in the heart of the economically dynamic Asia-Pacific region, and at the gateway to Mainland China, which Hong Kong is consistently ranked as one of the most attractive locations in the world to do business.  

“Belt and Road” refers to the land-based “Silk Road Economic Belt” and the seafaring “21st Century Maritime Silk Road”. The routes cover more than 60 countries, accounting for 30 per cent of global GDP and more than 30 per cent of the world’s merchandise trade. Currently, the New Silk Road is an endeavor that’s spearheaded by big governments and big international development banks. However, without investment from the private sector this project is little more than a naked framework of new highways and rail lines, vacant SEZs and underpopulated new cities. With the global network of Alter Domus, we believe we are able to enhance the economic corridors and to increase connectivity between countries from China to Europe by opening up opportunities for private investments.

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Company Profile

Bowtie is a licensed life insurance company and Hong Kong’s very first virtual insurer. Built with modern technology and medical expertise, Bowtie’s powerful platform offers medical insurance plans under the Voluntary Health Insurance Scheme (VHIS) and other real insurance products to customers instantly and directly. By eliminating paper, commissions and intermediaries, Bowtie’s mission is to enable a new generation of consumers to access real insurance protection and take control of life protection decisions for themselves. Bowtie is backed with HKD 234 million from Sun Life Financial and supported by leading international reinsurers. Stay up to date at www.bowtie.com.hk

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