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Hong Kong homes in on Middle East, Indonesia to attract family offices

Hong Kong homes in on Middle East, Indonesia to attract family offices
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Hong Kong homes in on Middle East, Indonesia to attract family offices as city steps up efforts, InvestHK says

The Middle East and Indonesia are the next targets for Hong Kong to attract family offices, but more needs to be done to bolster the city’s status as a global family office hub, according to an executive at InvestHK, the agency in charge of attracting foreign investment.

China is undoubtedly Hong Kong’s biggest family office market, but the city has to adopt an international outlook, said Jason Fong, global head of family office at InvestHK.

There are many opportunities in Indonesia, he said, citing his recent trip to the Southeast Asian country.

“For these big Indonesian family businesses, as well as family offices, they’re familiar with Hong Kong, but surprisingly, they’re not too aware of how much knowledge and wisdom we have in the family office [space],” Fong said.

Jason Fong, global head of family office at InvestHK, speaks at an event on family offices at the HKGCC in Admiralty on Monday. Photo: Jonathan Wong

High-level visits to the Middle East last year by Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po and Hong Kong Monetary Authority CEO Eddie Yue Wai-man were paying dividends, as more wealthy individuals were looking to set up family offices in the city, he said.

Hong Kong had more than 2,700 single-family offices at the end of last year, according to a study published by Deloitte in March.

The city is renowned for its “simple, direct and transparent” tax regime, said Fong, which introduced a slew of tax incentives for family offices in May last year.

Singapore, Hong Kong’s main rival as an Asian financial hub, has stricter rules for family offices to qualify for tax incentives, said Paul Ho, a financial services tax partner at EY.

This includes a 10 per cent threshold of assets under management invested locally, whereas no such requirement in Hong Kong, he said.

Unlike the city state where single-family offices seeking tax concessions must seek approval from the Monetary Authority of Singapore first, Hong Kong has a self-assessment tax regime where the tax concessions automatically apply provided the family offices meet the minimum criteria.

Ho suggested that the government do more, such as setting up a hotline, for family offices to get in touch with the tax department to answer questions related to tax policies, noting that this will “further facilitate the process and provide more certainty”.

InvestHK’s Fong said they were exploring setting up of an art-storage facility at Hong Kong International Airport to serve as a catalyst to speed up and encourage art transactions in the city.

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