Hong Kong beats Switzerland in global wealth management, study shows

Hong Kong has overtaken Switzerland for the first time in cross-border wealth management, according to a study by the Boston Consulting Group published on Wednesday.

Based on the volume of foreign capital under management in 2025, there were US$2.95 trillion of overseas assets in Hong Kong compared with US$2.946 trillion in Switzerland.
The study said Hong Kongβs greater volume β up 10.7 percent on the previous year β was driven by βmainland China inflows, strong IPO activity, and equity market gainsβ.
Switzerland saw a 7.6-percent increase in the same period.
Cross-border wealth flows intensified in 2025 despite geopolitical tensions and trade uncertainties, increasing by 8.4 percent to reach US$15.7 trillion worldwide, as investors sought to diversify their assets.
βWe are seeing wealth creation, cross-border capital flows, and investment ecosystems increasingly concentrate into a smaller number of globally connected hubs,β said Michael Kahlich, a co-author of the study, from BCG in Zurich.
βHong Kongβs rise reflects the growing gravitational pull of Asian wealth and capital markets.β
Switzerland, though, remains a key financial centre, offering stability and neutrality in an uncertain geopolitical context, the study said.
The Swiss Bankers Association told AFP that the development had taken shape over several years, with asset growth in China being βexceptionally strongβ, from which Hong Kong βdirectly benefitsβ.
Swiss banks βare present there themselvesβ, it added, as Asia is one of their growth priorities.
βFor Switzerlandβs future, competitive framework conditions are particularly crucial,β the association pointed out, adding that it was βessential that regulation remains targetedβ.
The Hong Kong government welcomed the studyβs findings.
βWhile global economic gravity shifts eastward, geopolitical tensions further highlight Hong Kongβs role as a safe harbour, reflecting Hong Kongβs appeal as an international financial centre,β said the secretary for financial services and the treasury, Christopher Hui.