Why Chinese tech companies are racing to set up in Hong Kong
7 hours ago Sylvia ChangBusiness reporter, Hong Kong In a hotel lobby on Hong Kong Island, a delivery robot pauses outside one of the lifts as the doors open, and a guest steps out. The robot waits, and then rolls neatly inside. The move looks simple, but it isn't.
People are often getting in the way, and it must be able to take the lift to the correct floor, and then find the right room.
"We aim to make our product succeed in Hong Kong, and then expand outward," says the firm's vice-president, Xie Yunpeng.
This matters because US and European nations have grown more wary of such Chinese companies.
Dubbed "China risk" by some commentators, countries fear state-led espionage and excessive Chinese domination of their tech sectors.
So, they are instead looking to Hong Kong in the first instance.
Invest Hong Kong, the investment promotion agency for the special administrative region, has also reported a rise in the number of mainland firms it has helped to set up or expend in the territory, with innovation and technology among the biggest sectors. Xiaomeng Lu, a director at political consultancy Eurasia Group, says mainland Chinese tech firms are "shifting to Hong Kong" for their primary share listing as "geopolitical headwinds dampen their dreams" to float in New York.
Meanwhile, Wendy Chang of the Mercator Institute for China Studies, a Germany-based think tank, says Hong Kong is "fashioning itself as a connector to the outside world for Chinese companies", with policies to speed up share flotations and help mainland firms set up operations in the city.
In this context, the "strategic value of Hong Kong for high-tech Chinese companies" has increased, says Paul Triolo, a Washington-based partner of global business consultancy DGA Group. Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at French investment bank Natixis, says that Hong Kong offers mainland firms a place where they can show that they can meet international standards while building trust with global investors and clients. For Yunji, that means proving its robots can operate in real-world international settings. The company, which builds its service robots for hotels, hospitals and factories, listed in Hong Kong in October of last year, as it sought to widen its investor base beyond the mainland. MiningLamp Technology, a Chinese AI software company set up its operation in Hong Kong the same month. Its founder, Wu Minghui, calls Hong Kong a "data compliance transfer station", where mainland Chinese firms like his can test how to handle cross-border data flows and build compliance processes before moving into other markets.
But even if a mainland Chinese firm is successful in Hong Kong, it can still face barriers overseas.
Some countries, like the US and UK have also moved to restrict or phase out Chinese suppliers from telecoms networks. Western nations also have broader concerns about Chinese firms' governance and transparency. The Luckin Coffee scandal remains a cautionary tale for many international investors after the Chinese company admitted fabricating sales.
The revelation saw its shares being delisted from New York's Nasdaq stock market in 2020.
Meanwhile, Hong Kong is not as appealing to international companies and investors as it once was.
Dozens of activists, opposition politicians and journalists have been arrested or jailed under security or related laws.
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: