Some denials are more worrying than their absence. A company insisting that its director will be vindicated by the forensic auditors is unlikely to succeed in calming investors; a sports team insisting it has total confidence in its coach is likely to receive a flurry of speculative applications; and a president insisting that ‘we’re not gonna be in a recession in my view’ is unlikely to do consumer confidence a great deal of good.
The major difference here is that the White House has the advantage of being able to mark its own homework. No matter what today’s GDP data shows, Biden’s team will be able to claim the US is not in recession by the cunning mechanism of simply choosing a different definition. Output’s fallen for two quarters in a row? Actually, we think you’ll find it’s a bit more complicated than that; you need to take a holistic view of the economy.

You are probably familiar with the first definition. You’ll find it being used by everyone from the Bank of England to Goldman Sachs to the European Central Bank. It’s even been used by economists at the US Federal Reserve. Take this transcript of a May 1979 meeting of the open market committee responsible for setting interest rates. Called to give forecasts, an economist presenting to the august figures of the committee defines a ‘technical recession’ as ‘two consecutive negative quarters’. Nobody bats an eyelid.

This meeting is particularly interesting given a little more context. It took place at the height of the great inflation, with prices that year rising over 13 per cent as the US economy was buffeted by sudden shocks to energy costs. The second was the presence of one Paul Volcker. In August that year, Volcker would be made chairman of the Federal Reserve. His policies would break the back of inflation, returning the economy to normality at the cost of a steep recession – a historical parallel unlikely to comfort Biden.

The two quarters definition is simple, understandable – and not official in America. As widely adopted as it is, there are other definitions available. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has debunked the naive idea that a technical recession is a technical recession, pointing instead to the definition used by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The NBER dates recessions based on ‘economy-wide measures of economic activity’. Because they’re looking for a big drop in economic activity, across a big chunk of the economy, over an extended period, there is ‘no fixed rule’ for measures and weights. It’s unlikely to declare the US in recession any time soon. This has very little to do with technical definitions: the business cycle dating committee doesn’t like to put a date on peaks and troughs until all the data is in, which takes time. This raises the interesting mental image of Team Biden sitting there declaring all is well while the economy burns down around their ears, waiting for the official proclamation that there is in fact smoke to the fire.

It’s not necessarily the case that the US is about to enter a downturn under any definition. The indicators used to argue that the US is not in recession – employment, industrial output, consumer spending – still show signs of growth. But employment is a lagging indicator which tends to take time to adjust to new economic circumstances, telling you more about how the economy was in the recent past rather than it is now. Consumer spending meanwhile can be driven by concern over the declining value of cash as well as by confidence.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s ‘nowcasting’ model predicts that the US is set for a second quarter of negative economic growth. Given that the latest data is due out today, it would be quite a miss for a generally well-performing estimator if the US turns out to be growing strongly. This concern is compounded by the fact that the Fed raised interest rates again yesterday, further constricting economic activity in the hope of fighting inflation.

And this is the thing; if the US is growing strongly, then Biden has nothing to worry about. You only need to play word games if things are going badly. And while a recession is a fuzzily defined concept, that doesn’t mean that it isn’t something real; there isn’t a scenario where carefully redefining a recession away from ‘two negative quarters of growth’ saves his bacon in the midterms.
Chipmaker sues former employee Jinfeng Luo, accusing him of stealing classified design and source code materials before disappearing
Intel Corporation has filed a civil lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington against former software engineer Jinfeng Luo, accusing him of stealing approximately 18,000 confidential files, some marked 'Intel Top Secret,' shortly before his termination.

According to court filings, Luo, who joined Intel in 2014, was notified on July 7 of his dismissal as part of a wider round of corporate layoffs, with his employment ending later that month.

Intel alleges that on July 23, Luo attempted to transfer company files to an external drive, but security systems blocked the attempt.

Three days before his final day, he is said to have connected a home-based network-attached storage (NAS) device, enabling him to download tens of thousands of documents from Intel’s internal systems.

These reportedly included engineering documentation, internal testing data, source code, and technical plans for unreleased processors and architectures.

The company discovered the breach through routine information-security audits and immediately began an internal investigation.

Intel’s legal complaint states that for more than three months, the firm tried to contact Luo by phone, email, and certified mail at addresses in Seattle and Portland, but received no reply.

Luo’s current whereabouts remain unknown.

Intel is demanding at least $250,000 in damages, the return of all stolen materials, and injunctive relief to prevent further use or disclosure of its trade secrets.

The case, filed under Intel Corporation v.

Luo (Case No. 2:2025-cv-02159), invokes the U.S. Defend Trade Secrets Act and related state laws.

While the allegations are detailed, Luo has not yet responded publicly, and no criminal charges have been announced.

The lawsuit comes during a turbulent period for Intel, which has been restructuring amid fierce competition from AMD, Apple, and Nvidia.

The company has already laid off tens of thousands of workers since 2023 in an effort to stabilize profitability.

The alleged theft adds to Intel’s recent series of internal security breaches — including a previous case where another engineer was convicted of misusing confidential Intel data after joining Microsoft.

For Intel, the case highlights not only the risk of insider breaches during mass layoffs but also the critical importance of securing trade secrets in an era of rapid technological competition.

Whether Luo’s alleged actions were linked to future employment or external influence remains unclear.

For now, the company’s message is unmistakable: the protection of its intellectual property remains a top priority as it works to rebuild trust and maintain its strategic edge in the semiconductor race.
Locally developed hydrogen power unit supports the golf event at the 15th National Games, advancing low-carbon innovation in the Greater Bay Area
The Hong Kong and China Gas Company Limited (Towngas) has unveiled the city’s first integrated hydrogen power generator in support of the 15th National Games of the People’s Republic of China.

As silver sponsor of the Hong Kong competition region, Towngas has installed the unit at the golf venue in Fanling, using locally produced hydrogen combined with a battery energy storage system to supply temporary electricity to the police command centre, volunteer headquarters and event offices.

Developed jointly by Towngas and Chi Shing New Energy Technology, the system roughly the size of a shipping container is positioned as a low-carbon alternative to traditional diesel generators, producing only water vapour during operation.

Officials from the Electrical and Mechanical Services Department visited the site to evaluate safety and operations, marking a milestone in Hong Kong’s hydrogen-energy deployment.

Mr Don Cheng Hill-kwong, Chief Operating Officer (Hong Kong Business) of Towngas, said the initiative demonstrates the city’s innovative capabilities in hydrogen energy application and aligns with broader ambitions in the Greater Bay Area to accelerate green development.

Academic groups have also been invited to tour the system, underscoring the educational and industrial synergy envisaged.

The move by Towngas highlights an important trend: hydrogen energy is increasingly being integrated into high-profile infrastructure and events.

The Hong Kong government’s Strategy of Hydrogen Development has already approved multiple pilot projects, including hydrogen extraction from existing pipelines and vehicle-fuel cell applications.

Looking ahead, Towngas said it plans to expand hydrogen-energy applications across multiple sectors in Hong Kong and the Greater Bay Area, reinforcing the transformation to a sustainable energy ecosystem and supporting key regional sporting and cultural events.
Wong Chun Ting and Doo Hoi Kem get off to a strong start at the 15th National Games in Macao as co-hosts authorised venues begin competition
Hong Kong’s mixed doubles team of Wong Chun Ting and Doo Hoi Kem opened their campaign in impressive fashion at the 15th National Games of China, defeating Hebei’s Zhou Yu and Zang Xiaotong 10-12, 11-8, 11-7, 11-5 in the round of 16 on Saturday at Macao’s Galaxy Arena.

Their match was played in front of a vibrant crowd and marked the first major contest staged in the Macao competition zone as part of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao co-hosted event.

Macao resident and volunteer interpreter Liu Feng Theresa cheered the performance and noted the significance of the national sport being engaged at such a level.

“As table tennis is known as our national sport, there will be fierce competition at the Games definitely, while the strength of China’s Hong Kong and Macao paddlers is noteworthy in particular,” she said.

Both players emphasised their focus on process over outcome.

Wong, aged 34 and the torch-bearer for Hong Kong in the relay, stated that the pair needed to “move forward step by step and just focus on each match,” while Doo, 28, added that the seeding “didn’t give us pressure… we are clear about our status and will not regard ourselves as the top duo.” Their familiarity was evident: Doo remarked that they “grew up together in training camps… we are familiar with each other and have great relationship.” Wong added that the enthusiastic Cantonese-speaking crowd provided an extra boost.

Macao’s hosting of the table tennis events, which are scheduled from 7 to 20 November at the Galaxy Arena, forms part of the region’s role in the landmark Games—its first time as a venue for China’s premier multi-sport event.

A schedule released in May confirms that Macao is designated to host the table tennis competitions, along with other sports including women’s volleyball and 3×3 basketball.

Theresa also pointed to the broader impact: with Macao’s student population increasingly active in sports, she said large-scale staging like the National Games “will further ignite the passion in younger generations.” She noted Macao local paddler Zhu Yuling, world number six and gold medallist at the United States Smash this July, will open her Games campaign in the singles draw on Monday, setting further hope for the territory.

With strong starts from the Hong Kong pair and growing local engagement in Macao, the table tennis competition promises to be a focal point of the Games’ multi-city showcase of sport, culture and integration across the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area.
The Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macau co-host edition of the Games is officially launched with an ambitious cultural and technological opening ceremony
President Xi Jinping officially opened the 15th National Games of China at the Guangdong Olympic Sports Centre in Guangzhou on Sunday evening, marking the first time the event is co-hosted by Guangdong province, Hong Kong and Macau.

The opening ceremony featured a dramatic blend of cutting-edge technology and southern China’s Lingnan cultural heritage.

Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu, attending as part of the city’s delegation, described the opportunity to co-host the Games as an “immense honour” and said the city was ready to make its mark across the eight elite sports and two cross-boundary competitions it will stage.

Hong Kong athletes are already making headlines: cyclist Ceci Lee Sze-wing defended her women’s road-race title and gave the city a second gold medal just before the formal opening.

The ceremony emphasised the role of the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macau Greater Bay Area as a dynamic hub, with Xi stating the Games would highlight “the vibrant landscape of Chinese modernisation” in the region.

Hong Kong’s involvement includes venues such as the Hong Kong Velodrome for track cycling and the Kai Tak Sports Park hosting rugby sevens and handball—events the city has been preparing for with a record delegation of more than 600 athletes.

For Hong Kong, the Games represent both a major sports opportunity and a platform for broader regional integration.

Lee attended the flame-lighting ceremony days earlier in Guangzhou’s Nansha District, where the torch was symbolically drawn from marine methane-ice under the South China Sea—a fusion of technology and natural heritage.

Officials say the event is on track to be “simple, safe and splendid,” with over 16 000 volunteers mobilised and extensive test-events completed.

As the Games proceed through November 9 to 21, Hong Kong officials are keen to see athletes such as fencers Cheung Ka-long and Ryan Choi Chun-yin build on their success at past Asian and Olympic events.

With the spotlight now on the city and the wider Greater Bay Area, the focus will be on how effectively the co-hosting model and cultural spectacle deliver both sporting excellence and regional showcase value.
Rare Chinese coins and paper money fuel strong Asian market performance with standout individual lots

The autumn auction staged by Stack’s Bowers & Ponterio in Hong Kong spanned eight days and encompassed approximately 8,500 lots of world coins, Chinese rarities and paper currency. The sale realised in excess of US$18 million, underlining the firm’s pre-eminence in the numismatic market and demonstrating growth in Asian demand.

The opening session, dubbed “Rarities Night”, featured 233 premier lots focused on Chinese treasures and achieved US$6.206 million in total. A gold “Flying Dragon” dollar pattern (Lot 40161) led the session, achieving a hammer price of US$504,000. Other notably strong performers included a Kiangnan 7 mace 2 candareen gold coin graded PCGS MS-62 (Lot 4005) which realised US$240,000, and a gold presentation “Pavilion” dollar (Lot 40173) also selling for US$240,000.

Across subsequent sessions, additional highlights included a Foochow Arsenal silver award medal (Lot 40229) that realised US$140,000, and a gold 10-tael ingot dating circa 1750 (Lot 41039) which fetched US$78,000. From the Philippines, an 1828 overstrike on a Peru-mint 8 reales (Lot 43496) achieved US$114,000. Paper-money sales likewise thrived: a People’s Bank of China 10 yuan note (Lot 31075) realised US$114,000 and a Hong Kong Chartered Bank of India, Australia & China US$5 note (Lot 31101) sold for US$55,000.

Throughout the auction, Chinese rarities—both in coin and paper form—anchored the market, reflecting strong regional collector interest and international investor participation. The realisation of multiple six-figure lots and a total auction result above US$18 million further reinforce the company’s leading position and the robustness of the Asian numismatic segment.

As consignors and bidders now assess the results, the performance offers insight into price levels for Chinese rarities and paper money entering market channels in 2025. With global collectors increasingly active in Asia, the Hong Kong auction sets a benchmark for forthcoming world-currency and numismatic sales in the region.

CEO Bill Winters says the bank will build on Hong Kong’s fintech framework and blockchain pilot projects to advance its next-generation banking model
Standard Chartered is placing Hong Kong at the core of its digital-finance ambitions as the bank gears up for a blockchain-driven future, according to Chief Executive Bill Winters.

In a recent interview the banker emphasised the city’s “pioneering regulatory framework” that supports experimentation with tokenisation, central-bank digital currency and other innovations.

Winters praised the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) for its pilot programmes and regulatory sandboxes, which have enabled participants to safely work on projects such as tokenised deposits and stablecoins.

He added that Standard Chartered, as one of Hong Kong’s note-issuing banks, is actively engaging in the local fintech ecosystem and participating in the HKMA’s initiatives.

“We’re going to remain ahead on digital technology, and what we lose in margin, we’re going to make up in volume by providing a better service to our customers,” Winters said, signalling a shift in the bank’s operating model.

He noted that Hong Kong’s newly announced five-year fintech strategy will strengthen the city’s role as an innovation hub and aligns with the bank’s vision of a tokenised financial system.

For Standard Chartered, the commitment to Hong Kong fits within a broader push across Asia to deepen its digital and wealth-management franchises.

Winters has described the future of money as “fully digital” and predicted that virtually all transactions will eventually settle on blockchains.

Even as the timing of that transformation remains uncertain, he said, experimentation in Hong Kong offers a platform to shape how new settlement infrastructure and tokenised assets will operate.

Analysts observe that the move highlights Hong Kong’s renewed relevance in global finance as it seeks to reassert itself as a gateway to China and a platform for digital-asset innovation.

Standard Chartered’s strategy suggests that as banking income growth faces pressure, leveraging fintech and tokenisation may offer alternative growth pathways.

The bank’s focus on Hong Kong may also reflect confidence that the region will remain a favourable jurisdiction for experimentation in digital finance.

Winters reinforced that for the bank the question is no longer whether to invest in digital-asset infrastructure—but where and how.

With Hong Kong delivering a regulatory ecosystem that blends safety with innovation, Standard Chartered views the city as the natural anchor point for its digital-finance ambitions.
Bill Ford cites surging Chinese innovation, eased U.S.–China tensions and a reinvigorated Hong Kong market as key global investment drivers
Bill Ford, chairman and chief executive of the U.S. private-equity firm General Atlantic, issued a stark warning to Western investors at an investment summit in Hong Kong, stating that avoiding China “at your own peril” risks missing “tremendous investment opportunities.” His comments reflect the firm’s perspective on China’s evolving role in global markets and underscore the strategic importance of engaging with the region’s innovation ecosystem.

During a week-long visit to China preceding the summit, Ford highlighted the rise of a new generation of Chinese entrepreneurs pursuing global market leadership across sectors including industrial automation and medical technology.

He said their ambition to “be global leaders” marks a shift beyond serving exclusively domestic demand.

Ford further pointed to recent improvements in U.S.–China relations and the revival of the Hong Kong equity market as enhancing the appeal of Chinese and regional investment.

Ford’s remarks come as the orbits of geopolitics and capital converge.

Although trade and security issues remain, he said the current phase presents an “entry point” for Western capital to tap China’s growth trajectory.

He described the region not as a purely emerging-market play but as central to multiples strategies including digital infrastructure, climate tech and healthcare.

At General Atlantic, Ford has overseen expansion into more than 20 countries and asset-under-management growth to approximately US$114 billion, with China among its strategic geographies.

He emphasised that investors who “sit on the sidelines” may forgo participation in breakthrough valuation arbitrage and innovation flow from the region.

Analysts say Ford’s message reflects a broader recalibration of risk, where caution over China is giving way to selective engagement.

Challenges remain—ranging from regulatory opacity to decoupling concerns—but the narrative among some global managers is shifting toward identifying consistent entry points rather than full withdrawal.

Ford framed this as a timely moment.

He asserted that for Western investors, the question is no longer “whether” to engage with China, but “how” to do so smartly.

Ford concluded that China’s integration into global capital markets, when combined with Hong Kong’s renewed financial positioning and easing bilateral tensions, creates a compelling crossroads for investment strategy.

He stressed that the opportunity, in his view, merits serious attention from global allocators.
The University of Hong Kong aims to mass-produce radioligand therapies in the Northern Metropolis, targeting cancers such as nasopharyngeal carcinoma
The University of Hong Kong (HKU) is moving to establish a nuclear-medicine production facility in the Northern Metropolis development area, with the goal of halving the cost of imported therapies and expanding access.

The initiative builds on successful clinical trials conducted by HKU using radioligand therapy (RLT) between 2020 and 2023 for neuroendocrine tumours, according to Professor Victor Lee Ho-fun, chairman of HKU’s Department of Clinical Oncology.

The proposed plant, to be sited in the Northern Metropolis megaproject zone in Hong Kong’s New Territories, will aim to manufacture isotopes and delivery agents for use in treatment of nasopharyngeal cancer—a disease notably prevalent in southern China, including Hong Kong, Macau and Guangdong province.

Professor Lee pointed out that current therapies for nasopharyngeal cancer are “not very effective”, and the localised manufacturing would allow both innovation and cost-reduction.

Radioligand therapy uses radio-labelled molecules to deliver targeted radiation to cancer cells.

Hong Kong already widely utilises such nuclear-medicine techniques for prostate cancer.

HKU researchers are now adapting their RLT platform to tackle different tumour types.

A key enabler of the scheme is the Northern Metropolis initiative, which envisions new industrial infrastructure and innovation clusters across the region.

The government’s development plan states that the Northern Metropolis will support high-end professional services and innovation-technology industries, positioning it as a strategic site for advanced health-science manufacturing.

The university said the facility would contribute to the broader Hong Kong-Greater Bay Area ambition to establish a downstream production cluster for nuclear medicine and therapeutics.

By localising supply chains, HKU envisages cost savings and improved availability, particularly for cancers with regional concentration.

Observers say that if realised, the plant could add a layer to Hong Kong’s health-science ecosystem and reduce reliance on overseas imports of specialty isotopes and radiopharmaceuticals.

HKU emphasised that project planning remains in early stages, including regulatory approval, manufacturing licensing and site-design work.

The next steps involve detailed feasibility studies, partnership discussions with industry and hospitals, and alignment with radiation-safety frameworks.

The university noted that its prior achievements in nuclear-medicine research and the strategic land-use potential of the Northern Metropolis make the plan timely and regionally strategic.

Should the production facility advance as proposed, it may mark a significant step in Hong Kong’s transition from research to manufacturing in the life-sciences sector, expanding access to advanced cancer therapies and reinforcing the city’s role in the Hong Kong–Shenzhen science corridor.
Despite its largest-ever consumption subsidy effort, China’s Guangdong province faces tepid public response amid economic uncertainty
Guangdong province’s ambitious consumer subsidy initiative, which launched in early November with a headline commitment of 3.5 billion yuan (roughly 492 million US dollars), has so far failed to ignite broad consumer enthusiasm.

The scheme, which offers discounts on goods from smartphones to snowboards and will run until March, aims to spur domestic spending ahead of the 2026 National Games and key holidays.

The programme reflects Beijing’s broader effort to rebalance its economy by boosting consumption as exports face trade-tension headwinds and the property sector remains under pressure.

Guangdong – China’s most populous province and a major export hub of 128 million people – is seeking to generate a surge in foot traffic and spending through subsidised goods transactions.

However, on-the-ground feedback has been underwhelming.

Many locals say the vouchers do not deliver sufficiently generous discounts to overcome lingering caution in the face of job-market fragility and broader economic uncertainty.

One Shenzhen resident remarked that the incentive “wasn’t enough” to justify a large purchase.

In addition, some retailers said the promotional pricing was opaque, and that the discount layers were modest in practice.

Analysts observe that Guangdong’s difficulties underscore structural headwinds facing China’s consumer-led growth model.

Although consumption voucher programmes have shown near-term impact in past years, their success is heavily conditioned on underlying consumer confidence.

With youth unemployment elevated, property market policy still unsettled and external demand softening, households remain in wait-and-see mode.

Moving forward, Guangdong officials plan to pivot the voucher campaign toward major events and holidays – including the National Games and Spring Festival – in the hope of creating targeted “spikes” in spending.

But for the momentum to be sustained, experts say the region may need to expand the scheme beyond durable goods and appliances to services such as dining, tourism and leisure, which could engage a larger share of household budgets.

If consumer sentiment does not improve, Guangdong’s high-profile subsidy effort may struggle to close the consumption gap it was meant to address.
HKU launches investigation after paper containing non-existent references generated by AI prompts student misconduct probe
The University of Hong Kong (HKU) has initiated an internal investigation after a published academic paper, led by a PhD candidate, was found to contain multiple non-existent references apparently generated by artificial intelligence (AI).

The corresponding author, Professor Paul Yip Siu-fai of HKU’s Department of Social Work and Social Administration, issued an apology on Sunday on behalf of himself and the lead author, Ms Bai Yiming.

The issue was raised when a user on the social-media platform Threads flagged the paper’s reference list as potentially the output of “AI hallucination”—a term used to describe instances where AI systems fabricate plausible-looking but non-existent information.

Professor Yip acknowledged that Ms Bai had used AI to assist with the referencing process without individually verifying each citation, and he accepted oversight responsibility as corresponding author.

In his statement, Professor Yip asserted that while the agreement to submit the paper followed two rounds of peer review, he believed the paper’s findings were not themselves fabricated and therefore did not constitute academic misconduct in his view.

He noted that other co-authors served only in support roles and did not contribute to the reference validation process.

The university said that it had established stringent policies on AI use and had asked the relevant faculty to conduct a full assessment of the matter.

The case reflects wider challenges in higher education concerning the responsible integration of generative AI in academic workflows.

Universities globally are adapting policy frameworks to address risks such as reference fabrication, ghost-writing and other integrity concerns, and HKU’s investigation may yield precedents for emerging oversight mechanisms.

As the probe unfolds, attention will focus on the university’s governance response, the extent of policy enforcement and whether academic sanctions will follow.

HKU declined to comment on the disciplinary outcome but affirmed its commitment to upholding academic integrity and reviewing procedures for the use of AI tools in research.

The investigation is ongoing.
Lee secures second consecutive gold in the women’s road race, becoming just the third Hong Konger to claim multiple National Games titles
Hong Kong cyclist Ceci Lee Sze-wing successfully defended her women’s road-race title at the 15th National Games in Zhuhai on Sunday, completing the 138.7 km course in three hours, 19 minutes and 54 seconds.

She edged out Guangdong’s Wei Xiaoqing and Liaoning’s Sun Jiajun to provide Hong Kong with a second gold medal at this year’s Games, following the city’s earlier sailing victory.

In celebrating Lee’s achievement, Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Rosanna Law Shuk-pui said she was “thrilled and excited” and that Lee had once again “brought glory to Hong Kong”, reinforcing the city’s capacity to compete strongly at the highest level of elite sport.

Lee’s victory also marks her distinction as the third athlete from Hong Kong to win gold more than once at the National Games, following the legacies of Wong Kam-po and Sarah Lee Wai-sze.

Lee is set to receive HK$750,000 (approximately US$96,000) from the Hong Kong Jockey Club in recognition of her title defence and outstanding performance.

Her victory is especially notable given the field’s heightened expectations: after claiming her first gold in Shaanxi in 2021, she entered the 2025 Games as a marked rider, yet she produced a decisive sprint to retain the crown.

With cycling Hong Kong’s most fruitful sport at the National Games—accounting for 23 medals since first competing in 1997—Lee’s win adds to the city’s proud record.

The road-race route, held partially in the Greater Bay Area, proved suited to her pacing strategy and sprint finish.

As Hong Kong’s cycling programme continues to evolve under international coaching leadership, Lee’s performance underscores the city’s growing strength and ambition.

Moving forward, Lee is expected to transition to the track events held in Hong Kong later in the Games, where she remains a strong medal contender.

Her back-to-back golds may well mark her emergence as a dominant figure in Hong Kong’s cycling future.
The city’s medical regulator comes under pressure amid dual inquiries after a patient was left in a vegetative state following a clinic endoscopy
Hong Kong’s medical regulator has come under intensified scrutiny after it was revealed that the Medical Council of Hong Kong (MCHK) closed an inquiry into a patient who became vegetative following an endoscopy, raising fresh questions about professional oversight.

The case involves Mr Andy Chan Suk-wai, aged fifty, who visited a Kowloon clinic in July 2021 and saw his blood pressure and oxygen levels collapse within minutes of anaesthesia.

He was subsequently transported to hospital after suffering pulseless electrical activity and remains in a vegetative state.

Mr Chan’s sister, Ms Kitty Chan, publicly accused the MCHK of handling the investigation “haphazardly” after a four-year wait and absence of action.

She confirmed she has launched civil proceedings against both a general surgeon and an anaesthetist in respect of alleged professional misconduct.

The incident follows another high-profile case in which the council terminated its hearing into a paediatrician accused of causing lifelong disability in a child, prompting the government health chief to order a review of the council’s process.

The government has since announced an investigation by the city’s ombudsman into the administrative support provided to the medical-regulation bodies after a fifteen-year delay surfaced in that past inquiry.

In its response, the council acknowledged it would review its own handling of the paediatric case and said it remains committed to safeguarding patient interests.

Meanwhile, patient-rights advocates say the endoscopy incident underscores longstanding concerns about transparency, timeliness and accountability in the disciplinary system.

Analysts observed that the twin episodes create a pivotal moment for Hong Kong’s healthcare governance.

While the council’s statutory powers permit investigations into professional misconduct, the public’s confidence hinges on visible outcomes and adequate procedural safeguards.

As the review proceeds, all eyes are on whether systemic reform will follow, and whether the latest allegation will lead to meaningful disciplinary action.

The case of Mr Chan and the broader governance challenge suggest that for patients in Hong Kong, the standards of oversight and remedy in serious medical‐error incidents remain very much in the spotlight.
As major cases proceed and international tensions rise, the city’s national-security enforcement shows no signs of easing
Hong Kong enters the sixty-fourth month of its national-security crackdown with a fresh wave of legal developments, as authorities press ahead with trials, arrests and restrictions under the city’s sweeping security framework.

The month has brought highly visible cases and international diplomatic exchanges that underscore the depth and breadth of Beijing’s security agenda for the territory.

On October 9, the trial of Kwok Yin-sang commenced at West Kowloon Magistrates’ Courts.

He is charged under Article 23 of the Hong Kong Basic Law for allegedly handling funds belonging to his daughter, fugitive activist Anna Kwok.

The case is the first instance in which a family member of a wanted activist is criminally prosecuted under Hong Kong’s national-security law.

Kwok pleaded not guilty and the hearing has been adjourned to December 23 for closing arguments.

Several other prominent cases advanced last month.

A 19-year-old woman pleaded guilty to sedition after appearing in videos promoting a “shadow legislature” the authorities deem subversive, while a 16-year-old boy admitted to conspiring to commit secession over his alleged involvement with a Taiwan-based independence organisation.

Separately, an 89-year-old man was arrested on October 1 under the Safeguarding National Security Ordinance for setting up a demonstration, though he was later released on bail.

In a separate domain, scrutiny of the independent film scene intensified, as the city’s film regulator confirmed that since November 2021 a total of 13 films had been banned on national-security grounds and 50 required edits.

This comes as the Office for Film, Newspaper and Article Administration refused to publish a full list of the titles affected.

On the diplomatic front, Hong Kong and Chinese authorities rebuffed UK and US calls for the release of media tycoon Jimmy Lai ahead of the anticipated verdict in his national-security trial.

Beijing’s top diplomat in Hong Kong delivered a warning to the newly appointed US consul general, Julie Eadeh, issuing so-called “four don’ts” in relation to contact with activists, foreign interference and national-security cases.

The government reported that as of November 1 a total of 348 individuals had been arrested on suspicion of acts endangering national security since the law came into effect in 2020. Among those charged, 172 persons and one company are either convicted or awaiting sentencing; 77 people have been convicted under the national-security law.

The figures illustrate how national-security policies have become an established part of Hong Kong’s legal and political landscape.

Observers say the latest developments signal a continuation of the city’s wide-ranging security enforcement phase, reflecting Beijing’s intention to maintain tight oversight of dissidence, foreign links and media operations in its global financial centre.

For Hong Kong, the sixty-fourth month of enforcement reaffirms that national-security policy remains among the most consequential influences on the territory’s rule-of-law environment and international standing.

“Hong Kong has transformed from a contesting space into one of managed stability,” said one legal analyst.

“What we are seeing now is the long-term phase of a security regime that far outlasts the immediate protest era.”
Legislative Council votes 71 to 14 against limited legal recognition for same-sex couples, leaving the government under pressure to meet a court deadline
Hong Kong’s Legislative Council has voted down a government-proposed bill that would have offered limited legal recognition for same-sex couples, marking a significant setback for LGBTQ rights in the city.

The legislation, rejected by 71 votes to 14 with one abstention, was introduced in response to a 2023 Court of Final Appeal ruling that required the government to create a framework for recognizing same-sex partnerships by October 2025.

The proposed Registration of Same-Sex Partnerships Bill sought to grant couples certain civil rights, including hospital visitation, access to medical information, authority over organ donation, and decision-making in funeral arrangements.

The measure would not have legalized same-sex marriage but was intended to bring Hong Kong into compliance with the court’s directive.

Opponents, including pro-Beijing legislators and conservative religious figures, argued that the bill undermined traditional Chinese family values and that society lacked consensus on the issue.

Some lawmakers warned it could open the door to full marriage equality, which the government has said is not currently under consideration.

Following the vote, the government expressed disappointment but said it would respect the outcome and explore alternative administrative options to fulfill its obligations under the court order.

Rights advocates described the veto as a “missed opportunity” for Hong Kong to demonstrate inclusivity and align with global standards of equality.

Surveys from the Chinese University of Hong Kong have found that around 60 percent of residents support same-sex marriage, indicating growing acceptance among the public despite political resistance.

Activist Jimmy Sham, whose legal case prompted the original ruling, said the rejection was regrettable but vowed to continue pressing for change.

Legal analysts warned that the government must still comply with the court’s timeline, raising the possibility of renewed judicial intervention if no viable framework is introduced.
Outdoor-safety tool has already aided 272 rescues since January 2024 and will receive major upgrade in December
Hong Kong’s police force is preparing a significant upgrade to its “HKSOS” mobile application this December that will introduce live location sharing for groups and increase the number of emergency contacts users can designate.

Since its launch in January 2024, the app has been credited with aiding the rescue of 272 people.

Senior Superintendent Swalikh Mohammed of the Digital Policing Services Bureau reported that the app has achieved 150,000 downloads to date and that all search-and-rescue missions involving the app so far have been completed without prolonged delays.

The current version allows users—particularly those engaging in outdoor activities like hiking, paragliding and canoeing—to alert the 999 emergency call centre with a single tap.

An upcoming feature upgrade will enable users to form groups of up to ten people and track each other’s locations in real time throughout a journey.

Another enhancement is the further deployment of the patented “Signal Radar” technology, which allows rescue teams to pinpoint a user’s location even if the mobile device lacks signal reception.

Rescuers may use the radar on helicopters or drones in terrains where conventional telecoms coverage is unavailable or unreliable.

The new version is part of the police’s broader push to boost outdoor safety in Hong Kong’s challenging terrain and strengthen the connection between digital tools, live rescue capability and community involvement.

The force is also increasing public education efforts to raise awareness of the app’s features and promote its relationship with designated emergency contacts as part of its “outdoor safety-first” initiative.

With the upgraded functionalities, the app is expected to enhance response times and coordination among users and rescuers—particularly for remote or signal-poor areas—and broaden the safety net for both individuals and small groups engaged in outdoor recreation.
Co-hosting on November 9–21 underscores the region’s strategic role and integration under the Greater Bay Area plan
Hong Kong has stepped into a pivotal role as co-host of the 15th National Games of China, playing a key part alongside Guangdong province and Macau in what is the first-ever multi-jurisdiction sporting event of its scale across the Greater Bay Area (GBA).

The Games run from November 9 to 21 and represent a milestone in both sports and regional integration.

The city will stage eight sports events, with venues such as Victoria Park and others already declared “ready” by Chief Secretary Chan Kwok-ki, who described Hong Kong’s involvement as of “immense significance” and a sign of the central government’s confidence.

The co-hosting arrangement expands Hong Kong’s international event-hosting credentials and aligns closely with national priorities under the GBA framework.

Observers say the Games offer more than competition: they act as a vehicle for infrastructure connectivity, tourism growth, talent mobility and the alignment of regulatory regimes across the GBA.

One standout example is the cross-border road cycling route beginning in Zhuhai, passing over the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge and into Hong Kong’s territory, symbolising the region’s evolving integration.

While the event marks a significant shift in scope, it also brings operational and logistical challenges, including the coordination of immigration, venue readiness and cross-border services.

Hong Kong’s dedicated National Games Coordination Office is managing these demands in partnership with mainland and Macau authorities.

For Hong Kong’s government, hosting parts of the Games is an opportunity to reinforce the city’s status as a global sports hub and to deepen its links with neighbouring cities in the GBA.

Chan said the legacy will extend beyond November, helping sustain the city’s sports, tourism and development agenda in the years ahead.
As mainland China diversifies exports and markets, Hong Kong plays a growing intermediary role for regional and global flows
China’s merchandise trade has shown resilience this year, expanding by around six per cent in yuan terms for the first nine months of 2025. This growth momentum reflects steady external demand and an evolving trade structure aimed at mitigating reliance on any single market.

However, the regional performance has been uneven.

Exports to the United States fell by 27 per cent year-on-year in September, while shipments to the European Union rose 14.2 per cent.

Exports to Africa surged 56.4 per cent, and trade with the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) region increased 15.6 per cent, highlighting Beijing’s push for greater diversification.

Within this shifting landscape, Hong Kong’s role has gained strategic importance.

Official data show goods trade between mainland China and the city stood at US$261.56 billion in the first nine months of 2025, with mainland imports from Hong Kong climbing 86.6 per cent year-on-year in dollar terms.

Mainland China’s exports to Hong Kong also rose by 12.6 per cent, outpacing last year’s growth.

Survey data from the Hong Kong Trade Development Council indicate a marked improvement in exporter sentiment: in the third quarter the confidence index rose decisively above the fifty-point threshold for current and expected conditions, with 64 per cent of respondents anticipating stable or improving profit margins.

Many cited the mainland and ASEAN markets as key growth drivers.

Analysts say Hong Kong is increasingly acting as a trade “accelerator” for China’s pivot away from traditional Western markets towards the global south and intra-Asian corridors.

Its deep integration with the mainland, robust service and logistics infrastructure, and liberal trade regime afford the city a unique intermediary function.

The city is poised to leverage this in upcoming initiatives such as joining the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership and expanding Belt-and-Road linkages.

While headwinds such as trade tensions, global slowdowns and competition from other regional ports remain, Hong Kong’s evolving role suggests it could harness its free-port status and gateway position to support China’s broader trade strategy.

Its success will depend on how effectively it moves beyond bottlenecks and enhances value-added services to maintain its standing in the changing architecture of global commerce.
Major travel agencies tailor high-end visitor offers as the city co-hosts the 2025 National Games alongside Guangdong and Macau
Hong Kong’s travel sector is ramping up for a significant influx of visitors as the city prepares to co-host the 15th National Games of China from November 9 to 21 alongside Guangdong and Macau.

Travel agencies are offering bespoke packages aimed primarily at mainland Chinese tourists, with the region expecting around one hundred thousand additional visitors during the event.

The bespoke travel offerings focus on high-spend sports tourists and include four-star to five-star hotel stays, chartered transport and access to events such as rugby sevens, golf, beach volleyball and basketball.

Tour operators say the premium demographic is particularly drawn to the multifaceted experience—combining high-profile sport with Hong Kong’s famed leisure and hospitality scene.

Accommodation deals have already emerged, such as one at a flagship hotel near Kai Tak Sports Park, offering exclusive rates and benefits for National Games ticket-holders.

Meanwhile, mainstream agencies are promoting customised itineraries that bundle sports event access with luxury dining, retail and regional experience, positioning Hong Kong as a destination for more than just leisure tourism.

Independent travel, however, is expected to dominate the visitor mix.

Because ticketing for many events requires individual registration under the event organisers’ rules, large group tours face constraints.

Travel firms anticipate that many visitors will self-book their tickets and then seek premium accommodation or local experiences, resulting in strong spill-over for hospitality, retail and food & beverage sectors.

Economists caution that while this surge presents a window of opportunity for Hong Kong’s tourism industry, the long-term economic uplift may be modest.

Shared hosting with Guangdong and Macau diffuses direct financial gains for the city and high accommodation costs may discourage longer-stay mainland visitors.

Even so, tourism authorities hope the National Games will enhance the city’s sports-tourism profile and attract a more mature, high-value visitor segment in the years ahead.

As the city prepares for the Games, travel agencies and hotels alike are betting on sports tourism to accelerate Hong Kong’s repositioning as a destination for premium leisure, business and event travel alike.
With eight events under its belt Hong Kong gears up for action ahead of the November 9 opening ceremony
Hong Kong is firmly in action ahead of the opening ceremony of the 15th National Games of China on November 9, serving as co-host alongside Guangdong and Macau for a historic multi-jurisdiction sporting event that runs until November 21. The city will stage eight competitions and is already seeing “sell-out” crowds and high anticipation.

Major venues such as Kai Tak Sports Park and Victoria Park have been prepared for events ranging from beach volleyball to men’s handball and rugby sevens.

One official noted that day-passes for key events featuring fencing champion Cheung Ka-long have already been snapped up, and shopping centres across all eighteen districts are set to livestream the action as for the Paris Olympics.

Chief Secretary Eric Chan Kwok-ki described the arrangement as enhancing Hong Kong’s reputation, saying that the central government’s “high degree of trust” in the city underlines its capability to deliver large-scale competition.

He added that hosting the Games will deepen cooperation within the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao region, promote tourism and help bolster economic development.

Observers say that co-hosting the Games is not just about sport.

It symbolises the city’s growing role within the Greater Bay Area initiative and the integration of infrastructure, talent and jurisdictions across the three regions.

While there remain significant organisational and logistical demands—border coordination, venue readiness and large crowds—Hong Kong’s preparation appears well advanced.

As the Games kick off in earnest, the success of Hong Kong’s hosting efforts will be closely watched—not only by athletes and spectators, but by regional planners assessing the city’s place in the evolving Greater Bay Area framework.
Financial-services chief cites tripling of startups over decade and signals tech pivot after JPEX fallout
Hong Kong’s fintech ecosystem has grown significantly over the past decade, and the special administrative region’s government is now looking to artificial intelligence (AI), blockchain and tokenisation as key drivers for the next phase of innovation.

The city’s Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau Director, Xu Zhengyu, spoke publicly about the shift after marking ten years of FinTech Week.

Xu noted that startups in the city have increased from about 1,600 to nearly 5,000 over ten years, with around 1,200 fintech firms now active—representing consistent year-on-year growth.

He said the quantitative expansion was now giving way to qualitative changes, as the ecosystem matures and embraces new technologies.

Turning to the future, Xu identified AI, blockchain and tokenised assets as “the current phase” of fintech development.

He pointed to examples such as converting long-term rental income into tokenised investment products and using blockchain to underpin asset-income streams like electric-charging stations.

According to Xu, these real-world applications signal that fintech is moving beyond pilot stage into implementation.

Xu also addressed the aftermath of the JPEX cryptocurrency case, which saw losses exceeding HK$1.5 billion (about US$190 million) after an unlicensed digital-asset platform restricted withdrawals.

He acknowledged that rapid growth presents challenges, especially in investor education and understanding of new products, and stressed the importance of strengthening awareness and transparency as the city develops its technology-driven finance agenda.

The commentary coincides with the launch of a five-year plan dubbed “Fintech 2030”, with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s roadmap identifying data infrastructure, AI, resilience and tokenisation as its four strategic pillars.

Industry observers say the renewed focus positions Hong Kong to leverage its role as an international finance centre and to integrate the mainland-Hong Kong market with new digital-asset protocols.

Xu concluded that although the journey is far from complete, the city is well-placed to harness the intersection of finance and technology: “We can also see qualitative changes as the ecosystem becomes richer and more mature,” he said—adding that education and cautious rollout will be key to ensuring innovations benefit investors and businesses alike.
During a visit to southern China, the Chinese president urged Guangdong to deepen cooperation with Hong Kong and Macau across technology, infrastructure, and governance to drive regional development
President Xi Jinping has directed Guangdong province to take a leading role in advancing the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area initiative, calling for stronger cooperation with the two special administrative regions in innovation, infrastructure, regulation, and governance.

His comments, delivered during an inspection tour of the province, mark his most detailed remarks on the Greater Bay Area since the Communist Party’s Central Committee outlined priorities for China’s next five-year development plan.

Xi told senior Guangdong officials that developing the Greater Bay Area is both a major responsibility and a rare opportunity, urging them to expand ties with Hong Kong and Macau in areas such as technology, infrastructure connectivity, market regulation, and judicial collaboration.

The Greater Bay Area, which includes Hong Kong, Macau, and nine Guangdong cities, aims to build an integrated economic and innovation hub to rival global metropolitan regions such as Tokyo Bay and the San Francisco Bay Area.

The initiative is a cornerstone of Beijing’s broader effort to modernize China’s southern economy and foster cross-border synergy under the 'one country, two systems' framework.

Xi’s call for deeper alignment follows recent progress in joint Guangdong-Macau projects, including the Hengqin Cooperation Zone, which has advanced cross-border business integration and talent exchanges.

Analysts say the new emphasis underscores Beijing’s intent to solidify Guangdong’s role as the anchor of China’s high-tech and manufacturing transformation.

However, aligning distinct legal and financial systems between the mainland and the two special administrative regions remains a complex challenge.

Xi’s message makes clear that Guangdong’s mission is to turn policy ambitions into practical outcomes, reinforcing the Greater Bay Area as a pivotal driver of national growth.
The number of candidates declaring professional backgrounds drops by ten percentage points from last poll amid evolving electoral contests
Only forty-five, or twenty-eight per cent, of the one hundred and sixty-one candidates for Hong Kong’s upcoming Legislative Council election have declared professional occupations such as teaching, law, accountancy, engineering or architecture—a ten-percentage-point decline compared with the previous election cycle.

The drop occurs despite an overall rise in nomination numbers and signals a shifting candidate profile ahead of the 7 December poll.

The most pronounced decline is in the sector-based functional constituencies, where the number of professional candidates has fallen from twenty-five in 2021 to just fifteen in the current contest.

In nearly all of the twenty-eight functional constituencies there are only two contenders each, compared with multiple-way races in the past.

For example, in 2021 some seats such as the medical and health services and accountancy sectors attracted five-way and four-way contests respectively; such competition has now nearly vanished.

Across all constituencies, nineteen professionals are standing in the Election Committee constituency and eleven in the geographical constituencies, showing slight shifts in candidate placement though a general retreat from the professions in the functional blocs.

Among the professional-background contestants are twelve from the legal sector—including Thomas So Shiu-tsung, a former president of the Law Society—and eleven academics or teachers such as Ray Cheung Chak-chung of City University.

Analysts suggest the reduction in professional-sector participation may reflect changes in the electoral environment and candidate dynamics since the 2021 reforms.

With fewer competitors in each functional-sector race and more district-councillors and local community figures seeking nomination, observers note a change in the mix from sector-based professional representation to broader civic-layer candidacies.

The 2025 election will also feature a high-number of newcomers and retirements, making it a critical test of the legislature’s evolving composition.

The nomination period closed with 161 valid forms submitted, already slightly higher than in the prior cycle.

Returning officers are now vetting eligibility under the Candidate Eligibility Review mechanism, with final lists set to be published in the Government Gazette within 14 days.

Voting will proceed on 7 December for the full 90-member legislature under the reformed electoral system.
Chinese firms strike multiple billion-dollar licensing deals in 2025 as the country emerges as a major pharma exporter
China’s biopharmaceutical industry is entering a new era of global influence, having secured a wave of billion-dollar licensing agreements with major international drug companies this year.

These deals mark a decisive shift: Chinese firms are no longer just catching up, they are now shaping the direction of global pharmaceutical innovation.

In December 2022 one landmark accord saw US drug-maker MSD licence global (ex-China) rights to seven antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) cancer candidates from Sichuan Kelun‑Biotech Biopharmaceutical for an upfront payment of US$175 million and potential milestone payments of up to US$9.3 billion.

Analysts regard that deal as the turning point for China’s export-oriented biotech ambitions.

By the first eight months of 2025 Chinese biotech companies had concluded at least 93 overseas licensing agreements totalling approximately US$85 billion in potential value—demonstrating how China has become a major exporter of innovative medicines, rather than merely a manufacturing base for foreign drugs.

Much of the momentum is rooted in oncology: ADCs, bispecific antibodies and other high-complexity therapies developed in China are now attracting global investment at scale.

One estimate projects China’s outbound licensing activity may reach US$60 billion across more than 150 deals by year-end.

Several structural factors underpin this surge: improved R&D capabilities in China, regulatory reforms that accelerate development and approval, and cost advantages that make Chinese-origin assets attractive to Western pharmaceutical companies facing pressure from patent expiries and pricing constraints.

In the first quarter of 2025 China accounted for 32 % of global out-licensing value, up from 21 % the previous year.

Although concerns remain—including regulatory scrutiny overseas, supply-chain tension and domestic pricing pressures—Chinese biotechs are increasingly positioned as sources of high-value assets.

Their transformation from generic-drug makers into global innovators signals a major strategic shift in the international drug-development ecosystem.

The broader implication is that global pharmaceutical firms must now engage China not simply as a market but as a partner in research and innovation.

With more high-value deals expected, China’s biotech industry is stepping into a new role as a pillar of the global drug pipeline and a key driver of medical innovation.

The pace and scale of these licensing agreements suggest that the age of China as a purely manufacturing powerhouse is coming to an end—and it is becoming a strategic collaborator in defining the next generation of therapies.
Operation ‘Momentum’ uncovers coordinated scam exploiting government-guaranteed financing, with bribery of frontline bank staff
Hong Kong’s anti-corruption agency and police have arrested 32 individuals — including 13 frontline bank employees — as part of a joint operation that uncovered a HK$140 million (US$18 million) fraud involving government-backed small- and medium-enterprise (SME) loans.

The sting, designated Operation “Momentum”, took place on October 30 and 31 and targeted 28 loan applications submitted on behalf of 22 SMEs.

The Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) revealed that bribes totalling HK$500,000 were paid to staff at ten banks to facilitate the scheme.

Investigators say intermediaries orchestrated the entire process, from application preparation to bank submission, with the involvement of both loan applicants and bank insiders.

The loans in question stem from the SME Financing Guarantee Scheme, which offers 80 %, 90 % and 100 % government guarantees for eligible firms—measures originally intended to assist businesses amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The 100 % guarantee product launched in April 2020 and ran until March 2024.

ICAC principal investigator Grace Yee Hin-Lai cautioned that the misconduct was enabled by weak oversight in the loan-guarantee process and noted that banks and commercial clients alike would face more rigorous checks going forward.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority and the Hong Kong Mortgage Corporation Limited are working with regulators to review the integrity of the guarantee scheme in light of the arrests.

Banking sources say affected institutions are now conducting internal reviews of staff-referral processes and enhancing training on detecting illicit loan submissions.

Authorities froze some assets and are investigating how funds flowed once disbursed.

The case adds to a series of recent loan-fraud operations in Hong Kong, underlining the challenges facing pandemic-era relief programmes when exploited by well-organised syndicates.
Travel agencies launch event packages for mainland visitors as Hong Kong expects more than 100,000 attendees for the Games
Hong Kong’s travel agencies are capitalising on the upcoming 15th National Games by introducing specialised tour packages for mainland Chinese visitors, coinciding with a broader tourism rebound in the city.

The Games, jointly hosted for the first time by Hong Kong, Guangdong and Macau, are projected to draw more than 100,000 visitors to local venues throughout the month.

Tour operators said the focus is on premium packages that combine attendance at sporting events with leisure activities.

Golf and rugby sevens have proven the most popular attractions.

Timothy Chui Ting-pong, executive director of the Hong Kong Tourism Association, said mainland tour groups are generally smaller and composed of a more mature demographic with higher spending power.

The city will host eight disciplines of the Games, including fencing, track cycling, triathlon, beach volleyball, men’s handball, men’s under-22 basketball and golf.

Packages typically include dining, shopping and sightseeing to extend visitor stays and enhance economic impact.

Industry representatives noted that limited ticket allocations for tour groups could pose a challenge but expressed optimism that flexible arrangements and additional travel permits would help meet demand.

Tourism analysts said the National Games present a valuable opportunity to position Hong Kong as both a sports and leisure destination, strengthening its international appeal.

The event marks a milestone for the city’s sports tourism sector, blending large-scale athletic competition with cultural and recreational experiences designed to boost long-term visitor engagement.
Start-up from Singapore crowned overall champion at EPIC 2025; separate track winners in fintech and healthtech also announced
A Singapore-based battery-recycling start-up has claimed the overall title at the ninth edition of EPIC 2025 (Elevator Pitch International Competition), hosted by the Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP) at Hong Kong’s Kai Tak Cruise Terminal.

More than one hundred semi-finalists from 28 economies gathered to compete for a top cash prize of US$60,000 and exposure to the region’s leading investors.

The winner, a Singaporean venture specialising in battery-recycling technologies, impressed judges with its circular-economy model and will receive the US$60,000 prize.

The competition also honoured winners in three tracks: fintech, digital healthtech and greentech.

Singapore’s Belli, which develops air-cargo software, took the fintech prize of US$20,000, while Canada’s KA Imaging secured the digital healthtech award after presenting a spectral X-ray system able to differentiate materials.

EPIC 2025 drew a record load of applications — nearly 1,200 start-ups from over 70 countries entered this year’s edition, reflecting the event’s growing status as Asia’s top pitch competition.

As part of the programme, finalists participated in networking and investor-matching sessions during EPIC Week at Kai Tak, with the Grand Finale broadcast globally.

HKSTP officials described the event as a showcase of Hong Kong’s ambition to serve as a launchpad for innovation into the Greater Bay Area and wider Asia.

The success of the battery-recycler underscores the growing interest in greentech solutions targeting the circular-economy and energy-storage sectors — areas that are increasingly strategic for Asia’s technology and sustainability agenda.

Investors and won-up participants alike noted that the competition provided a rare platform for smaller clean-tech start-ups to access capital, mentorship and regional market opportunities.

With EPIC now firmly established on the global start-up calendar, the spotlight is on how the winners convert their pitch success into commercial and regional growth.
Chinese solar giant seeks $126.7 million in Hong Kong listing to fund diversification amid trade and supply chain pressures
Chinese renewable energy manufacturer Sungrow Power Supply Co. has filed for an initial public offering on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, aiming to raise approximately $126.7 million through the sale of 338 million shares.

The listing is designed to strengthen its capital base for investment in next-generation solar and energy storage technologies while expanding production and research capabilities overseas.

The move highlights Sungrow’s growing pivot from its traditional inverter business toward broader energy solutions.

In the first half of 2025, Sungrow reported revenue of $6.1 billion, a year-on-year increase of around 40 percent, while net profit rose by roughly 56 percent.

For the first time, international markets accounted for 58 percent of total sales, surpassing domestic revenue.

The company’s energy storage systems business has surged, growing 127 percent year-on-year to $2.45 billion, and now makes up more than 30 percent of total revenue.

In contrast, the contribution of inverters has declined to about 35 percent.

In its prospectus, Sungrow cited “uncertainties associated with tariffs, international trade regulations, and geopolitical tensions” as key business risks.

Analysts say the Hong Kong listing will help diversify Sungrow’s access to global capital while reducing exposure to policy constraints linked to the ongoing U.S.–China trade dispute.

Industry observers view the IPO as part of a wider transformation among Chinese clean energy manufacturers.

Increasingly, companies are expanding beyond single-technology products into integrated renewable systems such as solar-plus-storage and hybrid energy plants.

Sungrow’s evolution mirrors this shift, positioning it as both a leading technology provider and a participant across multiple segments of the clean-tech value chain.

By securing funds in Hong Kong, Sungrow aims to accelerate its global manufacturing buildout and consolidate its position as one of the world’s foremost renewable technology companies amid a rapidly evolving market landscape.
Altamura Distilleries appoints Six Days Distro in Hong Kong and Elire HK in China to spearhead Asian market entry
Altamura Distilleries, the premium Italian vodka producer crafted from 100 % Puglian wheat, has signalled a formal launch into Asian markets, beginning with distribution partnerships in Hong Kong and mainland China.

In Hong Kong, the brand has appointed Six Days Distro to manage channel placement across luxury hotels, cocktail bars and curated retail environments.

In mainland China, Elire HK will drive introduction via Shanghai with plans to expand into Beijing, Shenzhen and Guangzhou.

Co-founder James Goggin said the company views Asia as “one of the most exciting growth opportunities” and lauded Hong Kong and Shanghai as global hubs of gastronomy, cocktails and luxury culture.

The partners were selected for their shared ethos of provenance, authenticity and craft.

Altamura’s Asian debut follows recent expansion in India through a distribution agreement with a Delhi-based firm.

The brand emphasises its unique production process—distilled from wheat linked to a PDO-certified bread region in Altamura, Italy—and positions itself in the ultra-premium vodka segment.

For Hong Kong, Six Days Distro brings strong ties to boutique spirits and a network embedded in the city’s high-end hospitality scene.

Altamura will target leading cocktail bars and luxury hotel outlets as part of its roll-out strategy.

In China, Elire’s Shanghai headquarters and access to luxury lifestyle venues provides the brand with a platform to address sophisticated consumers seeking imported spirits with provenance.

As global vodka consumption evolves and Asian markets grow in importance for premium spirits, Altamura’s entry underscores both the appeal of Italian craft vodka and the belief that the region remains fertile for growth.

The success of the launch will depend on brand storytelling, on-trade activation and the ability to differentiate in a competitive premium category.
Twelve-team tournament pairs full members with associate nations to promote cricket growth across Asia
The Hong Kong Cricket Sixes 2025, scheduled from November 7 to 9 at the Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground, will feature twelve international teams, including leading cricketing nations and several rising Associate members.

The event, known for its rapid six-a-side format, marks a major revival of a Hong Kong sporting institution first launched in 1992.

The Sixes, sanctioned by the International Cricket Council, is now positioned as a key development platform for smaller cricket nations to compete alongside top-tier sides.

Associate teams such as Hong Kong, Nepal, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates will join established participants including India, Australia, England, and South Africa.

Organisers believe the 55-minute matches, featuring six-over innings, will provide valuable exposure for emerging players while keeping the format exciting for fans.

Anurag Bhatnagar, a senior administrator at Cricket Hong Kong, said the event’s revival is driven by a renewed emphasis on inclusivity and growth.

“This is a unique product, the only tournament of its kind that is truly nation versus nation,” he said.

“It’s about cricket development, giving players from Associate countries the opportunity to play alongside big names.”

The tournament has received significant institutional support, with Hong Kong’s Major Sports Events Committee granting it official status and matching private sponsorships with public funds.

This recognition aligns with the city’s strategy to strengthen its profile as a regional sports hub.

The Sixes’ return also means Hong Kong is unlikely to relaunch its previous Twenty20 franchise league, which ended in 2018.

With televised coverage and a growing global audience, the Hong Kong Sixes is set to combine nostalgia with new purpose.

For emerging cricket nations, it offers more than just a showcase — it provides a gateway to higher-level competition and renewed ambition within the international cricket community.
Research led by CUHK identifies high-risk adults and develops a Chinese-specific risk model to curb rising young-onset cases
Diabetes poses a mounting public-health challenge in Hong Kong, with over 700,000 residents living with the condition and more than 570 deaths recorded in 2023 alone.

Health authorities and researchers alike emphasise that lifestyle changes, early diagnosis and effective management remain pivotal to preventing the serious complications associated with the disease.

In a major prevention drive, the Faculty of Medicine at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) has launched a screening scheme targeting 9,000 adults aged under 44 who have at least one identifiable risk factor, such as obesity, family history of diabetes or inadequate physical activity.

As of early November, more than 3,300 participants have been tested and about 45 % of them flagged as high-risk.

The initiative is timed to address the growing prevalence of young-onset type 2 diabetes, which research shows carries a higher burden of complications and an elevated risk of cardiovascular and kidney disease.

Complementing the screening programme, CUHK scientists in collaboration with the University of Oxford have developed the first Chinese-tailored predictive tool for diabetes-related complications.

The model—based on data covering over 21,000 diabetes patients and validated against a cohort of 170,000—can evaluate an individual’s lifetime risk of developing ten major complications including stroke, end-stage kidney disease and cancer.

The tool is designed to help doctors personalise treatment plans and guide cost-effective resource allocation by predicting outcomes in a way that reflects population-specific risk profiles.

Research conducted by CUHK has also quantified the substantial economic and productivity losses associated with diabetic disease in Hong Kong.

A modelling study estimated that working-age adults with type 2 diabetes face productivity-adjusted life-year (PALY) losses of 17 % for men and 28 % for women over their working lifetimes, translating into a combined gross-domestic-product loss of approximately HK$232 billion.

The impact was found to be especially severe among younger patients.

To bolster efforts, the Government launched a three-year pilot scheme in 2023 that subsidises private-sector screening and treatment for diabetes.

Officials say that alongside medical interventions, public-health messaging must reinforce the role of balanced diet, regular exercise and weight control in delaying or preventing onset of the condition.

With World Diabetes Day on November 14 flagged as a critical reminder, experts urge the community not to ignore early warning signs of the disease.

If the city is to bend the curve of its diabetes epidemic, researchers argue that combining targeted screening, predictive analytics and lifestyle-based prevention constitutes the most promising approach.
Late-bloomers David Wong, Johnny Wong and Andy Cheng will represent Hong Kong in mass-participation tennis event
David Wong Ka-chuen, Johnny Wong Koon-wah and Andy Cheng Man-nam are set to represent Hong Kong in the men’s tennis team draw of the 15th National Games of the People’s Republic of China, under the category of mass-participation events.

Their selection highlights a pathway for non-professional athletes to compete on a national stage.

Both Johnny Wong and Andy Cheng only picked up competitive tennis in their late thirties and forties.

Cheng, the eldest of the trio at 53, exemplifies the late-starter model, while Johnny Wong, previously a recreational volleyball player, began training after discovering his aptitude.

David Wong had played in his teens but paused for more than thirty years before returning to the sport.

“The reason I play now is for health,” Johnny Wong explained.

“I cannot handle the big jumps volleyball demands with age.” He added that performance fluctuates: “Maybe I had a really good week and kept winning, but this week I just cannot get into that state.” David Wong stressed the additional effort required: “Before, I did not stretch at all.

Now I have to stretch as soon as I wake up and again before going to bed just to keep my body ready for tennis, especially matches.”

The mass-participation events of the Games cover nineteen sports and are designed to offer everyday athletes the opportunity to experience national competition without preliminary rounds.

Hong Kong’s delegation to the Games will be exempted from preliminary rounds in these events.

While most media attention focuses on elite stars such as tennis prodigy Coleman Wong and Olympic fencing champion Cheung Ka-long, this trio’s trajectory offers a different narrative: one of perseverance and regional representation beyond professional rank.

Their inclusion underscores the Games’ message of “benefit ordinary people, make a healthy China.”

Hong Kong’s mass-participation athletes say they hope their participation will inspire broader public engagement in sport, and show that competitive experience is accessible even in mid-life.

Their event will take place alongside the main competition events in the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area from November 9–21 2025.
Cyclist Ceci Lee, rugby-sevens star Cado Lee and others reveal what fuels them and how they indulge in ‘cheat’ meals
Hong Kong’s top athletes preparing for the upcoming 15th National Games have offered a rare glimpse into their nutrition routines—and the “cheat” foods they reserve for special occasion.

Cyclist Ceci Lee Sze-wing admits cheesecake is her weakness, rugby-sevens standout Cado Lee Ka-to opts for double cheeseburgers, and sprinter Alton Kwok Chun-ting confesses to loving milkshakes.

Triathlete Hilda Choi Yan-yin describes her dietary regimen as largely rice-and-meat based, noting: “I’ll eat any meat alongside; I’m not picky and don’t follow a special diet; I just make sure I get all the nutrients I need.” On her cheat day she enjoys Hong Kong egg-puffs (gai daan jai).

Each athlete stressed the high demands placed on them—ample carbohydrates, lean protein, supplements such as iron (for women) and magnesium (for recovery)—while acknowledging that indulgence plays a role in maintaining morale.

“Coming from an Asian culture, I love eating rice; I have it every day for lunch and dinner,” Choi said, underlining the cultural comfort of staple foods even at the elite level.

Their honesty highlights how sport science frameworks embrace both rigid training plans and human flexibility.

The athletes’ ‘cheat’ choices underline that high-performance regimes can integrate moments of normalcy—not purely sanitised menus.

With the National Games now less than a week away for many Hong Kong competitors, nutrition discussion is front-of-mind across disciplines.

The athletes’ candour also offers a public relations boost to local sport, showing the city’s high-performance talent as both disciplined and relatable.

How much these dietary approaches translate into success will be watched closely during the event—but for now, the combination of sacrifice, staple diet and well-earned treat is firmly on the menu.
NFRA issues guidance encouraging mainland insurers to sponsor collateralised sidecar vehicles out of Hong Kong’s ILS framework
China’s insurance markets regulator, the National Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA), has issued new guidance prompting domestic insurers and reinsurers to establish collateralised “sidecar” structures in Hong Kong.

The move is aimed at deepening access by Chinese re-/insurers to international capital via Hong Kong’s insurance-linked securities (ILS) ecosystem and enhancing risk-transfer capacity for disaster and large-loss exposures.

The NFRA’s Notice on the Issuance of Insurance-Linked Securities on the Hong Kong market (October 2025) outlines steps to encourage quota-share vehicles and special-purpose insurers that can issue equity or debt-type securities to investors, funding reinsurance obligations of Chinese cedants.

These vehicles would sit alongside catastrophe bonds already issued by mainland sponsors such as Taiping Reinsurance Company (“Silk Road Re”, US$35 million, Dec 2024) and PICC Property and Casualty Company Limited (“Great Wall Re”, US$32.5 million, 2022).

According to the NFRA, the initiative supports three objectives: enriching channels for risk diversification, improving domestic insurance-market resilience and enhancing Hong Kong’s status as an international financial centre.

The regulator stated that solvency treatment of sidecar structures would align with reinsurance-counterparty risk measures, and listed management requirements referencing its existing cat-bond ILS framework.

Industry observers view the launch of sidecar guidance as the next evolutionary step in China’s ILS journey—providing Chinese insurers with a more flexible tool than excess-of-loss catastrophe bonds and enabling quota-share and retrocession business to tap global capital markets via Hong Kong.

One data point noted by the community: outstanding collateralised reinsurance sidecar structures globally have surpassed US$17 billion as of mid-2025, showing investor appetite for this format.

The development comes amid broader liberalisation of the Chinese insurance-financial sector.

Earlier this year the NFRA removed the requirement for Hong Kong and Macau financial institutions to have at least US$2 billion in assets before investing in mainland insurers (effective March 2025).

That reform is seen as complementary to the sidecar initiative, signalling Beijing’s intent to deepen cross-border risk-and-capital linkages in insurance markets.

While details of future sidecar transactions remain emergent, the guidance positions Hong Kong as a growing ILS hub and offers Chinese cedants an avenue to alleviate rising catastrophe-exposure pressures.

The success of the initiative will depend on regulatory clarity, investor take-up and the ability of Chinese insurers to adopt quota-share models with sufficient transparency and capital-market depth.
Pony AI raises HK$6.7 billion and WeRide HK$2.4 billion as both list in Hong Kong on November 6 amid global capital-market shifts
Two leading Chinese autonomous-driving firms, Pony AI Inc and WeRide Inc, made their Hong Kong Stock Exchange debuts on November 6, marking a significant moment in the robotaxi and mobility-technology sector.

Pony AI raised approximately HK$6.71 billion (about US $863 million) after pricing shares at HK$139 each, while WeRide generated roughly HK$2.39 billion (around US $308 million) via its offering priced at HK$27.10 per share.

For Pony AI, whose U.S. listing on the Nasdaq was completed last year, the Hong Kong listing is described by the company’s co-founder and chief executive Peng Jun as a “key step in our global capital strategy and, more importantly, a milestone that connects us to broader resources as we face the global market.” The company noted that around half of the net proceeds will be allocated to large-scale commercialisation of its Level 4 autonomous-driving technology, with the balance supporting AI research and general corporate use.

WeRide’s offering likewise underscores ambitions to scale robotaxi operations.

Its founder and chief executive Tony Han Xu highlighted what he termed the “huge economic and social benefits” of safe and reliable autonomous driving and confirmed that about 40 percent of the funds raised would enhance the company’s technology stack and accelerate fleet deployment and global expansion, including in Europe, Singapore and Japan.

Despite the successful capital-raises, both stocks fell on debut trading—Pony AI shares dropped around nine per cent and WeRide roughly ten per cent—a reflection of investor caution in a crowded listing market and questions about near-term profitability in the robotaxi space.

Analysts note that while autonomous mobility is a high-growth theme aligned with China’s industrial strategy, it remains a capital-intensive business with long lead-times to scale.

The dual listings also reflect a broader trend of U.S.-listed Chinese tech firms securing secondary or dual listings in Hong Kong, driven by regulatory uncertainty in the United States and the city’s rising prominence as a global listing venue.

For Hong Kong’s capital markets, the arrival of two high-profile autonomous-driving listings bolsters its credentials as a destination for next-generation mobility technology firms seeking global scale.

With the offering proceeds now committed, both Pony AI and WeRide are entering a critical commercial phase: scaling fleets, refining autonomous systems, and proving business models beyond pilot operations.

How they execute in the coming three to five years will determine whether their ambitious capital-market valuations are justified.
Beijing warns against external interference after US President raised the case of the jailed Hong Kong media mogul
China declared that the case of Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai is solely an internal matter and standing external pressure will not succeed.

At a press briefing, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning described Lai as “the principal mastermind and perpetrator behind the series of riots that shook Hong Kong” and affirmed the central government’s full support for the Hong Kong judiciary.

Her remarks followed reports that U.S. President Donald Trump raised Lai’s case during a recent meeting with Xi Jinping in South Korea.

Trump is reported to have urged Xi to consider Lai’s release, citing concerns over Lai’s health in solitary confinement.

China declined to confirm the specifics of that discussion and insisted the matter remains under Hong Kong’s judicial process.

Mao insisted that Hong Kong affairs are an internal matter of China and must not be subject to foreign intervention.

She said: “Any attempt to interfere with the judicial process or to undermine the rule of law in Hong Kong will not succeed.”

Lai, founder of the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily, faces charges of colluding with foreign forces and publishing seditious materials under Hong Kong’s national security law.

If convicted he may be subject to life imprisonment.

His case has become a focal point in international relations, with his son publicly appealing for increased diplomatic pressure.

The statement signals Beijing’s firm stance that judicial and security issues in Hong Kong fall within its sovereign domain and underlines its resistance to external calls for intervention.

The coming weeks are expected to see continued diplomatic fallout as allies evaluate their responses to Lai’s trial and the broader implications for Hong Kong’s legal autonomy.
Leading AI pioneers say machines now demonstrate human-equivalent capabilities in multiple domains, redefining the debate over artificial general intelligence.
At the Financial Times Future of AI Summit in London, a group of prominent artificial intelligence researchers and industry leaders declared that AI systems have reached what they consider to be human-level intelligence in certain domains.

The announcement, made by figures including Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, Meta’s Chief AI Scientist Yann LeCun, Yoshua Bengio, Geoffrey Hinton, Fei-Fei Li, and Bill Dally, reignited global debate about whether artificial general intelligence (AGI) has already arrived.

Huang said, 'For the first time, AI is intelligence that augments people, it addresses labour, it does work.

We have enough general intelligence to translate the technology into an enormous amount of society-useful applications in the coming years; we are doing it today.' His remarks were echoed by LeCun, who emphasized that AGI will not be a sudden event but a gradual expansion of capabilities across domains.

Bengio, while cautious, added that 'we are already there'—suggesting that human-level performance in some tasks may no longer be hypothetical.

The claim comes as AI systems continue to surpass human benchmarks in translation, pattern recognition, and data reasoning.

However, experts caution that these achievements remain limited to specific, well-defined areas.

True AGI—defined as the ability to understand, learn, and apply knowledge across all contexts, including emotional and moral reasoning—remains a point of contention.

A recent AGI Progress Report found that while modern systems outperform humans in narrow tasks, they still lack the breadth and adaptability of full human cognition.

Analysts note that what qualifies as 'human-level' is itself ambiguous: does it mean matching average human ability in individual tests, or achieving the flexible, context-aware intelligence that defines human thought?

The broader implications of this moment are profound.

Investment in AI companies has surged, with references to AGI in corporate filings and earnings calls increasing more than fifty percent year-on-year in early 2025.

Governments are now revisiting definitions of intelligence and rethinking regulatory frameworks that may no longer capture the pace or scope of machine learning advances.

The consensus among experts at the summit was clear: whether or not true AGI has arrived, the world must prepare for systems that are already powerful enough to reshape industries, economies, and societies.

The shift in tone—from 'someday' to 'already'—marks a turning point in how humanity perceives its technological reflection.
Global asset manager introduces a blockchain-based short-term treasury vehicle for professional investors in Hong Kong as city uplifts fintech infrastructure
Franklin Templeton has introduced what is described as Hong Kong’s first fully tokenised money-market fund for professional investors, marking a significant step for the city’s fintech ambitions and token-economy build-out.

The fund—known as Franklin OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund—invests in short-term U.S. Treasuries and utilises blockchain tokens registered in Luxembourg for ownership records.

The initiative aligns with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s FinTech 2030 strategy, which includes more than forty measures to support tokenisation, digital-asset infrastructure and artificial-intelligence integration.

Franklin Templeton’s entry into Hong Kong follows earlier landmarks such as Singapore’s approval of its retail tokenised fund and Luxembourg’s tokenised UCITS vehicle.

The fund leverages Franklin Templeton’s proprietary Benji Technology Platform, which enables features such as intraday yield distribution and continuous, wallet-to-wallet transfers of tokenised shares.

In its June 2025 announcement the firm highlighted that such tokenised money-market funds can offer greater utility and quicker settlement than traditional structures.

Despite the ambitions, observers note that while the product is tokenised, its current availability is limited to professional investors and it remains to be seen how Hong Kong retail rollout will proceed.

The city’s regulator, the Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), has published guidance on tokenised investment products but secondary trading and full retail access are still evolving.

The fund’s launch underscores Hong Kong’s efforts to position itself as a hub for real-world-asset tokenisation and digital finance.

At the same time, Beijing’s wider caution over cross-border tokenisation and real-world-asset flows means the regulatory environment remains attentive.

Industry participants say that success will depend on adoption by institutional investors, alignment with settlement infrastructure and clarity of regulation.

For now, the fund represents a bold step in blending traditional cash-management instruments with blockchain rails, and signals that global asset managers view Hong Kong as a strategic frontier for tokenised fund innovation.
Hong Kong urged to align with national blueprint to upgrade industry, broaden its tax base and enhance its role as gateway for mainland companies
China has embarked on formulating its 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-30), and for Hong Kong this next phase presents not merely opportunities but an imperative for strategic realignment and deeper integration.

From the vantage point of a member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference National Committee, an adviser to the Ministry of Finance and a veteran investor in emerging technologies, the 15th-FYP offers a definitive blueprint for Hong Kong to solidify its unique advantages, catalyse industrial upgrading, expand its tax base, and amplify its role as the indispensable bridge for mainland enterprises venturing globally—all while strengthening the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and contributing significantly to national objectives.

Hong Kong’s traditional prowess in finance, trade and logistics remains foundational.

However, the 15th-FYP’s emphasis on new quality productive forces—driven by technological innovation and high-end manufacturing—demands that Hong Kong proactively diversify and upgrade its economic structure.

Our strengths in intellectual property protection, common law, free flow of capital and information and world-class universities position us uniquely to become a global hub for the emerging industries crucial to the 15th-FYP.

In sectors such as artificial intelligence and digital assets, Hong Kong can leverage its robust financial infrastructure and regulatory agility to become a leading centre for AI-driven fintech, responsible digital-asset development and Web3 innovation.

Clear, forward-looking regulation is key to attracting global talent and capital in these fields.

By establishing dedicated clusters—for instance expanding Cyberport’s mandate—Hong Kong can gain the critical mass needed to foster these ventures.

In biotechnology and health-tech, with strong research capabilities, a sophisticated healthcare system and IP safeguards, Hong Kong is primed to be a Greater Bay Area and Asian leader in biotech R&D, clinical trials and health-tech commercialisation.

Deepening collaboration with Shenzhen’s biomedical hubs and leveraging the Northern Metropolis for R&D facilities is essential.

Green-finance and tech also form an important plank.

Aligned with the national “dual-carbon” goals, Hong Kong must scale its green-finance leadership.

This involves not just facilitating green bonds, but actively investing in and incubating climate tech, sustainable infrastructure solutions and carbon-market mechanisms—thus attracting environmental-social-governance-focused global capital.

A broader, more resilient economy naturally expands the tax base.

At the same time, proactive measures aligned with the 15th-FYP can further enhance fiscal sustainability: targeted policies to attract regional headquarters, treasury centres, R&D hubs and high-growth tech firms (especially in AI, biotech and green tech) will broaden corporate tax revenues beyond traditional finance and property.

Successfully capturing the industrial upgrade outlined earlier will be essential.

Leveraging family offices and wealth-management hubs can bring not only management fees but stimulate investment in local ventures and philanthropy, creating a virtuous cycle.

Modernising tax policy—while maintaining a simple and low-tax regime—by exploring modern concessions for R&D spending or specific green/social investments can stimulate desired activities without compromising our fundamental attractiveness.

Stability and predictability remain paramount.

The 15th-FYP also intensifies the push for mainland enterprises to expand internationally, enhancing brand presence, securing global resources and integrating into global value chains.

Hong Kong’s role here is irreplaceable: its world-class legal, accounting, consulting, risk-management and fundraising expertise is critical for cross-border mergers, listings, compliance and dispute-resolution.

Hong Kong provides a stable, familiar platform for mainland firms to test international waters, manage currency- and geopolitical risks, and access global capital markets and partnership networks before venturing further afield.

As the world’s largest offshore RMB hub, Hong Kong is central to facilitating cross-border trade and investment settlements in RMB—reducing forex risk for mainland companies and supporting the currency’s global role.

Deepening integration with the Greater Bay Area is a key component of realising this vision.

Hong Kong must act as its international R&D front-end and fundraising centre.

Shenzhen, Guangzhou and others provide scale-up manufacturing and vast market access.

Breaking down residual barriers to talent, capital and data flow across the border is crucial.

Cross-border recognition of professional qualifications is vital.

We must avoid duplication and instead focus on complementarity—Hong Kong’s global connectivity, IP framework and professional services aligning with the mainland’s industrial capacity, huge talent pool and cutting-edge research infrastructure.

The Northern Metropolis policy is a tangible opportunity to create this synergy on the ground.

The 15th-FYP is not a distant policy document—it is the road-map for the country’s next transformative leap.

For Hong Kong, embracing this plan with strategic urgency is not optional—it is essential for its future relevance, prosperity and continued contribution to national advancement.

By aligning its development trajectory tightly with the national vision, focusing on industrial upgrading, sustainable revenue streams and amplifying its super-connector role, Hong Kong can secure its own vibrant future while making an unparalleled contribution to the realisation of the Chinese Dream.
Record high turnout of nominees and mass retirement of incumbents reshape the December 7 election battleground
A total of 161 candidates, many younger in profile, are now competing for 90 seats in Hong Kong’s upcoming Legislative Council election, marking a roughly five-per-cent increase over the previous poll and leaving no seat uncontested.

The nominations window closed on Thursday, ahead of the December 7 election — the second under the revamped “patriots-only” system.

Among the most striking developments is that up to 35 incumbent lawmakers, including long-serving member Paul Tse Wai-chun who entered the legislature in 2008, have chosen not to seek re-election — the largest number since 1997. Notably, all incumbents aged 70 or over have stepped aside, clearing the way for a new generation of aspirants.

Competition is especially intense in the city’s directly elected geographical constituencies.

In the newly redrawn configuration, up to 51 contenders are vying for 20 seats — a significant rise from 35 candidates in 2021 and an increase of 45.7 per cent.

In several constituencies candidates number five or six for each pair of seats, reflecting heightened contestation within the limited electoral tier.

In the New Territories North and New Territories South-East regions, the entire candidate field consists of newcomers, with no sitting lawmakers seeking re-election.

By contrast, veteran politicians from larger parties have withdrawn, citing age or a desire for renewal.

Analysts view the influx of new entrants and exodus of veterans as part of Beijing’s broader strategy to rejuvenate the legislature and align it more closely with governance and performance-focused mandates.

While the increased candidate numbers suggest more engagement, observers remain cautious over whether competition in a system tightly managed by the Candidate Eligibility Review mechanism will translate into meaningful electoral choice or higher voter turnout.

With the nomination period concluded, attention now turns to the campaign phase and whether the new-look legislature will inject fresh perspectives into the city’s policy-making process.
Millions across Thailand release floating krathongs and sky lanterns on 5-6 November to symbolise renewal and gratitude
On the evening of the full moon of the 12th lunar month, Thailand’s landscape is transformed by two entwined celebrations: the nationwide Loy Krathong, and in the north, the sky-lantern spectacle of Yi Peng.

This year the main events fall on 5-6 November, with the most striking mass lantern releases centred in Chiang Mai.

Across the country, participants craft small decorative baskets known as krathongs, typically made of banana trunks and leaves, flowers, incense and a candle.

They float these on rivers, canals and ponds as offerings to water spirits and as symbolic acts of releasing misfortune and welcoming new beginnings.

In Chiang Mai the festival rises a dimension higher.

Thousands gather to launch rice-paper lanterns, known as khom loi, into the night sky—each a drift of light that signifies hope, merit and renewal.

Along rivers such as the Ping and in the Old City moat, the combined spectacle of shimmering water and glowing sky creates one of Thailand’s most iconic annual scenes.

Although the celebrations are often picturesque and joyful, modern versions of the festivals also emphasise environmental and safety considerations.

Organisers increasingly recommend biodegradable krathongs and regulated lantern releases to minimise impact on waterways, wildlife and airspace.

Public authorities remind visitors to attend official events and respect local customs.

Since ancient times these illuminated ceremonies have provided Thais and visitors alike with moments of reflection, gratitude and community.

The dual imagery of light on water and lanterns aloft offers a vivid reminder that what we let go of can rise—and what we release may illuminate the path ahead.
Dignity Kitchen in Mong Kok aims to secure HK$2 million commitment to continue supporting disabled employees
A Singapore-based social enterprise operating in Hong Kong is appealing for a local partner to maintain a hawker-style restaurant that trains and employs people with disabilities.

The founder, Koh Seng Choon, revealed that following heart surgery in March he is no longer able to travel frequently to oversee the business in Mong Kok and is prepared to dilute his ownership stake as a “last resort” if the required funds are not secured.

Mr Koh said he received over 30 expressions of interest after making an open plea on social media in June, seeking a local partner willing to commit HK$2 million (approximately US$257,000) in the first year and bring experience in running training and placement for people with disabilities.

Although a variety of organizations — including charities, non-governmental organisations, businesses and consultants — expressed interest, he stated that none were fully aligned with the enterprise’s dual mission of providing training and placing workers alongside managing a food-service operation.

Some were more focused on commercial catering, while others lacked sufficient funding or capacity following government budget cuts.

The restaurant, operating under the name Dignity Kitchen and based at 618 Shanghai Street, has provided vocational training and employment to over 200 people with disabilities since its 2019 opening.

Its founder noted that, briefly, he considered shutting the operation but a visit to the business and seeing employees at work changed his mind.

Under the proposed arrangement, the local partner would join the issue while the Singapore-based parent business retains mission oversight and support.

Although the training-and-placement centre operates as a stand-alone enterprise, its model relies on the partner bringing capital, local networks and operational competence.

Mr Koh said he intends to further explore stake dilution only after all other partnership options have been exhausted, emphasising his preference to maintain the enterprise’s mission and integrity.

He added that the establishment had achieved profitability in Hong Kong and Singapore in past years and that the partner’s role would centre on expanding the training model rather than transforming it into a standard catering business.

For the time being, the founder continues to lead the enterprise, supported by a team in Hong Kong that designs adaptive equipment and training workflows for staff with disabilities.

The search for a suitable partner enters its next phase as the social enterprise seeks to secure the requisite funding and expertise to preserve both its hospitality and social-impact functions.
Gold-medalist fencing star questioned over professional ties to travel industry after filing for Legislative Council functional constituency
Olympic gold-medallist Vivian Kong Man-wai is facing detailed scrutiny by election authorities after submitting her candidacy for the Tourism functional constituency in Hong Kong’s upcoming Legislative Council election.

Accessing documents obtained on Thursday, it was revealed that the returning officer sent Kong a request marked “urgent” asking her to explain her professional and occupational background in the tourism sector and whether she holds a role such as “member, partner, officer or employee” within a corporate elector entity.

In her four-page response, she emphasised her previous role at the Hong Kong Jockey Club, where she helped promote “racing tourism” – a government-backed strategy that positions horse-racing events and facilities as international visitor attractions.

Her supporters include prominent figures such as Stephen Ng Tin‑hoi (Chairman and Managing Director of Wharf Holdings), Daryl Ng Win‑kong (Chairman of Sino Group) and Kuok Khoon‑hua (Chairman of Kerry Properties).

Kong, aged 31, ended her sports career following a gold-medal win at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games and resigned from her role at the Jockey Club in November to focus on the election.

She said that through her global sporting experience she has consistently “invited people to visit Hong Kong” and pledged to bring her international perspective to the tourism sector.

Observers point out her academic credentials—studies in international relations at Stanford University and law at both Renmin University of China and Chinese University of Hong Kong—as part of her broader appeal.

The returning officer’s enquiry puts the spotlight on eligibility criteria applicable to functional-constituency elections, where candidates must show a relevant connection to their sector.

Some industry participants have expressed that while Kong’s star profile may boost visibility for tourism, they want assurance that she will “listen to the industry’s needs and work collaboratively for its continued growth”.

The tourism constituency comprises 176 votes from travel-industry agencies, hotel owners and airline representatives.

Travel-industry stakeholders say the candidate must demonstrate practical sector knowledge, not just symbolic representation.

With nominations closing on 6 November ahead of the election scheduled for 7 December, the incoming weeks are likely to determine whether Kong’s tourism-sector credentials will satisfy electoral requirements and industry expectations.

Her campaign is being watched as part of a wider trend of sports-leaders transitioning into public service roles in Hong Kong’s post-electoral reform landscape.

Her bid also raises questions about the intersection of celebrity, industry representation and governance in the city’s functional-constituency system.

For now, the emphasis remains on whether Kong can convincingly translate her sporting passion and international experience into a substantive advocacy role within Hong Kong’s tourism sector.
US-China summit includes brief but direct appeal by President Trump over jailed Hong Kong publishing magnate
President Donald Trump raised the case of jailed Hong Kong media tycoon Jimmy Lai directly with Chinese President Xi Jinping during their recent meeting in South Korea, according to sources familiar with the talks.

The discussion, lasting under five minutes, did not hinge on a formal deal but focused on concerns about Lai’s health and the broader implications for U.S.–China relations.

Lai, aged 77, founded the now-defunct pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily and has pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to collude with foreign forces and seditious publishing under Hong Kong’s national-security law.

He has been held in Stanley Prison in solitary confinement for more than 1,700 days and reportedly suffers from heart-related ailments.

According to one administration official, Trump stated that freeing Lai would benefit China’s international image and U.S.–China ties, while another source confirmed that Xi listened but did not publicly commit.

While neither side’s official summary of the summit mentioned the case, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington said she was unaware of specific Lai discussions, restating that Lai’s actions “gravely undermined Hong Kong’s prosperity and stability” and declaring any outside interference “will not succeed.”

Lai’s son, Sebastien Lai, released a statement thanking Trump for the appeal, calling him the “Liberator in Chief” and expressing hope that sustained pressure would lead to his father’s release.

Trump’s intervention arrives amid a broader backdrop of U.S. lawmakers pressing the issue ahead of the summit and amid affirmations by both sides that the meeting had advanced trade talks and rare-earth agreements rather than human-rights issues.

Though recent meetings between the U.S. and China have placed less emphasis on rights, this case highlights that it remains part of the diplomatic ledger.

Whether Trump’s appeal will lead to a tangible outcome remains uncertain.

Analysts say the brief exchange signals U.S. willingness to link rights and health-humanitarian concerns to broader diplomatic engagement, while China’s silence may reflect a cautious balancing act between domestic legal processes and foreign-policy optics.

The coming weeks will test whether this exchange constitutes mere symbolic diplomacy or blossoms into further pressure, advocacy and potential progress in Lai’s case, and whether U.S.–China relations will interpret it as part of a wider reset or retain rights concerns in their interactions.
Chinese autonomous-driving frontrunners raise over HK$9 billion but face investor caution with share declines of 11% and 8% respectively
Two leading Chinese autonomous-driving companies, Pony.ai Inc. and WeRide Inc., began trading on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange this week, marking significant dual-listings while also signalling growing investor scrutiny of the sector.

Pony.ai raised approximately HK$6.71 billion (US$863 million) while WeRide secured about HK$2.39 billion (US$308 million) in their respective initial public offerings.

The offerings came amid a surge of Chinese tech firms choosing Hong Kong as a secondary listing venue amidst shifting global regulatory dynamics.

At opening trades, however, the share price reactions were sharp: Pony.ai’s stock dropped by nearly 11 per cent as it opened at HK$124, down from its HK$139 offer price, while WeRide’s shares opened at HK$24.98, down 7.8 per cent from their HK$27.10 offer price.

The declines follow modest falls in their U.S.-listed shares — Pony.ai fell around 2 per cent and WeRide 5.2 per cent the prior day.

Both firms told investors that their objective in raising such substantial capital is to accelerate deployment of Level 4 autonomous driving technology — where no human driver is needed under defined conditions — expand robotaxi fleets, build charging and parking infrastructure, increase artificial-intelligence and data-centre capabilities, and drive global market entry.

Pony.ai’s CEO emphasised that short-term share-price fluctuations will not affect long-term plans, while WeRide’s founder reaffirmed confidence in future performance despite market volatility.

Their listing exercises underscore Hong Kong’s emergence as a pre-eminent destination for Chinese companies seeking access to international capital with regional advantages.

Data show that the Hong Kong exchange has raised over US$31.2 billion in initial listings so far this year, outpacing both the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market when excluding special-purpose acquisition companies.

Yet the market’s muted response to the robotaxi debuts may reflect investor caution about commercial viability, regulation and profitability in the autonomy sector.

While autonomous technology remains a marquee theme, analysts caution that long development cycles, regulatory approvals and heavy capital intensity continue to challenge returns.

For Hong Kong and the companies involved, the test now is converting capital-market success into sustained operational momentum.
Autonomous-driving names WeRide and Pony.ai join two others as Hong Kong continues its listing resurgence
Four Chinese companies took the floor of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on Thursday, including leading autonomous-driving firms Pony.ai and WeRide, marking another busy day of initial public offerings in the city and underscoring its status as the world’s top destination for equity listings this year.

Shares of Ningbo Joyson Electronic, a major automotive-supplier, opened at HK$29.83 above its HK$22 offer price, gaining roughly 35 per cent.

Biotech firm Vigonvita Life Sciences surged 184 per cent from HK$33.37 to HK$95. The robotaxi names drew mixed reactions: Pony.ai entered at HK$124—down 11 per cent from its offer price of HK$139—while WeRide started at HK$24.98, a 7.8 per cent drop from its HK$27.10 listing price.

Pony.ai raised HK$6.71 billion (US$863 million) in its offering after fully exercising its option, with heavyweight institutional and retail demand noted.

By contrast, WeRide opted for a smaller scale but emphasised its technology credentials and North-American listing pedigree.

Both companies had earlier secured approval from mainland China’s securities supervisor to list in Hong Kong, part of a broader push by Chinese tech firms to diversify capital access amid evolving global market conditions.

The strong performance of Joyson and Vigonvita, and the heavy interest in the world’s most advanced Chinese driver-technology companies, come against a backdrop of Hong Kong’s resurgent initial public-offering market.

According to accounting-firm data, fundraising volume through Hong Kong’s main board IPO channel has already surged year-on-year, supported by regulatory reform and global investor flows.

Analysts note that the city’s role as a gateway to Chinese capital remains intact, yet the nature of listing mandate is shifting: more secondary listings of already-publicised mainland firms, and fewer high-margin mandates for Western banks in the process.

For investors assessing the Houston-style ‘go-global’ story of Chinese autonomous-driving companies, the mixed debut of Pony.ai and WeRide sends a nuanced signal: while appetite remains strong, valuations and investor expectations are under increased scrutiny.

For the Hong Kong market, the debuts reinforce its positioning as the preferred venue for China’s next-generation firms, even as the global listing environment becomes more selective.
Hong Kong flag-carrier signals confidence in its recovery by buying back shares from Qatar Airways
Hong Kong-based carrier Cathay Pacific Airways announced that it will repurchase the entire 9.57 per cent stake currently held by Qatar Airways, subject to independent shareholder approval.

The buy-back will cost approximately HK$6.96 billion (about US$896 million) and covers 643.07 million shares at a price of HK$10.8374 each.

The transaction comes after Qatar Airways expressed its intention to sell its entire holding in the airline, prompting Cathay to move swiftly.

The share price offered represents a discount of roughly 3.9 per cent to the previous close of HK$11.28, and about 0.5 per cent above the thirty-day average of HK$10.78. On the morning following the announcement, Cathay’s shares rose about 3 per cent to HK$11.62.

Cathay said the purchase will be funded via internal resources and existing credit facilities, reflecting the company’s view of its financial strength and outlook.

In a statement, chairman Patrick Healy said the move “reflects our strong confidence in the future of the Cathay Group and underscores our commitment to the development of the Hong Kong international aviation hub.”

The deal will see Qatar Airways exit its six-year investment in Cathay, which began in 2017 when it initially acquired a similar level of shares.

With the repurchase completed, the airline’s ownership structure will further consolidate, reinforcing the positions of the key shareholders, including Swire Pacific and Air China.

Analysts interpret the transaction as a strategic step for Cathay to bolster its control and reduce minority-shareholder influence, while signalling confidence amid strong passenger recovery and investment in fleet and network expansion.

The carrier has in recent months reported rising profits, placed large aircraft orders and resumed its full-service focus as global travel rebounds.

Execution of the buy-back remains conditional on independent shareholder approval at an extraordinary general meeting.

Once cleared, the transaction will complete the exit from Qatar Airways and solidify Cathay’s path towards its next phase of growth and hub development in Asia.
Charities report growing number of pregnant migrant helpers dismissed or left homeless, pointing to systemic failures in maternity protections

At five months pregnant, Daisy* was suddenly asked to leave her employer’s home in Hong Kong. The Filipino domestic helper says she was shown the door in the middle of the night, abandoned and terrified with no family or support in the city.

Daisy’s experience reflects a broader pattern among the city’s domestic helpers, who face numerous barriers when they become pregnant while working in Hong Kong. A report by the charity PathFinders – published in September 2025 – found large knowledge gaps among employers regarding legally mandated maternity protections, highlighting how foreign domestic helpers are often dismissed, isolated or left in limbo despite legal safeguards. The study found that fifty-one per cent of surveyed employers were unaware of maternity rights and eighty-four per cent wrongly believed helpers could be legally dismissed for pregnancy.

The rights of migrant domestic workers to pregnancy and maternity leave are enshrined in labour legislation. They are protected by the Sex Discrimination Ordinance and must receive notification procedures and, once eligible, fourteen weeks of paid maternity leave if they have served at least forty weeks in employment. Yet enforcement and awareness remain deeply inconsistent.

Many pregnant helpers who are unlawfully dismissed become uninsured, lose their visa status, and cannot access subsidised public hospital care – even though delivery costs without eligibility can exceed HK$90,000 (US$11,500). Charities have documented that the city’s shelters are increasingly accommodating expectant domestic workers who have nowhere else to go, cannot afford healthcare and face imminent deportation or joblessness.

Advocacy groups say that the deeper issue lies not with legislation but with a system where the live-in requirement, complex immigration rules and financial uncertainties place pregnant helpers in vulnerable positions. Even well-intentioned families often report not knowing how to manage maternity situations for live-in helpers and resort to informal “mutual termination” agreements rather than following statutory pathways.

For Daisy, returning home was not a simple option due to high airfare and social stigma linked to pregnancy out of wedlock. The absence of affordable maternity insurance, limited options for maternity leave outside employer homes and precarious visa status combine into a situation that sees pregnant domestic workers caught between legal rights and practical realities in Hong Kong.

Supporters of the helpers say that addressing the crisis will require mandatory employer education programmes, reform of live-in requirements, affordable maternity insurance schemes and more accessible shelter services. With domestic helpers making up a vital part of Hong Kong’s workforce, their wellbeing and rights are increasingly viewed as both a humanitarian concern and a matter of social-economic stability.

*Name has been changed to protect the individual’s identity.

Major rise in Chinese undergraduate graduates helped drive increase in U.S. STEM master’s programmes and student intake
China’s significant higher-education expansion has triggered measurable ripple effects at U.S. universities, a new study reveals.

Researchers found that as China lifted annual undergraduate enrolment from about one million in 1999 to 9.6 million by 2020, every additional 100 Chinese graduates led to approximately 3.6 Chinese graduate students enrolling in U.S. institutions.

The study further found that for every 100 Chinese master’s students in the U.S., American universities introduced around one new STEM master’s programme, concurrently raising the number of American and other international master’s students.

The authors described this as a “crowding in” effect, challenging the notion that Chinese students simply displace U.S.-domestic ones in postgraduate programmes.

Analysis also showed positive spill-overs beyond campuses: U.S. college towns hosting international students experienced increased job creation in non-university sectors, suggesting broader economic benefits from global student inflows.

The researchers leveraged detailed quota-based admissions data from China and visa records from U.S. institutions to identify causal links between China’s domestic education policy and the international flows of students.

These findings come amid growing political debate in the U.S. about foreign student presence, especially from China, in key science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields.

Some lawmakers have argued that wealthy international students crowd out U.S. peers; the new evidence counters that view, indicating the expansion of Chinese talent may have enabled U.S. universities to expand programmes and intake rather than restrict opportunities.

While the paper has not yet undergone full peer review, its findings illuminate how interconnected global education systems have become, and how policy shifts in one country can reshape academic and economic landscapes abroad.

The results underscore that rather than a zero-sum contest for global talent, the flow of Chinese students into the U.S. may have catalysed growth in graduate-education capacity and supported local economic activity in university regions.
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