
Veteran Hong Kong billionaire boosts holdings in precious metals as gold hits highs and wealthy Asian family offices increase allocations
Hong Kong investor and billionaire Cheah Cheng Hye has placed roughly a quarter of his personal wealth into gold and other precious metals, reflecting a marked shift in strategy among some ultra-high-net-worth individuals as bullion prices rise.
Cheah, a co-founder of Value Partners and now managing his own family office, says he has consistently bought gold over many years and views physical holdings as core to his lifetime savings.
His allocation — well above the typical allocation of around two per cent seen among global family offices — spans physical bars and coins, gold-related exchange-traded funds and gold mining stocks, and benefits from storage in a government-backed vault in Hong Kong.
This positions him as an outlier among wealthy investors who often maintain smaller exposures to the precious metal.
Gold has recently surged to record levels as investors grapple with geopolitical tensions, inflation concerns and expectations of easing U.S. monetary policy.
Asian family offices more broadly have increased their allocations to gold, with some doubling their exposure in response to market uncertainty.
Cheah says holding physical metal offers security because it does not rely on counterparty claims, and he notes growing interest among wealthy Asian investors in gold as a hedge and store of wealth.
His bullish stance highlights broader trends among affluent investors in the region who are diversifying portfolios in response to economic volatility and asset-price shifts.
Cheah, a co-founder of Value Partners and now managing his own family office, says he has consistently bought gold over many years and views physical holdings as core to his lifetime savings.
His allocation — well above the typical allocation of around two per cent seen among global family offices — spans physical bars and coins, gold-related exchange-traded funds and gold mining stocks, and benefits from storage in a government-backed vault in Hong Kong.
This positions him as an outlier among wealthy investors who often maintain smaller exposures to the precious metal.
Gold has recently surged to record levels as investors grapple with geopolitical tensions, inflation concerns and expectations of easing U.S. monetary policy.
Asian family offices more broadly have increased their allocations to gold, with some doubling their exposure in response to market uncertainty.
Cheah says holding physical metal offers security because it does not rely on counterparty claims, and he notes growing interest among wealthy Asian investors in gold as a hedge and store of wealth.
His bullish stance highlights broader trends among affluent investors in the region who are diversifying portfolios in response to economic volatility and asset-price shifts.












































