Head of State from Quad countries -- Australia, Japan, India, and the US are scheduled to meet in Australia on June 24.
There is no plan to add new members to the Quad at this point in time, the White House has said ahead of the summit of Quad leaders in Australia later this month.

Head of State from Quad countries -- Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, Prime Minister Narendra Modi from India, and US President Joe Biden – are scheduled to meet in Australia on June 24.

"The Quad was established two years ago. The Quad is still a relatively young partnership. There are no plans for new members at this time," White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters at her daily news conference.

Quad members, she said, have agreed that for now, they'll focus on cementing the quad's many strengths.

"However, the Quad welcomes opportunities to work with a wide range of Indo-Pacific partners, such as through its Indo-Pacific partners on maritime domain awareness, which is delivering cutting edge maritime domain awareness technology around the region," she said.

"The May 24th Sydney Summit will showcase other opportunities for the Quad to partner around the region on climate, global health, infrastructure, and more. The Quad's top priority is ensuring it is well-positioned to deliver for the Indo-Pacific. And so, there's no conversation on extending or expanding at this time," Jean-Pierre said.
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.
Indiana Public Retirement System moves to eliminate Hong Kong exposure after updated interpretation of China investment prohibition
The Indiana Public Retirement System (INPRS) plans to fully divest approximately US$170 million of its holdings in Hong Kong by December, following a recent clarification of its 2023 legislative mandate to divest from Chinese-controlled entities.

The review comes two years after the state legislature passed Senate Enrolled Act 268, which prohibited investment in companies domiciled in or controlled by the People’s Republic of China.

INPRS has already exited fixed-income holdings tied to Hong Kong and is now working to update its performance benchmarks, as detailed in its board materials released ahead of a meeting Friday.

The benchmark adjustments will reflect that certain assets will have “no exposure” to Hong Kong investments.

The divestment effort builds on the system’s earlier achievement of eliminating its US$1.2 billion exposure to Chinese entities, completed ahead of schedule in mid-2024.

The law established progressive divestment targets: fifty per cent within three years of identifying a restricted investment, seventy-five per cent within four years, and one hundred per cent within five years.

INPRS exceeded the timeline by divesting from China nearly four years ahead of requirement, but had previously not treated holdings linked to Hong Kong under the law’s scope.

That oversight was addressed after the “recent clarification” referenced in the board packet.

Supporters of the legislation, including State Senator Chris Garten (R-Charlestown), point out that Hong Kong remains defined as an “inalienable part” of China under China’s Basic Law, and say the original intent was to cover Hong Kong assets.

Columnist Jacob Stewart raised concerns in September that the pension fund still held millions of dollars in Hong Kong investments despite the Chinese divestment law.

INPRS now says it will complete the remaining divestment by the end of December and has planned to reinvest in other markets in compliance with its strategic asset allocation.

The move signals the fund’s commitment to align with state policy on reducing exposure to China-linked jurisdictions, while managing index and performance benchmarks for affected portfolios.
Global summit in Hong Kong signals a rebound in investor sentiment—but also marks shifting opportunities for international firms
A sense of relief pervaded this week’s 2025 Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong, as a truce in the Sino-American trade war and a rebound in Chinese markets set a calmer tone.

Senior executives from major global firms met in the city to discuss trade, private markets and energy, gathering at the Rosewood hotel and even watching a robot demonstrate boxing at a welcome dinner.

Despite the upbeat atmosphere, the event underscored that the window of opportunity for global firms in Hong Kong may be changing.

Four years ago, when the summit was first held, the aim was to announce that Hong Kong was once again open for business after a period of pandemic isolation and political unrest.

Today, delegates no longer needed to tread lightly around China, but the question has evolved from “Can we be present?” to “How much business can we capture?”

In remarks and commentary during the summit, Chinese authorities reiterated their commitment to strengthening Hong Kong’s role as a financial centre, including through boosting offshore yuan liquidity.

The city’s benchmark Hang Seng Index posted one of the world’s best performances this year, with a gain of 28 per cent, while mainland China’s CSI 300 Index rose by nearly 20 per cent.

Many Western firms remain active in China: cross-border claims by U.S. banks on Chinese residents are near record highs.

Yet the nature of participation is evolving.

The lion’s share of initial public offerings in Hong Kong are now secondary listings of Chinese issuers already traded in New York or mainland exchanges.

These generate lower fees, and the domestic push has shifted more business to Chinese financial firms—one local securities house now sponsors nearly a third of new listings, up from 5 per cent a decade ago.

Challenges persist.

Hong Kong remains heavily dependent on mainland China’s economic fortunes.

The International Monetary Fund expects China’s gross domestic product growth to slow to around 4.2 per cent next year, down from 4.8 per cent this year.

The city’s property market remains weak and consumption sluggish, feeding questions about the depth of opportunity.

For now, Hong Kong is not fading—it is repositioning.

The city remains a gateway for global finance into the Chinese economy, but its role appears more limited than before.

To thrive, multinational banks and asset managers may need to look beyond Hong Kong and the mainland to capture new growth.

The message from this year’s summit appears clear: the era of unlimited access may be over, but a new form of engagement is underway.
Government reveals 20 per cent of 4,500 modular units were damaged during two typhoons; most to be repaired, some dismantled for recycling
Around one-fifth of the 4,500 modular units that were previously used as community isolation and treatment facilities in Hong Kong sustained damage during two strong typhoons earlier this year, the city’s Development Bureau has confirmed.

The so-called pandemic camps at the Tseung Kwan O fill bank — where construction waste is stored — were found to have dozens of modules with collapsed roofs and broken metal-panel walls.

In its response, the bureau said that while most of the affected units suffered damage to their metal panel walls, the structural steel frames remained intact.

It stated that those modules will undergo repairs, be properly protected, and reused on future public works projects.

A “minor portion” of units deemed unsuitable for reuse will be dismantled, with steel components separated and sent for recycling.

The bureau emphasised that the modular units had originally been procured in response to the pandemic and later shifted to standby status.

Of the units damaged, approximately 20 per cent were impacted by the storms given the location of the storage site and the exposure to high winds.

The authority noted that storage above the fill bank, where the modules were sited, left them vulnerable to typhoon-force gusts.

While the precise number of units removed from the reuse pool has not been publicly disclosed, the bureau confirmed that repairs will be prioritised to maintain Hong Kong’s capacity for redeployment of modular units in future infrastructure projects.

The move is aligned with wider adoption of modular integrated construction (MiC) and reuse of pandemic-era assets, forming part of the city’s drive toward more sustainable building practices.

Analysts note that Hong Kong’s increasingly severe typhoon seasons — with recent storms breaking long-held records — place growing emphasis on resilience of modular infrastructure storage, transport and siting.

The damaged modules highlight an emerging risk: that assets designed for rapid deployment during a crisis must also withstand extreme weather when stored or repurposed.

The disclosure comes amid public scrutiny of the modular-unit stockpile, including questions over the long-term plans for the isolation facilities once the pandemic emergency receded.

The bureau’s statement now gives a clearer picture of losses and the path forward: reuse when feasible, recycling where necessary, and repair works beginning promptly to support future projects.

For now, the Hong Kong government’s approach underscores its commitment to repurpose pandemic-era infrastructure, limit waste, and safeguard value from previously deployed units, even as climate-driven weather events increasingly test the resilience of such assets.
Over 200 young scientists gather in Hong Kong for the 2025 Laureate Forum amid new frontier-tech funding scheme
More than two hundred early-career scientists from over twenty countries and regions convened in Hong Kong on Wednesday for the opening of the 2025 Hong Kong Laureate Forum 2025, a four-day science and technology exchange event designed to fast-track the city’s ambition to become a global innovation and technology hub.

At the ceremony, Chan Kwok‑ki, Chief Secretary for Administration of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, announced a recently launched HK$3 billion (approximately US$385.8 million) Frontier Technology Research Support Scheme to build advanced facilities and undertake basic research in breakthrough science and technology fields.

The forum brings together laureates, distinguished scholars and young researchers under the theme “Meeting of Inspirational Minds”.

Participants will engage in keynote lectures, breakout sessions and poster presentations spanning astronomy, life science and medicine, and mathematical sciences.

The event is the second edition of the forum, signalling Hong Kong’s growing profile as a cross-discipline science capital.

Chan underscored the government's role in deploying a “raft of policies” to attract top talent and equip local institutions with world-class infrastructure, positioning the forward-looking funding scheme as a key plank in that strategy.

The new scheme, administered by the city’s Innovation & Technology Commission, invites applications by 25 November 2025 for funding support of between HK$100 million and HK$300 million per project, matched by participating institutions, and expects to announce results in the first half of 2026.

Tong Wai‑cheung, Chairman of the forum, said the gathering offers emerging scientists an environment to “cultivate curiosity, ignite passion for science and technology, and empower … emerging scientific talent”.

He described Hong Kong’s role as an ideal setting for trans-disciplinary engagement and global networking.

The forum will run from 5 to 8 November and is expected to enhance the city’s scientific ecosystem by linking young researchers with established laureates, research institutes and industry partners.

The combination of a high-level science forum and a major public investment in frontier technology underlines the city’s commitment to shaping its future as an international innovation node in which talent, capital and infrastructure converge.
City shifts from landfilling food waste toward biogas generation and composting as part of its circular-economy strategy
Hong Kong is stepping up its efforts to divert food waste from landfills by converting it into biogas and compost at two dedicated facilities.

In 2022, roughly three thousand three hundred tonnes of food waste were still being buried daily in landfills—accounting for around thirty per cent of municipal solid waste—which put pressure on the city’s limited landfill capacity.

The Organic Resources Recovery Centre Phase 1 (O·PARK1), located in Siu Ho Wan on Lantau Island, opened in July 2018 and has a design capacity of two hundred tonnes per day.

It processes source-separated food waste through anaerobic digestion to generate biogas, which is used to power the facility and export about fourteen million kilowatt-hours per year—enough to supply about three thousand households.

The residual digestate is converted into compost for landscaping and agriculture.

A second facility, O·PARK2, in Sha Ling, North District, is designed to treat up to three hundred tonnes per day and is expected to bring total food-waste-recycling capacity to six hundred tonnes per day when fully operational.

O·PARK2 also incorporates low-carbon construction methods and is forecast to reduce approximately sixty-seven thousand tonnes of greenhouse-gas emissions annually through its operation.

The government’s Food Waste Management Strategy emphasises three pillars: reduction at source, food donation and recycling at facilities.

Smart food-waste-bin programmes in public rental housing estates and private buildings are being expanded; the Environmental Protection Department reports that by March 2024 the average daily food-waste collection stood at around two hundred and thirty tonnes, and the number of collection points has grown significantly.

While recycling rates remain modest—recovering around sixty thousand tonnes in 2023 from a potential daily generation of much larger volumes—officials view the infrastructure upgrades as critical to the city’s shift toward a circular economy.

By combining throughput expansion with behavioural-change campaigns and regulatory incentives, Hong Kong aims to ease landfill burdens, reduce methane emissions and capture value from food waste streams.
Fast-food giant disposes of a Yuen Long shop as part of a broader HK$1.2 billion (US$153 million) divestment of prime retail assets in Hong Kong
McDonald’s Corp., the U.S. fast-food chain, has completed its first property disposal in Hong Kong since announcing an asset-sale strategy in July 2025. The company sold a three-storey retail unit (9,695 sq ft) in Yuen Long Trade Centre for HK$77.4 million (approximately US$9.9 million).

The buyer, Acc Investment, took over the property on Monday, according to Land Registry records.

The Yuen Long site had originally cost McDonald’s HK$9.3 million in 1987, meaning the sale represented more than an eight-fold return on its investment.

McDonald’s Restaurants (Hong Kong) renewed the lease in 2016 for a 20-year term and, according to official filings and local media, is paying monthly rent of HK$460,000 at that location.

This transaction is the inaugural deal under the company’s broader divestment of eight prime Hong Kong retail properties marketed with a combined valuation of roughly HK$1.2 billion (about US$153 million).

The properties are situated in high-footfall districts such as Tsim Sha Tsui, Causeway Bay, Mong Kok, Kennedy Town, Tai Kok Tsui, Yuen Long, Tsuen Wan and Tsz Wan Shan, and are fully leased to McDonald’s or include it as anchor tenant.

The public tender for the portfolio closed on 16 September 2025.

McDonald’s emphasised that the restaurants at the properties will continue operating; the disposal relates only to property ownership.

In Hong Kong the company currently runs 265 outlets.

The sale aligns with broader corporate real-estate strategies to monetise fixed assets while retaining operational presence.

Market observers note that Hong Kong’s retail property sector is under pressure: prime street-level rents reportedly have reverted to levels seen in 2003 amid changing consumer behaviour and high vacancy rates.

In this context, McDonald’s move to unlock capital from its real-estate holdings underscores both its long-term brand commitment to the city and a prudent response to evolving market dynamics.

The Yuen Long sale therefore marks a landmark step in McDonald’s Hong Kong portfolio review and may foreshadow additional disposals, while the company affirms it remains fully committed to continuing operations at these strategic locations.
Secretary for Justice Paul Lam links high-value disputes and institutional reforms to the city’s ascent as a major international arbitration venue
Hong Kong’s rapid rise as an international arbitration centre is underpinned by institutional reforms and deep legal-market integration between the city and the Chinese mainland, according to the territory’s Secretary for Justice, Paul Lam.

In a recent visit to Seoul he said the “one country, two systems” framework gives Hong Kong the dual strength of a common-law jurisdiction and close access to China’s economy.

Lam pointed to the recent record-breaking caseload at the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC), which in 2024 received 352 new arbitrations across 510 contracts, with disputes valued at approximately US $13.6 billion.

This surge reflects growing demand for a neutral, bilingual forum in Asia capable of resolving complex cross-border disputes.

Key policy changes have supported this growth.

Since 2020 Hong Kong has allowed arbitrators, counsel and witnesses to enter without separate work permits, simplifying access for global legal professionals.

The territory also permits third-party funding and contingency fees in arbitration, making dispute resolution more accessible and cost-effective.

Lam said that the strength of Hong Kong’s financial centre and its legal system are mutually reinforcing: a robust legal-services ecosystem supports high-stakes commercial transactions, and in turn fuels demand for efficient dispute resolution.

He highlighted new initiatives in digital-asset regulation and multi-jurisdictional financing as part of the evolving legal landscape.

During his Seoul visit he underscored Hong Kong’s unique value proposition: “We offer the best of both worlds — independent common law and a close connection with China’s mainland,” enabling the city to serve as a global gateway for investment and legal services.

For Korean firms and other overseas investors he said Hong Kong provides certainty, procedural transparency and route-to-market access for regional activities.

The city’s position in the Belt and Road ecosystem, combined with expedited entry regimes for legal talent, enhances its appeal as a centre of dispute resolution.

Now the jurisdiction is targeting higher-value, more complex arbitrations and further evolution of its legal infrastructure.

As Lam noted, Hong Kong is reviewing its arbitration ordinance and adapting to emerging fields such as ESG (environmental, social and governance) compliance and virtual-assets regulation.

He expressed confidence that reforms and incremental enhancements will sustain the territory’s competitive edge in the Asia-Pacific legal markets.
New express lanes begin November 5 at key airports and land crossings, expanding document-free travel between the mainland and its adjacent territories
China is expanding its biometric-based expedited customs clearance system across a range of ports that connect with Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan, starting Wednesday, November 5. The upgrade will deploy “face-swiping” lanes at major airports and land crossings including Shanghai Hongqiao, Xiamen Gaoqi, Shenzhen’s Huanggang and Futian checkpoints, Zhuhai Hengqin and the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge.

Eligible users will include mainland residents aged 14 and above who hold valid travel permits and multiple-entry endorsements for Hong Kong and Macao, as well as Hong Kong and Macao residents with mainland travel permits.

Taiwan residents holding five-year mainland travel permits may also use the lanes after consenting to biometric collection (face, fingerprints and other identifiers).

To use the system, travellers must agree to biometric data collection and verification prior to entry.

Users report that these lanes are significantly faster than traditional document-based clearance.

The initiative is part of a broader drive to ease cross-boundary mobility for skilled workers, promote integration within the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area and support 240-hour transit permits at more ports.

In tandem, the system at Zhuhai’s Hengqin Port will launch “Smart Immigration Clearance,” featuring 64 automated channels that allow eligible travellers aged 14 and above to clear without showing physical documents.

Authorities say a further 46 channels will be added in 2026, boosting capacity by at least 65 per cent.

Hong Kong authorities have similarly introduced a “Face Easy e-Channel” at Hong Kong International Airport for residents, and say athletes and accredited personnel attending the National Games will be able to use document-free e-gates that complete clearance in about seven seconds.

The move intensifies China’s use of biometric and border-automation technology in its cross-boundary integration strategy, leveraging fast clearance to deepen links among the mainland, Hong Kong and Macao, while also expanding control and data flows at major transit nodes.
One-third of current lawmakers stepping down as the first post-reform council ends its term and public dissatisfaction rises
On the final day of their term, the city’s current Legislative Council posed for group photographs in apparent celebration.

Yet behind the smiles, more than one-third of the 90 lawmakers—many over the age of sixty—have announced they will not seek re-election in December, marking a significant turnover.

Veteran lawmaker Tik Chi-yuen, himself standing down, lamented that while the chamber once offered “free expression”, it now felt “more uniform.

There are multiple voices but they are not diverse enough.” These remarks reflect growing concern that the legislature has moved from robust debate into what many call an “echo chamber”.

As part of sweeping reforms in 2021, Beijing overhauled Hong Kong’s electoral system to ensure all legislators are “patriots” and fundamentally aligned with the city’s governance architecture.

The first legislature elected under those rules has now completed its four-year term.

Observers note that the number of bill-approvals rose sharply and disruption tactics such as filibusters all but vanished, prompting questions about representativeness and accountability.

Although outgoing LegCo President Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen rejected claims the legislature functioned only as a rubber stamp—pointing to active commentaries and amendments—critics highlight a marked drop in mentions of terms such as “rights” and “freedom” in parliamentary discourse, and trace falling public satisfaction with the institution.

Meanwhile, consultants and think-tanks report that procedural efficiency has come at the cost of visible critic-government interaction.

Some departing legislators cite age or strategic career shifts as their reasons.

Others are more blunt: one noted the transition from spirited opposition politics in the 2010s to today’s homogenous environment left them little room for meaningful engagement and prompted exit.

With voter turnout still near historic lows and key opposition groupings disbanded, the upcoming election is set to further recalibrate the city’s political architecture.

As December’s ballot approaches, the question remains: will the new legislature, stripped of much of its dissenting voices and with a large class of new members, be able to maintain legitimacy, institutional memory and public trust?

The answer may determine the long-term stability of Hong Kong’s governance and its role as an effective global financial centre.
Chinese leaders publicly vow support for Hong Kong’s status as an international financial hub at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit
Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng delivered a strong endorsement of Hong Kong’s role as a global financial centre during the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit, held in the city under the aegis of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.

He urged Hong Kong to seize openings created in China’s current five-year plan and reaffirmed the central government’s backing of the “one country, two systems” framework as a foundation for the city’s ongoing international financial integration.

At the event, Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee Ka‑chiu emphasised that the city offers global investors and businesses “certainty and clarity” — enabling reach to mainland China markets while maintaining international connectivity.

He described the city as a bridge between global finance and the Chinese economy and highlighted its potential to provide diversified asset exposure in a volatile geopolitical environment.

The summit gathered approximately three hundred financial-industry leaders, including more than one hundred chairmen or chief executives of major institutions.

Beijing underscored its commitment by dispatching top financial regulators, who pledged to expand mainland-Hong Kong cooperation in areas such as overseas listings, bond issuance and stock-connect channels.

In a notable move, the China Securities Regulatory Commission signalled support for a renminbi-denominated counter under the mainland-Hong Kong Stock Connect programme, strengthening offshore yuan infrastructure and enhancing Hong Kong’s role in the international financial system.

With China’s economic statecraft increasingly entwined with Hong Kong’s positioning, the summit showed the city navigating competitive global banking landscapes while drawing on Beijing’s institutional backing.

Investors will now watch how this political resolve translates into tangible reforms, market access and the leveraging of Hong Kong’s unique gateway status between East and West.
Missing Hong Kong man found with limb injuries at dusk after rescue operation involving drones and search dogs
A Hong Kong man aged eighty-two was found safe on Kowloon Peak late on Tuesday evening, more than a full day after his family reported him missing.

He was located at approximately ten p.m. in the Pak Fa Lam area of the mountain and taken to United Christian Hospital in Kwun Tong for treatment of scratches on his limbs.

The Fire Services Department had deployed a mountain rescue team, a search dog and a drone at around 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday after the man’s family reported his disappearance.

He had last been seen ascending the mountain on Monday morning before losing contact.

Police said no suspicious circumstances were detected after his recovery, confirming that he had wandered off the trail and sustained minor injuries before being located.

The rescue operation underscores the hazards posed by Kowloon Peak, known also as Fei Ngo Shan, which rises to 602 metres and lies in Hong Kong’s Wong Tai Sin and Sai-Kung districts.

Authorities reminded hikers to remain on designated paths and to inform mountain rescue services if delays or loss of contact occur, particularly after dunno- or multi-day outings where fatigue and terrain risks heighten danger.

With the elderly man now in hospital care and improving, the search and rescue teams stood down shortly after his retrieval and preliminary treatment began.
Premier Li Qiang underscores China’s resolve to embrace free markets and free trade as global economic pressures rise
China’s Premier Li Qiang affirmed in Shanghai that the country will further open its vast consumer market to international business and deepen its commitment to free trade, speaking at the opening of the China International Import Expo (CIIE).

He addressed about one thousand government officials, business leaders and foreign merchants, stating that Beijing remains firmly committed to globalisation and to resolving cross-border trade challenges through cooperation.

At a time when the global economy is decelerating and trade tensions are intensifying, Premier Li said China will adhere to equal and mutually beneficial cooperation, embrace free markets and free trade, and resolve cross-border contradictions through joint development.

He said China is ready to work with all parties to build an open, inclusive development environment, to enhance trade and investment liberalisation and facilitation, and to stabilise global industrial and supply chains.

Li projected that over the next five years China’s economic scale could exceed 170 trillion yuan, approximately 23.9 trillion US dollars, noting that the nation will advance high-level opening-up to the outside world.

He emphasised that expanding domestic demand, especially consumption, remains a core objective as China taps into the potential of its 1.4 billion-plus population.

His remarks follow a recent trade truce between China and the United States, and come amid heightened global concern about protectionism, tariff escalation and decoupling.

For foreign firms attending the expo, the message is clear: China intends to remain open for business, open for investment and open for partnerships.

Li also pointed out that China will broaden access in sectors such as telecommunications, education, culture and healthcare, and will provide equal opportunities in resource access, licensing and government procurement.

He stressed that China intends not simply to be a destination for exports but to become an investment and entrepreneurship hub for global enterprises.

With more than 4,100 overseas companies participating in the expo and the largest single exhibition area again allocated to United States-based firms, the event reinforces China’s ambition to strengthen its role in global trade and connect more deeply with international markets.

In summarising China’s strategic orientation, Premier Li asserted that when the world economy is slowing and disputes are increasing, the country must more firmly uphold openness and cooperation.

He concluded by adding that China’s market, talent and innovation capabilities will provide the foundation for global business growth and mutual benefit.
Huawei-partnered Chinese EV maker opens at HK$128.9 after raising HK$13.5 billion via H-share listing
Shares of China’s electric-vehicle maker Seres Group, a partner of Huawei Technologies, fell about 2 per cent in their Hong Kong Stock Exchange debut on Wednesday, even though the company raised around US$1.84 billion through its initial public offering.

The stock, priced at HK$131.50, opened at HK$128.90 as market weakness weighed on investor enthusiasm.

Seres sold 108.6 million H-shares in the offering, increasing the share count during book-building due to strong demand ahead of its listing, according to its filings.

The retail tranche was nearly 133 times oversubscribed, and the institutional segment around nine times.

The listing marks one of the largest mainland delegations in Hong Kong this year and underscores the renewed appeal of the city’s capital markets for Chinese firms.

The funds raised will support Seres’ global expansion, charging-infrastructure growth and research and development in intelligent automotive technologies.

While the debut performance fell short of a jump, analysts say it reflects both broader market softness and investor caution around valuation levels in the competitive new-energy vehicle segment.

The listing also carries strategic significance: Seres is already listed on the Shanghai exchange and will become one of the first premier Chinese EV makers to execute an A-share and H-share dual listing, further enhancing its cross-border capital-market presence.

The opening drop highlights the challenge of translating strong subscription metrics into secondary trading gains, particularly in volatile investor climates.

Although the near-term price movement was modestly negative, Seres’ deeper significance as a capital-markets milestone and indicator of Hong Kong’s IPO revival remains prominent among industry watchers.
A surge of non-re-elections at the Legislative Council raises questions about age, generational change and potential political recalibration
A substantial number of members of Hong Kong’s Legislative Council announced their retirement ahead of the forthcoming December election—a move that has sparked both speculation and commentary.

Among them is the long-serving President, Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen, who after nine years at the helm, cited age and family reasons for stepping down.

Leung’s departure comes as over a dozen other incumbent lawmakers—many over the age of 60, though some younger—also opted not to seek re-election.

Some attributed their exit to “giving younger candidates a chance” or navigating generational turnover.

Others say the pace and scale of departures suggest more than routine turnover.

Influential speculation has emerged that Beijing may be steering a generational reset of the legislature, possibly through an informal age-ceiling or preference for new appointees.

The Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office denied the existence of any “blessed list” of approved candidates.

Leung himself, in a rare show of irritation, asked rhetorically: “If there were 90 legislators and more than 80 were re-elected, what would you say then?”

Observers say the wave of change reflects multiple factors.

One is advancing age: several members tested the threshold of 70 and cited retirement as personal choice.

Another is institutional cycle: the 2025 election follows the sweeping reforms to Hong Kong’s electoral system, and some incumbents may prefer exit to uncertain re-nomination.

Simultaneously, pool-wide renewal supports the city’s leadership narrative of generational advancement under the “one country, two systems” framework.

While departing legislators and officials emphasise voluntary retirement, the broader pattern has unsettled some political watchers.

The absence of clear invitations for farewell motions or traditional send-offs—such as a banquet for members and chief executive John Lee Ka-chiu—has added to perceptions of managed transition.

In this light, the turnover may signal more than mere personal decisions: it could mark a calibrated reshaping of Hong Kong’s legislative body ahead of a new electoral era.

Ultimately, the question facing Hong Kong is how this turnover will affect institutional memory, legislative stability and representation.

As the city seeks to position itself as a resilient and adaptive global finance hub, the generational refresh in its legislature may reflect a broader leadership strategy to align governance with evolving priorities.
The longtime Republican statesman and vice president under President George W. Bush passed away from pneumonia and heart-related complications.
Richard Bruce Cheney, who served as Vice President of the United States from 2001 to 2009 under President George W. Bush, has died at the age of 84.

His family confirmed that he passed away on Monday, November 3, 2025, due to complications from pneumonia and cardiovascular disease.

He was surrounded by his wife Lynne, to whom he was married for 61 years, and their daughters Liz and Mary.

Born in Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1941 and raised in Wyoming, Cheney’s political career spanned more than four decades.

He served as White House Chief of Staff under President Gerald Ford, U.S. Representative from Wyoming, and Secretary of Defense under President George H.W. Bush, where he directed Operation Desert Storm during the 1991 Gulf War.

As Vice President, Cheney was widely regarded as one of the most powerful figures ever to hold the office.

Following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, he became a central architect of U.S. foreign and defense policy, helping shape the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq and the expansion of counterterrorism powers within the executive branch.

His influence, however, came with controversy.

Cheney’s support for the Iraq War, based on claims of weapons of mass destruction, drew heavy criticism when those claims proved unfounded.

He also defended harsh interrogation tactics and domestic surveillance programs, positions that fueled long-standing debates over the balance between security and civil liberties.

In later years, Cheney became estranged from the Republican Party’s populist direction, frequently criticizing President Donald Trump and labeling him “the greatest threat” to the American republic.

In the 2024 election, he notably voted for Democrat Kamala Harris.

His daughter, Liz Cheney, also faced political fallout for opposing Trump and serving on the congressional committee investigating the January 6 Capitol events.

Despite a history of severe heart disease—including five heart attacks and a 2012 transplant—Cheney remained politically active until his final years.

He continued to write, speak, and advocate for strong national defense and American leadership abroad.

Tributes have poured in from political figures across the spectrum.

President George W. Bush called him “a steady hand during uncertain times,” while world leaders recognized his role in shaping early 21st-century geopolitics.

Cheney’s legacy, marked by power, conviction, and controversy, leaves an enduring imprint on American political history.

He is survived by his wife Lynne, daughters Liz and Mary, and several grandchildren.
France’s consumer watchdog found allegedly child-like sex dolls on Shein’s marketplace, prompting investigations and threats to block the company’s French operations.
French prosecutors have launched a formal investigation into Shein after France’s consumer protection agency, the DGCCRF, discovered listings on the retailer’s website for sex dolls appearing to depict minors.

The scandal erupted just days before Shein was set to open its first physical store in Paris at the historic BHV Marais department store.

According to official statements, the DGCCRF reported that the listings were of a nature 'leaving little doubt as to their child-pornographic character.' France’s finance minister, Roland Lescure, called the products 'horrible objects' and warned that if such conduct occurs again, Shein could face a nationwide ban.

The case was immediately referred to prosecutors for criminal review.

Shein responded by removing all sex-doll listings, banning such items globally, and temporarily suspending its entire adult-products category in France.

The company said the listings originated from third-party sellers and vowed to strengthen content moderation to prevent similar incidents.

Donald Tang, Shein’s executive chairman, took 'personal responsibility' and promised swift action against those responsible.

The controversy sparked widespread public outrage and protests in Paris.

Several brands withdrew their products from BHV Marais, and employees staged demonstrations outside the department store, denouncing Shein’s involvement.

Despite the backlash, SGM—the operator of BHV Marais—has stated that the store opening will proceed as planned and may be followed by additional Shein outlets across France.

French prosecutors also announced broader investigations into other e-commerce platforms, including Temu, AliExpress, and Wish, over possible distribution of sexualized or violent content involving minors.

The offence of distributing such material in France can carry up to five years in prison and fines reaching seventy-five thousand euros.

The case comes as Shein faces mounting scrutiny in Europe over deceptive advertising and sustainability concerns.

Earlier this year, the company was fined forty million euros in France for misleading commercial practices.

Now, the discovery of child-like sex dolls adds new urgency to debates on digital accountability and the ethical obligations of online marketplaces.

For regulators and consumers alike, the episode underscores a larger question: how to ensure that global e-commerce giants take genuine responsibility for what appears on their platforms, beyond disclaimers about third-party vendors.

Whether Shein’s reforms will satisfy French authorities remains uncertain, but the scandal has already shaken the company’s image on the eve of its Paris debut.
The reality star admitted that using the AI chatbot ChatGPT for legal study advice led to repeated exam failures.
Kim Kardashian has revealed that she relied on ChatGPT for legal advice while studying for her bar exams — and claims the artificial intelligence chatbot is partly to blame for her repeated failures.

In a lie-detector interview for Vanity Fair, the forty-five-year-old entrepreneur and aspiring lawyer admitted she had turned to the AI tool when preparing for her legal qualification tests, saying she would photograph questions and send them to ChatGPT for answers.

Kardashian said the responses were often wrong and that she grew frustrated when they caused her to fail.

'It made me fail tests all the time,' she said, explaining that she would 'get mad and yell at it,' only for the chatbot to reply, 'This is just teaching you to trust your own instincts.

You knew the answer all along.' The exchange drew laughter from interviewer Teyana Taylor, who suggested that Kardashian’s relationship with the AI seemed like that of a 'frenemy.' Kardashian agreed: 'I trust it, but it talks back to me like a therapist and tells me to believe in myself.'

The polygraph test confirmed she was truthful about using ChatGPT, adding a touch of irony to her confession.

Kardashian’s law-school journey, which began around 2019, has stretched to six years rather than the standard four.

After passing California’s preliminary 'baby bar' exam in 2021, she has completed her studies and now awaits results from her final bar examination.

Her light-hearted yet revealing comments underline a growing issue in professional education — the temptation to rely on AI tools for learning and decision-making.

ChatGPT, while widely used for drafting and tutoring, is not designed for certified legal study and can easily provide inaccurate or incomplete answers.

For Kardashian, who has championed criminal-justice reform and studied to follow in her late father Robert Kardashian’s legal footsteps, the incident highlights both the promise and peril of integrating AI into human judgment.

While she expressed continued fascination with the technology, her story serves as a cautionary tale about over-trusting machine intelligence in high-stakes testing environments.

Whether she ultimately passes or fails, Kardashian’s remarks have already reignited the debate about the limits of artificial intelligence in education — and about the wisdom of letting an algorithm become one’s legal study partner.
After disappointment over GPT-5, the OpenAI CEO reignited debate with a cryptic viral post referencing Gen Alpha slang.
After GPT-5 received harsh criticism and widespread disappointment, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has once again managed to capture global attention.

In a brief and cryptic post on X, Altman declared that the company’s next model, GPT-6, will be called 'GPT-6-7.' The announcement instantly went viral, sparking confusion, humor, and speculation across the internet.

GPT-5, one of the most anticipated artificial intelligence models in recent years, was launched in August after months of hype led by Altman himself, who claimed it would be 'smarter than anything we’ve ever seen.' But a few months later, the reality proved underwhelming.

Instead of the promised revolution, many users complained that the model felt slower, colder, and less intuitive than before.

Facing heavy criticism online, OpenAI was even forced to partially restore GPT-4’s functionality weeks after the launch.

Now, with the controversy seemingly behind him, Altman has reignited it.

In his short post on X, he wrote: 'GPT-6 will be renamed GPT-6-7.

You’re welcome.'

For those unfamiliar with Gen Alpha slang — referring to those born between 2011 and 2024 — '6-7' might sound like an inside joke among engineers.

But according to Dictionary.com, which recently named '6-7' the 2025 Word of the Year, the phrase has become a viral expression among young people.

It roughly means 'so-so' or 'maybe, maybe not,' often accompanied by a hand gesture mimicking the act of juggling between two choices.

So is Altman serious about calling his next model by this bizarre viral name, or is it another linguistic stunt meant to grab attention?

No one knows.

Yet in a world where every OpenAI post is examined under a microscope, even a joke can turn into global headlines.

Some suggest Altman may simply be enjoying the hype, while others think the post could hint that OpenAI is already working on GPT-6 — a next-generation model meant to fix GPT-5’s shortcomings.

Either way, the choice of name might not be accidental.

The term '6-7' also resonates with younger audiences who spend their days on TikTok, creating memes and slang that adults often fail to understand.

The strategy might reflect OpenAI’s broader attempt to connect with younger users, who are increasingly abandoning traditional search engines like Google and Bing in favor of AI-powered tools such as ChatGPT.

For this generation, long articles and website browsing have given way to concise, instant answers.

In that context, Altman’s adoption of the '6-7' meme may be a clever wink to the next generation — a way to make AI feel less intimidating and more fun, evolving from a scientific tool into a cultural phenomenon that speaks the language of the internet.

Ultimately, OpenAI remains a tech company that needs to grow its audience and build emotional connection with users.

Understanding how to communicate with them — and how to make them fall in love with the brand — is part of that mission.

Whether Altman truly names the next model 'GPT-6-7' or not, one thing is clear: he has once again made the world talk about ChatGPT.
Fintech firm sees the city as a payment hub for Chinese companies under new regulatory framework for stablecoins
Hong Kong is positioning itself as a strategic bridge for mainland Chinese firms exploring stablecoin-based commerce, according to EBANX’s chief executive.

The Brazilian payments-tech company is actively evaluating how Hong Kong’s recent stablecoin licensing regime can enable cross-border trade and settlement for China-based businesses.

“The new framework in Hong Kong is transformational,” said João Del Valle, CEO and co-founder of EBANX.

“Hong Kong is becoming an entry point into the mainland, and that is the most attractive aspect of it.” He added that while adoption of stablecoins might be gradual, the city’s regulatory clarity and connectivity to China make it a natural hub for experimentations in “programmable money”.

Hong Kong rolled out one of the world’s first full-licensing regimes for fiat-referenced stablecoins on August 1 2025, under which issuers must secure a licence from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), hold reserves of high-quality liquid assets and meet stringent operational requirements.

Analysts note that the high barriers are likely to channel initial activity toward well-capitalised incumbents rather than startups.

Del Valle said that EBANX is exploring embedding stablecoin support into its global payment-rails ecosystem and targeting Chinese-export firms that face friction in traditional settlement channels.

He emphasised that settlement via stablecoins can occur in seconds compared with one to two days for conventional wire transactions, a key benefit for international trade.

The Hong Kong regime is not designed for rapid speculation, but rather for a controlled runway of institutionalised stablecoin participation.

According to regulators and market observers, the city aims to serve as a sandbox for innovation in tokenised finance and cross-border settlement, tied to the broader agenda of internationalising the Chinese currency and enhancing the global role of the renminbi.

Nevertheless, new reporting shows that some mainland firms—including tech giants that had been preparing for stablecoin issuance—have paused their projects following more cautious guidance from mainland regulators.

This introduces uncertainty into the ecosystem, even as Hong Kong continues to promote itself as a fintech bridge between China and the world.

For EBANX, the opportunity lies in servicing a new wave of Chinese exporters, e-commerce companies and digital-commerce platforms that can benefit from faster settlement and broader access via stablecoins.

Del Valle said the firm expects “some significant growth next year in stablecoin use as a payment method globally.”

Beyond China-linked trade, the developments reinforce Hong Kong’s ambition to build up digital-asset infrastructure and tokenised finance capability.

Whether stablecoins will scale quickly or remain niche remains to be seen, but for firms like EBANX the regulatory foundation in Hong Kong offers an attractive platform to test next-generation payments and settlement models.
Experts say the city must leverage its global talent appeal and tech ecosystem to support the nation’s next five-year development plan
Hong Kong is poised to serve as a crucial hub for talent and innovation in support of China’s broader push for technological self-reliance, say senior experts, following the fourth plenary session of the 20th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China held from October 20–23. The session’s “15th Five-Year Plan (2026-30)” recommendations underscored the importance of enhancing scientific and technological strength as a national priority, and positioned the Special Administrative Regions of Hong Kong and Macau as key contributors.

Commentators highlight the city’s dual advantage of “having the backing of the motherland and maintaining close connections with the rest of the world”, pointing to its potential to bridge mainland China’s innovation ecosystem with global research networks.

Consultant Lau Siu-kai urged the Hong Kong government to adopt a proactive industrial transformation role, particularly in coordinating economic development and embedding the city more deeply into the national strategy.

He suggested that success would see Hong Kong simultaneously become a global financial, shipping, trade, innovation and technology centre as well as a hub for high-calibre international talent.

Angus Ng Hok-ming, chairman of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area Youth Association, echoed the call by highlighting opportunities for Hong Kong youth to transition from “specialised professionals” into “strategic generalists”.

He cited emerging roles in green finance, digital trade and mediation services under the Belt and Road Initiative as avenues for young talent to engage globally while supporting national infrastructure and ESG standards.

These reflections come amid strong recent indicators of Hong Kong’s rising talent and innovation standing: the city moved up to fourth-place globally in the 2025 World Talent Ranking and topped Asia, and the Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Guangzhou science and technology cluster was ranked first globally by the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Global Innovation Index.

Policymakers view this as affirmation that local measures in education, innovation and technology are yielding results.

Stakeholders say that clear governance, strategic planning and deeper cooperation with mainland manufacturing and innovation ecosystems will be critical as Hong Kong seeks to fulfil its role in national development.

The emphasis includes strengthening digital infrastructure, advancing cross-border data flows, and attracting global scientific talent to reinforce Hong Kong’s contribution to China’s self-reliance and global competitiveness aspirations.
Leaping, crouching and charging ahead, the city’s first men’s foil world champion reshapes conventional norms with his own technique
Ryan Choi Chun-yin, Hong Kong’s newly crowned world champion in men's foil fencing, attributes his unconventional style to a restless spirit.

“I leap, crouch and charge forward,” he told the South China Morning Post, reflecting on what he described as a very unorthodox approach to the sport.

Born on October 9, 1997, in Hong Kong—just months after the territory’s handover—Choi began fencing at age nine at a school in Kowloon.

He admits he initially resisted the sport, viewing it as “violent and dangerous,” but stayed on after his mother’s encouragement and the coach’s early praise.

“He kept saying I was talented, which made me very proud,” Choi recalled.

His leap into prominence has been meteoric.

In May 2025 he captured his first senior international gold at the Shanghai Grand Prix.

He followed that with victory at the Asian Fencing Championships in June, and sealed his momentous streak by defeating Russia’s Kirill Borodachev 15-9 to become Hong Kong’s first ever men’s foil world champion in Tbilisi, Georgia, in July.

His triumph simultaneously elevated him to world No. 1 in the Fédération Internationale d’Escrime rankings.

Chief coaches Maurizio Zomparelli and Giacomo Fanizza embraced his atypical method rather than overhaul it, observing that his leap-crouch-charge rhythm didn’t conform with tradition—but it worked.

“I am not a traditional fencer,” Choi said.

“But now I have reached the top using my style, maybe it will inspire fencers worldwide that you don’t have to follow tradition.”

Choi’s victory follows Hong Kong’s fencing surge led by Olympic champions such as Edgar Cheung Ka-long and Vivian Kong, yet stands out for achieving the first men’s foil world title for the territory.

The path was not smooth: earlier this season Choi had discussed quitting after a run of poor results, only to be persuaded to persevere and channel his instinctive movement into a compelling, elite-winning approach.

As Choi moves into the next phase of his career his coaches plan to optimise rather than suppress his natural style—ensuring his explosive rhythm sustains stamina over long tournaments.

With his leap-crouch-charge trademark now global-known, Choi’s success challenges fencing orthodoxy and signals a new era of creative athletic identity in the sport.
New permits offer mainland professionals from key regions longer stays in Hong Kong and Macau for business and cultural travel
China’s National Immigration Administration (NIA) announced that from November 5, 2025 its expanded Talent Visa Programme will allow designated professionals to apply for multiple-entry travel permits covering mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau, enhancing mobility for business and tourism in the region.

The move opens the scheme to talent from newly included mainland areas such as the Yangtze River Delta, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei and all national pilot free-trade zones.

Under the revised rules, qualified professionals in fields including scientific research, culture, education, health care and law may obtain permits valid for up to one to five years, with each visit lasting up to 30 days.

Business activity in Hong Kong and Macau is expected to increase accordingly, as professionals engage in cross-border collaboration, conferences and leisure travel.

Tourism and hospitality sectors in both Special Administrative Regions are poised to benefit from the arrival of frequent travellers seeking both work and leisure.

The visa revision aligns with China’s broader “talent-power” strategy, positioning cross-border mobility as a catalyst for innovation and economic integration.

The scheme further consolidates Hong Kong’s and Macau’s roles as global business and tourism hubs, reinforcing their connectivity with mainland China’s innovation and financial ecosystems while enabling professionals to participate in the regions’ advanced infrastructure and services.

With border processes also enhanced through biometric smart-channel systems, entry and exit at major crossings between the mainland, Hong Kong and Macau are expected to become faster and more efficient, reducing friction for frequent travellers.

Business communities, tourism operators and talent agencies citing the development see it as an opportunity to tap a broader talent pool, boost hotel and event revenues and foster greater cultural and economic exchange across these jurisdictions.

In a statement accompanying the rollout, the NIA emphasised the intention to “support professional mobility and service trade” and to open “new pathways for innovation and talent circulation” between the mainland and the two Special Administrative Regions.

Stakeholders are advised to review detailed eligibility criteria, prepare supporting documents for roles and travel plans, and monitor guidance from immigration authorities in Hong Kong and Macau to take full advantage of the expanded visa framework.
Hong Kong carrier delays Flight UO559 by nearly ninety minutes after boarding altercation between passengers in Da Nang
A budget carrier, HK Express, removed two passengers ahead of take-off on a Sunday evening flight from Da Nang to Hong Kong following a heated confrontation that caused a delay of nearly ninety minutes.

The couple were asked to leave while boarding Flight UO559 after an argument in the waiting area escalated, with online footage showing the woman shouting accusations of prostitution visits and physical abuse against her partner, including claims she had been “punched forty times”.

The pair subsequently disrupted boarding, engaging in a verbal altercation with three cabin crew members once on board.

The airline confirmed that the behaviour was considered disruptive, and appropriate action was taken in line with its zero-tolerance policy toward conduct that endangers crew or passengers.

The aircraft departed later than scheduled after the removal of the individuals following intervention by ground staff.

Although the incident centred on personal allegations rather than public safety per se, its impact on operational scheduling underscores the sensitivity of passenger conduct in confined travel environments.

HK Express noted the delay in its official flight status tracker, showing Flight UO559 pushed back from its scheduled departure following the incident.

The carrier has not publicly disclosed the identities of the removed passengers, nor whether further sanctions—such as blacklisting from future flights—will apply.

The airline emphasised that it remains committed to safeguarding both safety and the travel experience of its clientele in line with aviation security regulations.

Observers say the episode may prompt a review of boarding screening and crew-response protocols for managing heated disputes before or during flight boarding procedures.
A 45-year-old man in Tsing Yi is the third confirmed local case, prompting expanded surveillance-and-mosquito-control efforts
Hong Kong health authorities have reported the third locally acquired case of Chikungunya fever in the city, a 45-year-old man residing in the Mount Haven estate in Tsing Yi and working in Sheung Wan.

He developed fever, joint pain and rash on October 30 and sought treatment at a hospital, where his infection was confirmed in a mosquito-free ward.

The patient has no travel history in the preceding three months and did not visit Fung Tak Estate in Wong Tai Sin, the site of previous local cases, raising concern of a second source of transmission.

The Centre for Health Protection (CHP) has begun genome sequencing to assess whether the latest infection links to earlier local cases or represents a new transmission chain.

Around 1,500 households in the nearby estate area will undergo health surveys and screening, while city-wide mosquito suppression efforts remain reinforced.

An 82-year-old woman from Wong Tai Sin, identified on October 26, and a 55-year-old woman from the same district, confirmed on October 31, represent the first two local-acquired infections in Hong Kong.

To date in 2025, Hong Kong has recorded 55 confirmed chikungunya cases, including three local and the remainder imported.

The city’s health and environmental agencies continue to emphasise mosquito-breeding site elimination, use of insect repellent and early clinical detection, especially as neighbouring Guangdong Province endures a large outbreak numbering thousands of cases.

Officials noted that while the risk of widespread transmission remains “not high” thanks to rapid intervention, the unforeseen third case underscores the need for vigilance.

Residents with symptoms such as sudden fever, joint pain and rash — particularly if they live in or have visited affected districts — are urged to seek immediate medical attention.

The CHP will maintain enhanced surveillance and vector control until local spread is confidently ruled out.
HKU eyes a branch in Riyadh following property acquisition in Spain, marking a dual-continent international expansion strategy
The University of Hong Kong (HKU) is advancing plans to establish a campus in Saudi Arabia, according to sources who confirm the institution is evaluating sites in or around Riyadh.

The move forms part of the university’s broader internationalisation strategy, which also includes the purchase of a property for a campus in Spain.

Insiders indicate that the project remains in early stages and that no definitive timeline has yet been set.

One person said the university “sees an opportunity in Saudi Arabia and has a plan to open a campus in Riyadh.” Another noted that HKU once considered the Diriyah area on Riyadh’s outskirts but later abandoned that option as it refined its expansion approach.

The Saudi initiative follows HKU Business School’s August 2025 signing of a memorandum of understanding with Argaam Investment Company in Saudi Arabia, aimed at delivering executive education in the gulf region.

This cooperation is seen as an intermediate step and reflects the university’s growing institutional presence in the Kingdom.

Establishing a full branch campus would align with Saudi Arabia’s ongoing vision to attract foreign institutions under its higher-education liberalisation drives and aligns with HKU’s desire to strengthen its global footprint.

The university has long emphasised its global alliances, noting it partners with over 380 institutions in 46 countries to support international mobility and collaboration.

HKU has not yet officially announced the Saudi campus plan, and neither the site nor proposed disciplines have been publicised.

The dual push into Europe and the Middle East signals the university’s ambition to reposition itself as a global centre for higher education, research and cross-regional talent flows.
Visual artist Nadim Abbas and choreographer Chan Wai-lok explore economy, attention and movement in immersive installation-performance
An immersive crossover of installation art and contemporary dance titled “No Time To Die: An Inert Liquid Assembly” will premiere in Hong Kong at the Freespace Dance 2025 festival from 20-23 and 27-30 November 2025. The work is a collaboration between visual artist Nadim Abbas and choreographer‐performer Chan Wai‑lok, hosted in The Room at the West Kowloon Cultural District and produced by cross-disciplinary platform No Discipline Limited.

Set in a hybrid space described as “part domestic interior, part logistics warehouse”, the production invites audiences to traverse installation environments by day and attend a one-hour fifteen-minute performance at night.

Through layered visuals of cardboard models, packaging material and robotic grabbers, the piece reflects on modern life’s saturation of data, the fluidity of economy, and a sense of “no-thing to grasp”.

Abbas and Chan draw on the Cantonese phrase “I have time to die but no time to get sick” to frame a socioeconomic mood of extracted attention and deferred value.

According to the production notes, the installation exposes a scenario in which the work done is zero when “there is no-thing to displace”, and the economy is processed through attention rather than material ownership.

The choreography embraces stillness and minimal movement, described metaphorically as “quiet quitting” and the “inert liquid assembly” of information and objects around absent products.

The project emerges under this year’s festival theme, “Speculative Futures: Asia-Pacific Perspectives,” which positions the work alongside interdisciplinary dialogues from the region.

The producers emphasise audience choice of engagement mode: visitors may experience the space at their own pace during open exhibition slots or join the framed performance evening.

Ticketing details indicate performance tickets start at HK$300, while exhibition access is free.

Concession rates and group-purchase discounts are available.

The timing and format of the event encourage reflection on how urban dwellers navigate a high-velocity, information-dense world when movement becomes logistics and stillness itself a form of resistance.
Regulator outlines four-pillar DART framework spanning data infrastructure, artificial intelligence, resilience and tokenisation
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) presented its next-generation Fintech 2030 strategy today, unveiling over forty initiatives under the new “DART” framework: Data infrastructure, Artificial intelligence (AI), Resilience and Tokenisation.

The plan was announced on the opening day of the city’s FinTech Week 2025 event.

Under the “Data” pillar, the regulator pledged to build a robust and future-ready infrastructure for secure data sharing, underpinning innovation in personalised financial services, trade-finance expansion and cross-border payments.

The “Artificial intelligence” component commits to a holistic model-for-finance approach that will develop shared AI infrastructure in collaboration with banks, fintech firms and regulators.

On “Resilience”, the HKMA says it will launch a fintech-specific cybersecurity certification framework, improve early-warning systems through real-time analytics and prepare the industry for quantum-safe cryptography.

The “Tokenisation” pillar includes plans to regularise the issuance of tokenised government bonds, explore tokenised deposits and engage with wholesale central-bank digital-currency (wCBDC) infrastructure through its “Project Ensemble” initiative.

The strategy builds on the regulator’s prior Fintech 2025 blueprint and is tailored to deepening Hong Kong’s position as a bridge between mainland China and global capital markets.

The HKMA emphasises that innovation presents both opportunity and risk—stressing that slower adoption may pose a greater threat than standing still.

FinTech Week 2025, co-hosted by the HKMA and InvestHK, sees the regulator engaging industry in the next phase of digital-finance transformation.

The chief executive of the HKMA described the initiative as driving “embedded technology powered by trust, transparency and intelligence”.

With global competition intensifying among finance hubs, this strategic sheet gives financial institutions a clear roadmap for the next decade of innovation, while signalling that Hong Kong is prioritising cross-border connectivity, AI-enabled services and tokenised finance as core pillars of its international financial-centre ambition.
He Lifeng tells summit the city must strengthen ties with China’s economy as Hong Kong’s listings surge to US$26.8 billion in 2025
China’s Vice Premier He Lifeng addressed the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong on Tuesday, asserting that the city must bolster economic and financial cooperation with the mainland to secure its future as a global financial centre.

Speaking via video link, He declared that “Hong Kong is destined for significant historical development opportunities.

Its future is bright.”

He said that by aligning more closely with China’s development plans and incentivising deeper financial integration, Hong Kong could more effectively reclaim its standing in world capital markets.

“I hope Hong Kong can grasp the opportunities and proactively deepen its connection with the country’s development plans,” he added.

The comments come as Hong Kong’s capital markets display notable strength in 2025. According to Dealogic data, the city welcomed 80 initial public offerings in the first ten months of the year, raising US$26.8 billion—nearly triple the comparable period in 2024—and overtaking both New York and Nasdaq (excluding special purpose acquisition companies) as the global top venue for new listings.

Hong Kong’s rebound follows years of reputational challenge stemming from extended COVID-19 border closures and the introduction of national security legislation in 2020. Chief Executive John Lee emphasised at the summit that the resurgence of listings and investor activity signalled a stronger foundation for the city’s financial system.

He Lifeng’s address emphasised three key priorities for Hong Kong: deepening financial reform and innovation, expanding opening-up and cooperation, and integrating with the nation’s wider economic strategy.

He encouraged the city to leverage its status as a bridge between Chinese capital markets and global investors and to embrace the advantages of the Greater Bay Area and other national initiatives.

As the mainland and Hong Kong enhance capital-market linkages, regulatory coordination and cross-border financing mechanisms, the vice-premier’s rhetoric signals Beijing’s intent to enlist Hong Kong more fully in its broader growth and global-finance agenda.

With global investor attention in the city renewed, the prospects for Hong Kong’s next chapter are shaped by both domestic reform and international confidence.
Autonomous-driving firm proposes global offering in Hong Kong after Nasdaq debut, filing for HK$2.39 billion share sale
Guangzhou-based autonomous-driving company WeRide Inc is preparing to launch a dual primary listing in Hong Kong, with the goal of raising approximately HK$2.39 billion (about US$308 million).

The firm plans to issue roughly 88 million new Class A ordinary shares, with an indicative price around HK$27.10 per share and a prior maximum of HK$35 per share, according to people familiar with the matter.

Having listed on the Nasdaq in October 2024, WeRide recently disclosed in a United States Securities and Exchange Commission filing that the China Securities Regulatory Commission had issued a notice of filing supporting a proposed global offering and dual primary Hong Kong listing.

The company has retained Morgan Stanley and China International Capital Corp as lead advisers for the transaction.

The funding round comes amid deteriorating relations between the United States and China and reflects a broader trend of U.S.-listed Chinese firms seeking alternative capital sources in Hong Kong.

WeRide’s current U.S. market valuation is roughly US$3 billion and its move into the Hong Kong market is seen as a strategic bid to diversify its investor base and mitigate regulatory risk.

Despite revenue growth — WeRide reported a second-quarter revenue of approximately RMB 127.2 million (about US$17.8 million), up around 60.8% year-on-year — the company remains unprofitable, with a net loss of RMB 406.4 million in the quarter.

The capital raise aims to support continued global deployment of its Level 4 autonomous-driving technology, including robotaxi and robobus services, and to fund further research and development.

If successful, the listing will position WeRide as one of the first major Chinese robotaxi players to tap the Hong Kong market via a dual primary structure.

The ultimate size, pricing and timing of the offering remain subject to regulatory approvals and market conditions.
Fencing champ Vivian Kong files nomination for the tourism functional constituency as incumbent shifts to Election Committee seat
Olympic gold-medallist Vivian Kong Man-wai confirmed on Monday her intention to contest the tourism functional constituency seat in the 2025 Legislative Council election in Hong Kong, marking her entry into politics following her retirement from competitive sport.

The 31-year-old fencer submitted her nomination form in the afternoon, after weeks of speculation about her potential candidacy.

Kong, who clinched the women’s individual épée title at the 2024 Paris Olympics and subsequently retired, had served as the assistant external affairs manager at the Hong Kong Jockey Club before suspending her duties to prepare for public service.

The tourism seat is being vacated by incumbent lawmaker Yiu Pak-leung (Perry Yiu), who announced his intention to switch to contest in the Election Committee constituency, effectively clearing a path for Kong’s bid.

On her social-media account, Kong emphasised that her previous posts were unrelated to the election, underscoring her newly declared focus.

Analysts view her transition from elite athlete to political candidate as emblematic of a broader pattern where celebrated sports figures seek public office, leveraging their personal brand and public goodwill.

The tourism functional constituency is one of 30 such seats in Hong Kong’s Legislative Council reserved for specific sectors.

Kong’s nomination highlights her sectoral ties: her prior role at the Jockey Club involved promoting visitor engagement and tourism-related initiatives.

While functional constituencies permit candidates with foreign right of abode—unlike geographical seats—some commentators note scrutiny may arise from questions over her professional experience and sectoral eligibility.

Kong’s campaign is expected to focus on post-pandemic recovery of Hong Kong’s visitor economy, enhancement of inbound travel, and positioning of the city as a premier global tourism hub.

The election arrives at a strategic moment as Hong Kong seeks to regain international traveller flows and revitalize its tourism-led sectors.

With nominations closing soon, Kong’s entry consolidates a growing talent pipeline within Hong Kong’s political-economy interface and signals a generational shift in candidate profiles across the functional constituencies.
Autonomous-driving pioneer targets up to HK$180 per share ahead of dual-listing on Hong Kong Stock Exchange
Chinese autonomous-driving firm Pony AI Inc. announced on 27 October 2025 that it is launching a Hong Kong initial public offering of 41,955,700 Class A ordinary shares, with a maximum offering price set at HK$180 per share (equivalent to US$23.17).

The company will retain its American depositary shares listed on Nasdaq under the ticker PONY and is presenting the Hong Kong listing via a dual-primary structure on The Stock Exchange of Hong Kong under stock code “2026”.

Under the offering structure, approximately 4.2 million shares will be allocated to the Hong Kong public (about 10%), with the remaining 37.8 million shares reserved for the international tranche subject to reallocation and over-allotment options.

Final pricing is scheduled on or around 3 November, and cannot exceed the HK$180 ceiling.

Pony AI is targeting the net proceeds for large-scale commercialisation of its Level 4 autonomous-driving technology, expansion of research and development, and general working-capital purposes.

Cornerstone investors have already committed to roughly US$120 million in the international segment of the offering.

The Hong Kong listing aligns with the approval issued by China’s securities regulator, and follows the firm’s Nov 2024 Nasdaq debut.

Investors will not be able to convert the Hong Kong shares into American depositary shares during a 40-day distribution-compliance window, after which fungibility will be enabled.

While the firm has outlined strong growth ambitions, observers note the capital-intensive nature of autonomous-driving deployment and rising competition in the sector.

Nonetheless, the IPO marks a significant milestone for Pony AI’s expansion and for China’s driverless-mobility industry more broadly.
Markets rally as Beijing indicates it may delay export curbs on rare earth metals and reconsider investigations into U.S. tech firms
Hong Kong’s benchmark equity market rose on Monday amid fresh signs of a thaw in the U.S.–China trade standoff, as Beijing signalled it would pause planned export controls on rare earth metals and drop probes into U.S. semiconductor supply-chain firms.

The Hang Seng Index advanced by 0.4 per cent to 26,001.13 by 9:50 a.m. local time, while the Hang Seng Tech index slipped 0.1 per cent, and mainland indexes recorded modest declines.

The market response followed statements attributed to the White House that China would suspend additional rare-earth export curbs and terminate investigations into U.S. chip-industry firms under a framework reached between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping.

The accord reportedly involves Washington holding off on imposing further reciprocal tariffs in return.

Among sector winners in Hong Kong, travel booking platform Trip.com Group rose approximately 1.5 per cent, e-commerce player JD.com gained around 0.9 per cent, and tech hardware company Xiaomi climbed about 2.5 per cent.

By contrast, jewellery chain Chow Tai Fook Jewellery Group dropped 6.6 per cent and gold producer Zijin Mining shed 2.5 per cent.

Commentators noted that the rare-earth sector remains closely watched as a flashpoint in the broader technology and defence trade dispute.

China controls about 70 per cent of the world’s rare-earth mining and approximately 90 per cent of its processing.

Recent Beijing announcements mandated licensing for exports of even minute traces of Chinese-sourced rare earths—fuel for global nervousness around high-tech supply chains.

The latest uptick in equities appears driven by improved risk sentiment, with investors interpreting the developments as a return to negotiation rather than escalation.

However, analysts caution that the details of any trade “pause” remain vague and that sustaining the positive momentum may depend on concrete regulatory actions and follow-through from both sides.

Global markets echoed the shift in tone: U.S. and Asian stocks rallied last week as the prospect of a meeting between Trump and Xi boosted hopes of a more enduring truce.

Metals such as copper also received a lift, while safe-haven assets like gold eased.

Still, underlying trade frictions remain.

While the framework may offer temporary relief, many key barriers—including tariffs and technology restrictions—remain intact until both capitals deliver on commitments.

Investors remain alert to any signals that the détente could unravel.

The move underscores how strategic minerals such as rare earths are increasingly central to global supply-chain and geopolitical risk assessments.
City-wide whole-genome sequencing scheme expands past goal to offer personalised diagnosis and treatment for undiagnosed conditions
Hong Kong’s large-scale genome sequencing effort has recruited more than forty of five thousand participants within four years since its launch, exceeding its original target for the scheme.

The Hong Kong Genome Institute (HKGI) announced that the Hong Kong Genome Project (HKGP) has enrolled over 52,000 individuals from more than 37,000 families as of mid-October 2025, surpassing its initial aim of 40,000 to 50,000 people from around 20,000 families by this year.

Launched in 2021, the HKGP focuses on participants with undiagnosed diseases, hereditary cancers or conditions potentially linked to genomics, alongside their family members.

Around three-quarters of those enrolled report that the sequencing findings led to changes in their treatment, according to chief medical and scientific officer Dr Brian Chung Hon-yin.

Eligibility for the project requires referral by a clinician at a Partnering Centre or designated referral network of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority.

Once accepted, participants undergo whole genome sequencing (WGS) and receive results coupled with genetic counselling.

The HKGP’s stated objectives include delivering more precise diagnoses, tailoring treatment plans, nurturing genomic-medicine talent and building a genomic database of the local Chinese population.

As the project moves beyond its initial phase, HKGI officials say they plan to expand the scheme further—both in recruitment and application—to help a broader patient base uncover the genetic causes of their conditions.

HKGP’s success in hitting and exceeding recruitment targets is seen as an important signal of genomic-medicine integration within Hong Kong’s public-health system.

The expansion comes amidst growing global momentum for large-scale genome sequencing initiatives, and positions Hong Kong to contribute more actively to population-specific sequencing data, precision medicine research and local clinical innovation.
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