For years, Hong Kong’s obituary has been repeatedly written by international commentators. Geopolitical tensions, pandemic isolation, concerns over capital flight and questions surrounding the city’s future contributed to a narrative of irreversible decline.
In many Western analyses, the assumption that Hong Kong’s best days as an international financial centre were behind it became almost automatic. Yet the latest global wealth management data tells a very different story.
According to estimates from Boston Consulting Group, Hong Kong has overtaken Switzerland to become the world’s largest offshore wealth management centre. The city reportedly held about US$2.95 trillion in offshore assets in 2025, surpassing Switzerland’s US$2.94 trillion.
The symbolism is difficult to overstate. For decades, Switzerland represented the pinnacle of offshore finance, synonymous with wealth preservation, banking sophistication and international capital mobility. Hong Kong surpassing Switzerland is not only a financial industry milestone but a broader turning point in the geography of global wealth.
The development reflects a structural transformation unfolding beneath the surface of geopolitical headlines. The centre of gravity of global wealth creation is shifting. Mainland China alone has generated one of the largest expansions of private wealth in modern history. Despite slower economic growth and the ongoing property market correction, China continues to produce high-net-worth individuals on an extraordinary scale.
Across Southeast Asia and India, wealth accumulation is also accelerating as regional economies expand and new entrepreneurial elites emerge. With Asia becoming an increasingly important engine of global wealth creation, financial centres closer to these capital flows inevitably gain greater strategic importance.




