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Home»Explore by countries»Hong Kong»HK’s next economic miracle might look old-fashioned
Hong Kong

HK’s next economic miracle might look old-fashioned

By IslaMay 14, 20266 Mins Read
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For years, Hong Kong’s economic story has revolved around familiar pillars: property, finance and trade. The formula created enormous wealth, but it also left the city vulnerable to every global market tremor and regional slowdown. That is why the special administrative region government’s latest push into commodities trading matters. Beneath the technical language of warehouses, metal contracts and settlement systems lies something much larger: A strategic attempt to redesign Hong Kong’s role in the global economy.

Speaking at the London Metal Exchange Asia Metals Seminar last week, Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po outlined an increasingly ambitious vision. The Hong Kong SAR is not merely trying to host more commodity trades. It wants to become a fully integrated commodities hub, complete with warehousing networks, physical delivery infrastructure, financing services, insurance products, arbitration mechanisms and renminbi-denominated settlement capabilities.

This is about much more than copper, aluminum or gold.

For decades, China has occupied a strange position in the global commodities economy. It is the world’s largest consumer of industrial metals and one of the largest producers of many raw materials, yet much of the pricing power still sits elsewhere. Commodities consumed in Asia are frequently priced in London or New York and settled in US dollars. China may dominate manufacturing capacity, but it does not fully control the financial architecture surrounding the resources that feed its economy.

That imbalance has become increasingly uncomfortable in a world shaped by sanctions, export controls and strategic rivalry.

As geopolitical tensions deepen, commodities are no longer just commercial assets. They are instruments of national security. Energy supplies, critical minerals and industrial metals have become entangled with diplomacy and strategic competition. Governments now worry not only about access to resources, but also about who controls logistics, settlement systems and pricing benchmarks.

This is precisely where Hong Kong sees an opening.

The city already possesses several advantages that most aspiring commodity hubs would struggle to replicate. It has a freely convertible currency system, deep capital markets, internationally recognized legal institutions and a financial culture fluent in both Chinese and global business practices. More importantly, Hong Kong already owns a seat at the table through the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing acquisition of the London Metal Exchange more than a decade ago.

Yet ownership alone was never enough. One of Hong Kong’s longstanding weaknesses has been its tendency to focus excessively on financial abstraction while neglecting the physical side of commerce. Commodity markets ultimately depend on real warehouses, real shipping routes and real delivery systems. For years, Hong Kong excelled at paper transactions while allowing much of the underlying industrial infrastructure to migrate elsewhere.

The current strategy appears to recognize that mistake.

The expansion of London Metal Exchange-approved warehouses in Hong Kong from just four facilities to 15 within a year may sound technical, but it matters enormously. Commodity traders care about certainty of delivery as much as financial liquidity. Warehousing networks influence price discovery, inventory management and regional trading flows. A city cannot become a serious commodities center if it exists only as a Bloomberg terminal.

The same logic applies to the SAR government’s proposed tax concessions for commodity traders and its exploration of specialized mediation services for commodity disputes. These are not isolated policies. Together, they form the architecture of an ecosystem designed to attract global traders, logistics firms, insurers and financial institutions into a concentrated cluster.

The broader ambition is clear. Hong Kong wants to move beyond being merely a capital raising center and evolve into a strategic coordination platform for trade, finance and supply chains.

There is also a domestic economic logic behind this push.

The city’s (Hong Kong’s) future may not depend on becoming the next Silicon Valley of Asia. It may instead depend on becoming something less fashionable but ultimately more durable: the place where global capital, Chinese industrial demand and international trade systems continue to meet, negotiate and settle with one another.

Hong Kong’s economy has long suffered from overreliance on property and finance. For years, rising asset prices masked the structural fragility beneath the surface. The city became exceptionally efficient at circulating wealth, but less successful at generating new forms of productive economic activity. Whenever global shocks hit financial markets or the property sector, the vulnerabilities became painfully visible.

Commodities trading offers something different. It creates spillover industries. Warehousing generates logistics demand. Trading creates financing opportunities. Insurance, shipping law, arbitration, risk management and derivatives markets all expand alongside it. Unlike speculative property activity, a commodities ecosystem anchors itself in global industrial flows.

In many ways, this is Hong Kong rediscovering an older version of itself.

Before the city became synonymous with luxury malls and soaring property valuations, it thrived as a gritty trading port deeply connected to physical commerce. The new commodities strategy attempts to modernize that heritage for a fragmented geopolitical era.

Still, the road ahead will not be easy.

Singapore remains a formidable competitor with a deeply entrenched commodities ecosystem. London retains immense influence over global pricing benchmarks. Shanghai continues to strengthen its own futures markets and financial infrastructure. Hong Kong will need more than optimistic speeches to carve out a meaningful role.

There are also political risks. International investors increasingly scrutinize Hong Kong through the lens of geopolitical uncertainty. Building trust in long-term dispute resolution, capital mobility and regulatory consistency will remain essential if the city hopes to attract major global commodity players.

Yet dismissing the strategy would be shortsighted.

Too often, discussions about Hong Kong’s future oscillate between nostalgia and pessimism. One side insists the city’s golden era has already passed. The other pins its hopes entirely on trendy technologies or tourism campaigns. Commodities may not generate flashy headlines in the same way as artificial intelligence startups or digital tokens, but they touch something far more fundamental: the infrastructure of global trade itself.

In a fractured world economy, the countries and cities that control the pipes, storage facilities, settlement systems and pricing mechanisms will possess quiet but significant power.

Hong Kong appears to understand that.

The city’s future may not depend on becoming the next Silicon Valley of Asia. It may instead depend on becoming something less fashionable but ultimately more durable: the place where global capital, Chinese industrial demand and international trade systems continue to meet, negotiate and settle with one another.

That role may sound old-fashioned. In today’s world, it could also become invaluable.

 

The author is chairman of the Asia MarTech Society and sits on the advisory boards of several professional organizations, including two universities.

The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.



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