Published: 13:22, November 12, 2025 | Updated: 14:24, November 12, 2025
Hong Kong’s investment firm reports HK$2b return in 2024
By Agencies

In this file photo dated Sept 11, 2024, Clara Chan Ka-chai, CEO of Hong Kong Investment Corp, delivers a speech during the BIOHK 2024, in Hong Kong. (PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY) 

Hong Kong Investment Corp generated more than HK$2 billion ($260 million) in investment income in 2024, boosted by initial public offerings and bets on biotechnology firms.

The figure comes three years after the fund was established in 2022 to promote the city’s economy and industries and strengthen ties with Chinese mainland cities surrounding the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

As of the end of last year, the firm had deployed less than 20 percent of its initial HK$62 billion, HKIC Chief Executive Officer Clara Chan Ka-chai said in a Bloomberg TV interview with Annabelle Droulers and Yvonne Man.

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“This is actually in perfect alignment with what we have set out for,” Chan said, referring to the investment pace and return. “We need to balance the speed with investment risk.”

The fund has now entered a second phase and is looking to make bigger bets with regional partners such as sovereign funds, pension plans and corporates. Investors in Southeast Asia and Middle East are interested in investing in Hong Kong SAR and mainland companies, Chan said.

HKIC is planning to scale up investment in a “more systematic manner” in the coming year, she said.

 This Feb 16, 2025, file photo taken from the Peak shows the Hong Kong skyline. (SHAMIM ASHRAF / CHINA DAILY)

Investments, which are made through four portfolios targeting different stages and sectors, so far comprise some 150 companies in industries including technology and biotechnology.

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“A lot of the growth drivers, I think, have been the biotech companies,” Chan said.

Its portfolio companies are exploring options, including public listings in the SAR as well as mergers and acquisitions.

Two Hong Kong listings have generated “double or triple” internal returns for the fund, according to Chan, who declined to provide the names or timeframe of these investments.

On top of the initial capital injected by the government, HKIC is also receiving about HK$2.8 billion in fresh funds from the city’s capital investment entrant scheme, she said.