Markets · Global Wealth
Key Facts
—The handover. Hong Kong has overtaken Switzerland as the world’s largest home for cross-border wealth, the first time the Alpine state has lost the title.
—The numbers. Hong Kong booked $2.95 trillion of foreign money in 2025 against Switzerland’s $2.94 trillion, by the count of Boston Consulting Group.
—The engine. Roughly three-fifths of that money comes from mainland China, funnelled through a city built to be its gateway.
—The Swiss wound. The collapse of Credit Suisse and the end of banking secrecy stripped away the privacy that made Switzerland special.
—The rivals. Singapore and Dubai are both growing fast, but neither has Hong Kong’s single overwhelming advantage: a direct line to Chinese money.
—The catch. Hong Kong’s fortune is now tied tightly to Beijing, for better and for worse.
For the better part of a century, the safest place for the world’s money was a Swiss vault. That era has quietly ended: by one closely watched measure, the world now has a new number-one Hong Kong cross-border wealth hub, and the story of how a Chinese city took the crown says as much about where global money is heading as it does about either place.
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A crown that changed hands by a whisker
First, a word on what is actually being measured, because the phrase “cross-border wealth” can sound like jargon. It simply means money that rich people park in a country other than the one they live in — an Indonesian tycoon’s account in Singapore, a German family’s portfolio managed in Zurich, a Brazilian industrialist’s trust booked in Geneva. It is the global business of looking after other people’s fortunes, and for generations Switzerland did it better, and more discreetly, than anyone else.
According to the Boston Consulting Group, a respected international consultancy that tracks these flows each year, that long reign has ended. In its 2026 Global Wealth Report — pointedly titled “The Great Reordering” — the firm found that the money booked in Hong Kong climbed almost eleven per cent in 2025 to reach $2.95 trillion. Switzerland, growing more slowly at under eight per cent, finished the year at $2.94 trillion. The margin is a rounding error, barely ten billion dollars between them. But the symbolism is enormous: for the first time, the Alpine state is no longer the world’s number one.
And this is not expected to be a one-year blip. BCG projects that by 2030 Hong Kong will hold around $4.6 trillion of foreign money, pulling away to a lead of nearly $600 billion over a Switzerland that will still grow, but only to roughly $4 trillion. The gap, in other words, is forecast to widen, not close. The crown has not just changed hands; it looks set to stay changed.
Why Switzerland lost the lead
To understand the handover, start with what went wrong in Switzerland, because the decline is partly self-inflicted and partly the price of joining the modern world. For decades, the Swiss offer rested on one word: secrecy. A Swiss bank account was a promise that no foreign tax authority would ever see inside it. That promise was worth a fortune, and it drew money from every corner of the planet.
Then it was dismantled. Under sustained pressure from the United States and Europe, Switzerland agreed to the automatic exchange of account information with foreign tax authorities. In plain terms, the vault now has windows. A wealthy foreigner’s Swiss account is reported to their home government like almost any other. The privacy premium that justified Switzerland’s dominance simply evaporated, and with it one of the main reasons to choose Zurich over anywhere else.
The second blow was a matter of trust. In 2023, Credit Suisse — a 167-year-old pillar of Swiss finance — collapsed and was swallowed in an emergency, state-brokered takeover by its larger rival UBS. For a country whose entire brand was stability and safekeeping, the failure of one of its two banking giants was a profound embarrassment. It rattled confidence in Swiss oversight and pushed some clients to spread their money across several countries rather than trust it all to one famous name.
On top of that sit tax pressures. The generous lump-sum tax deal that long lured wealthy foreigners to settle in cantons like Zug is now under political fire at home, where many Swiss voters feel it is unfair. None of this means Switzerland is finished — far from it. It remains a magnet for nervous money fleeing more dangerous places, and bankers report fresh inflows from the Gulf as the Middle East stays volatile. But a hub that competes on safety alone grows slowly, and slow growth is exactly what the numbers show.
The neutrality question: a self-inflicted wound?
There is a further blow that is harder to measure but, to many critics, just as damaging — and it cuts to the heart of what Switzerland was selling. After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Switzerland broke with its centuries-old tradition of strict neutrality and adopted the European Union’s sanctions against Moscow, freezing the assets of sanctioned Russians. By early 2025 the Swiss authorities had frozen around 7.4 billion Swiss francs in Russian financial assets, along with properties, luxury cars and artworks.
For a country whose brand rested on the promise that your money was safe and nobody’s business but your own, the symbolism was jarring. A vault that can be opened at a foreign government’s request is a different product from the one Switzerland sold for generations. Critics — including voices inside the Swiss parliament itself — argue that Bern has drifted into becoming a rule-taker for Brussels, adopting EU measures it once would have stood apart from, and forfeiting the very independence that made Switzerland valuable. In this telling, much of the decline is self-inflicted: the price of choosing alignment over neutrality.
It is important to be precise about the scale, though, because the politics can outrun the numbers. The frozen sums are a small fraction of the Russian money once estimated to sit in Swiss banks, and far smaller still against Switzerland’s nearly three trillion dollars of cross-border wealth. Switzerland’s book did not shrink in 2025; it grew, just more slowly than Hong Kong’s. The neutrality break is best understood as a reputational crack rather than a measurable stampede for the exits — a dent in the mystique that, layered on top of the end of secrecy and the Credit Suisse failure, chips away at the reasons a cautious foreign fortune once chose Zurich by default.
Defenders of the move see it differently, and the disagreement is worth airing. Swiss leaders argued that neutrality cannot mean indifference to a war of aggression in Europe, and that a financial centre seen as a haven for sanctioned money would have suffered a far worse reputational hit in Western capitals than the one it took in Moscow. Whichever view one holds, the effect on the wealth map is the same: another reason the old Swiss promise no longer sets the city apart, at exactly the moment a hungry rival in Asia offers growth that Switzerland, by design or by circumstance, cannot.
Inside the rise of the Hong Kong cross-border wealth hub
If Switzerland’s story is one of subtraction, Hong Kong’s is one of sheer gravitational pull. The single most important fact about the Hong Kong cross-border wealth hub is its proximity to the largest pool of new money on Earth: mainland China. Around sixty per cent of the foreign wealth booked in Hong Kong originates across the border on the mainland. The city is not really competing with Switzerland for the same clients; it is harvesting a different, faster-growing crop.
China’s wealthy have an enormous and growing need to move some of their money offshore — to diversify, to hold assets in a freely convertible currency, and to sit a step removed from the mainland’s capital controls. Hong Kong was practically designed for that job. It uses its own currency, runs on English common law, and operates a financial system plugged directly into global markets, yet it is a short train ride from the mainland and politically part of China. Bankers call it the “superconnector,” the valve through which Chinese capital meets the world.
Two specific machines have supercharged the flow. The first is a revived market for initial public offerings: 2025 saw a wave of big companies listing their shares in Hong Kong, raising money and drawing investors back to the city after several lean years. The second is a set of official channels, known broadly as Wealth Connect, that let residents of the wealthy Chinese cities neighbouring Hong Kong invest through the territory in a controlled, legal way. Together they turned a steady trickle of mainland money into a flood.
There is a deeper engine still: China’s dominance in manufacturing, especially in fast-growing industries like electric vehicles, keeps minting new fortunes on the mainland. As long as China keeps producing billionaires, Hong Kong has a natural pipeline of clients that no European city can match. Geography, law and politics have aligned to make it the obvious front door for the world’s second-largest economy.
So why not Singapore, or Dubai?
This is the question that puzzles many observers. Singapore and Dubai are both booming, both court the wealthy aggressively, and both are widely seen as safer political bets than a city under Beijing’s authority. So why did Hong Kong, not one of them, take the crown? The answer comes down to scale and specialisation.
Singapore is the genuine challenger and, in some ways, the more diversified hub. It has built a remarkable ecosystem of family offices — the private firms that manage a single rich family’s money — growing from around four hundred in 2020 to roughly two thousand today. But Singapore plays a different game. It serves all of Asia: Indonesian, Indian and Southeast Asian money as well as Chinese, and it has deliberately become more selective about whom it lets in, tightening its rules after a high-profile money-laundering scandal. That diversification is a strength, but it also means Singapore is not riding the one colossal wave — mainland Chinese wealth — the way Hong Kong is. At roughly $2.1 trillion of cross-border money, it remains a clear step behind, even as it grows at a brisk pace.
Dubai is the fastest-growing of the lot, with cross-border wealth up more than eleven per cent in a single year, and it has become a favourite for the global super-rich who prize low taxes, privacy, a crypto-friendly stance and a setup process measured in weeks rather than months. Even Africa’s richest man has been reported moving a family office there. But Dubai is growing from a much smaller base, and it serves a scattered clientele — Russian, Indian, African, Middle Eastern money — rather than a single dominant source. It is a rising star, not yet a titan.
Hong Kong’s advantage, in short, is concentration. Singapore spreads its bets across a continent and Dubai across the world, while Hong Kong sits at the mouth of the single richest river of new capital on the planet. In a business where, as BCG puts it, what ultimately matters is being close to the client, nobody is closer to Chinese money than Hong Kong.
The reordering of the whole map
Step back and the individual contest is part of a bigger pattern. Global financial wealth grew almost eleven per cent in 2025 to a record $333 trillion, its fastest pace since 2021, shrugging off trade wars and geopolitical alarm. Cross-border wealth specifically rose to $15.7 trillion, and crucially, it is bunching up. The money is flowing overwhelmingly into the top ten booking centres and away from smaller ones, concentrating power in a handful of giant hubs.
BCG describes the result as two distinct gravitational systems. One is anchored by Hong Kong and Singapore and serves the rising wealth of China, India and Southeast Asia. The other is anchored by Switzerland, the United States and the United Kingdom, and serves Europe, the Middle East and Latin America. The world’s money is increasingly sorting itself into an Eastern pool and a Western pool, each with its own capitals.
That split is the quiet headline. The handover of the top spot from Zurich to Hong Kong is not really one city beating another; it is the centre of financial gravity tilting east, as Asian fortunes outgrow Western ones year after year. The crown moved because the money moved.
What it means for Latin America and the wider world
For an investor in London or Munich — or for a wealthy family in São Paulo or México City weighing where to keep their money — the practical takeaway is clarity about the two systems. Latin American offshore wealth still flows, by BCG’s mapping, into the Western network of Switzerland, the United States and the United Kingdom, not into Asia. Hong Kong’s rise does not redraw where a Brazilian or Mexican fortune naturally sits; the region’s money remains firmly in the Atlantic orbit.
But the region is far from a bystander in the wider wealth boom. BCG expects emerging markets to add nearly $7 trillion in financial wealth by 2030, and it singles out Brazil and Mexico, alongside India, as leading that next wave of new millionaires. The money being created in Latin America is growing quickly; the question for the region’s own financial centres is whether any of them can capture more of it at home, rather than watch it book in Zurich, New York or London.
There is also a caution buried in Hong Kong’s triumph. The same concentration that lifted the city ties its fate tightly to Beijing. A wealth hub that depends on one country for sixty per cent of its money is only as stable as that country’s economy and politics allow. Should China stumble, or should the relationship between Hong Kong and the mainland grow more fraught, the flood could slow as quickly as it rose. Switzerland’s great strength was always that its money came from everywhere; Hong Kong’s great vulnerability is that so much of its money comes from one place.
For now, though, the league table has a new leader, and the trend behind it is unmistakable. The world is getting richer, that wealth is clustering into ever-fewer hubs, and the biggest of those hubs now flies the flag of China. The Swiss vault has not been emptied — but the centre of the money world has moved, and it is unlikely to move back any time soon.
Frequently Asked Questions
Has Hong Kong really overtaken Switzerland as a wealth hub?
Yes. According to Boston Consulting Group’s 2026 Global Wealth Report, Hong Kong booked $2.95 trillion of cross-border wealth in 2025 against Switzerland’s $2.94 trillion, making it the world’s largest such hub for the first time. The consultancy expects Hong Kong’s lead to widen to nearly $600 billion by 2030.
Why is Hong Kong winning instead of Singapore or Dubai?
Hong Kong’s decisive advantage is its direct access to mainland Chinese money, which makes up about sixty per cent of the wealth booked there. Singapore is more diversified across Asia and more selective about clients, while Dubai is growing fastest but from a much smaller base and a scattered client list, so neither rides the single huge Chinese wave the way Hong Kong does.
What does this mean for Latin American wealth?
Latin American offshore money still flows mainly into the Western network of Switzerland, the United States and the United Kingdom rather than into Asia, so Hong Kong’s rise does not change where the region’s fortunes naturally sit. However, BCG expects Brazil and Mexico to help lead nearly $7 trillion in new emerging-market wealth by 2030, raising the question of how much of it the region can keep at home.
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