
South China Morning Post · Feb 28, 2026 · Collected from RSS
Hong Kong does not plan to get another transfer from its Exchange Fund in the next five years, the finance chief has said, citing a new medium-range forecast explaining why the rare move will not be repeated. Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po elaborated on his fiscal plan on Saturday, after his budget announcement to withdraw HK$150 billion (US$19.2 billion) from the government’s main investment arm and de facto sovereign wealth fund sparked concerns about the city’s financial stability. “In...
Hong Kong does not plan to get another transfer from its Exchange Fund in the next five years, the finance chief has said, citing a new medium-range forecast explaining why the rare move will not be repeated.Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po elaborated on his fiscal plan on Saturday, after his budget announcement to withdraw HK$150 billion (US$19.2 billion) from the government’s main investment arm and de facto sovereign wealth fund sparked concerns about the city’s financial stability.“In the entire medium-range forecast, apart from the HK$150 billion transfer over the two years just mentioned, there are actually no other transfers projected,” Chan said on a radio programme. “I will not make this a normal practice.”His assurances follow Wednesday’s budget announcement that the government would withdraw HK$75 billion annually for two years from the Exchange Fund’s investment income to top up the Capital Works Reserve Fund.The move, justified by the fund’s record-high investment income of HK$330 billion last year, aims to support the Northern Metropolis and other infrastructure projects.Chan argued that with the Exchange Fund’s total assets exceeding HK$4.1 trillion, the transfer represented only about half of last year’s investment gains and would not undermine the city’s financial stability or its ability to defend the currency peg.