TRADE WARS
Japan finds luring business from Hong Kong may be tough
By Etienne BALMER
Tokyo (AFP) Nov 15, 2020

Tokyo is on a charm offensive, hoping to lure firms in Hong Kong spooked by protests and a controversial security law imposed by China. But the city is proving a tough sell.

"I want to make Tokyo Asia's number one financial city," Governor Yuriko Koike said in October, as the Japanese capital opened an information centre in Hong Kong for international businesses considering a move.

Tokyo's courtship comes with some concrete promises, including temporary office space in the city for foreign financial firms that want to try out life in Japan.

There are also a number of more theoretical incentives being floated, including tax breaks, streamlined bureaucracy and even a special economic zone like Shenzhen, China's Silicon Valley.

In some ways, Japan might seem an obvious alternative for businesses looking to leave Hong Kong: it is the world's third-largest economy, home to the Tokyo Stock Exchange, and already houses outposts of numerous financial institutions and international firms.

But there are some serious stumbling blocks, and competitors, that experts say mean Tokyo's hopes for regional financial dominance may be little more than a pipe dream.

For a start, Japan's income taxes are sky high, comparatively, topping out at 45 percent against Singapore's 22 percent and Hong Kong's 17 percent.

Low English fluency levels are also a chronic handicap, as is the country's comparatively sluggish adoption of digital technology.

Trade on Tokyo's stock markets was halted for an entire day last month because of a "hardware failure" -- a glitch seen as unlikely to boost confidence and bring new traders flocking.

- Fierce competition -

Michael Mroczek, president of the European Business Council in Japan, said there were high hopes for new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga's digitisation and deregulation push.

But "there's also a lot of scepticism because there haven't been a lot of changes" over the years when similar initiatives have been proposed, he added.

Japan's particularly strict approach to border control during the pandemic -- for months foreign residents were not allowed to return even as Japanese citizens did -- has been seen by some as "discrimination" and could also be off-putting for tentative transplants, added Mroczek.

Tokyo is also not the only Asian city seeking to take advantage of a potential Hong Kong exodus.

Australia has announced new visa opportunities for Hong Kong students and entrepreneurs, and officials have said they will be "very proactive" in encouraging businesses to relocate.

And while Singapore's government officially says only that it seeks a "stable, calm and prosperous" Hong Kong, it is probably the most obvious alternative for firms, said Rajiv Biswas, Asia-Pacific chief economist at consultants IHS Markit.

"Most international financial services firms may already have a large presence in Singapore, and therefore may prefer to expand their existing operations in Singapore rather than finding another new location," he told AFP.

- 'Wait and see' -

There are still questions, though, about whether an exodus from Hong Kong is really on the cards, whichever regional city stands to gain.

"I wouldn't expect big firms to announce that they are pulling out of Hong Kong completely," Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics, told AFP.

"It's more likely that firms will just gradually reduce their headcount in Hong Kong and increase it elsewhere."

And despite jitters over freedom of expression, Hong Kong "remains the primary gateway to mainland China" for investors and financial services companies, said Stephen Innes, chief global markets strategist at AxiCorp.

Since 2014, the Hong Kong stock exchange has been directly connected to Shanghai's, allowing companies based in Hong Kong to invest in listed Chinese companies more easily.

And Hong Kong's proximity to Shenzhen is another important plus for some businesses.

"Wait and see is the general attitude," one expat employee at a major Western bank in Hong Kong told AFP on condition of anonymity, adding he personally was not yet thinking about relocating.

Innes said regional hubs like Singapore might also fear China's wrath if they seek to siphon off business.

No one "in the region wants to bite the hand that feeds", he said.

"It is way too early to write Hong Kong off."

etb/kaf/sah/dan/qan

MARKIT

IHS Global Insight


Related Links
Global Trade News

TRADE WARS
Asia markets take fresh hit as virus surge trumps vaccine hope
Hong Kong (AFP) Nov 13, 2020
A spike in coronavirus infections across the United States and Europe hit Asian markets again Friday morning as traders fear another wave of lockdown measures will throw an already shaky economic recovery off course. The rally fuelled by excitement over a possible vaccine before 2021 and relief at Joe Biden's US election win has given way to the reality that while there is light at the end of the tunnel, the killer disease remains rampant. Several European economies including England and France ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

TRADE WARS
Barclays finances more fossil fuel firms despite green vow: NGOs

Barclays finances more fossil fuel firms despite green vow: NGOs

Britain unveils green plan for post-Brexit finance

UK Space Agency wins global award for sustainable development

TRADE WARS
Turning heat into power with efficient organic thermoelectric material

Power-free system harnesses evaporation to keep items cool

Finland's battery plans spark environmental fears

Time for a new state of matter in high-temperature superconductors

TRADE WARS
Policy, not tech, spurred Danish dominance in wind energy

California offshore winds show promise as power source

TRADE WARS
Controlling perovskite ions' composition paves the way for device applications

New green materials could power smart devices using ambient light

UK government commissions space solar power stations research

New machine learning program to accelerate clean energy generation

TRADE WARS
Framatome's Le Creusot plant ramps up production of replacement components for French power stations

Tsunami-hit Japanese nuclear reactor gets restart approval

German court demands govt review compensation for nuclear exit

UK mini nuclear stations would create 6,000 jobs: Rolls-Royce

TRADE WARS
Catalyzing a zero-carbon world by harvesting energy from living cells

Microbe "rewiring" technique promises a boom in biomanufacturing

Tough, strong and heat-endure: Bioinspired material to oust plastics

Luminescent wood could light up homes of the future

TRADE WARS
Trump administration to seek bids on Arctic oil leases

Public money guarantees 'risky' fossil fuel projects: experts

Study reveals how to improve natural gas production in shale

Researchers discover a new way to produce hydrogen using microwaves

TRADE WARS
Engineering a way out of climate change with genetically modified organisms

Bank of England says to launch climate change tests

UK hopes climate change can warm frosty Biden ties

Under-pressure Australia 'welcomes' Biden climate pledge