Hong Kong set for greater role in international banking after HKMA CEO assumes key role at BIS, bankers say

Hong Kong is poised to assume a greater role in the international banking sector and elevate its status as a yuan internationalisation hub with the appointment of Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) CEO Eddie Yue Wai-man to a key position at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), analysts say.

Yue on September 1 took up a three-year chairmanship at the BIS Meeting of Governors from Major Emerging Market Economies (EMEs), replacing former deputy governor of the Brazilian central bank Luiz Awazu Pereira da Silva, who retired from the post, according to a statement of BIS earlier this week.

Since 1998, Hong Kong has been the Asia-Pacific regional office of BIS, which is known as a bank for the central banks. The Basel, Switzerland-based institution was founded in 1930 with 63 shareholding central banks to support their pursuit of monetary and financial stability and international cooperation.

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"BIS is an important international organisation for central banks worldwide," said Chan Tsz-Ching, a senior adviser for Bank of East Asia and former Hong Kong head of Citigroup. "The appointment showed its endorsement of Hong Kong's ability to lead international cooperation among emerging markets."

"Hong Kong needs to work hard to perform in its new leadership role in the international organisation to strengthen its role as a connector between mainland China and the world," he said.

The headquarters of the Bank for International Settlement in Basel, Switzerland. Photo: EPA alt=The headquarters of the Bank for International Settlement in Basel, Switzerland. Photo: EPA>

Yue's assumption of the key role at BIS comes ahead of several international meetings to be held in Hong Kong, a city that is keen to show the rest of the world that it is back to normal after three years of disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

China Investment Corp, the nation's US$1.35 trillion wealth fund, will assemble its global advisers in Hong Kong on September 19 and 20, in its first meeting outside the mainland since its council was established 14 years ago.

The second-day highlight will be an investment forum at the Ritz-Carlton in western Kowloon, featuring major political figures from former governor of the People's Bank of China Zhou Xiaochuan to former German chancellor Gerhard Schroder, as well as finance heavyweights like BlackRock vice-chairman Mark McCombe and Oaktree Capital Management managing director Robert O'Leary.