Hong Kong’s financial revival: trading, tokenisation and governance in focus Broadridge is scaling Hong Kong's financial revival through unified trading systems, tokenised repo liquidity, and AI-driven digital governance solutions, as cross-border flows and IPO pipelines rebuild. The company's senior country officer Wout Kalis says structural evolution, not a short-term rebound, is driving the shift, with Chinese investors increasingly using Hong Kong for global capital raising. Hong Kong’s financial revival: trading, tokenisation and governance in focus Broadridge scales Hong Kong’s financial revival via unified trading systems, tokenised repo liquidity, and AI-driven digital governance solutions The content of this article has been produced by our advertising partner. For a while and not so long ago, confidence in Hong Kong’s financial markets appeared fragile. Trading volumes softened, and geopolitical tensions weighed on sentiment. The city’s status as Asia’s leading international financial hub began to come under question. That tone is now beginning to shift. Volumes are rising, IPO pipelines are rebuilding, and cross-border flows are accelerating in both directions. For Wout Kalis, senior country officer, Hong Kong at Broadridge – a global technology leader – the change reflects structural evolution rather than a short-term rebound. “Chinese investors are increasingly using Hong Kong as a way of raising capital and selling their products to the globe,” Kalis says. “This is a massive change from before, and that’s great for Hong Kong.” Trading at scale: volume and simplification Naturally, as cross-border activity rises, operational demands across the market are increasing, too. “For the sell-side… there is an increase in volumes,” Kalis says, pointing to the growing influence of quant and artificial intelligence AI driven strategies. At the same time, fee compression remains a persistent challenge. “Brokers, internationally, are offering trading almost for free. So they need to have other ways of making revenue.” Pressure is also building on the buy-side. “You cannot charge the fees that you could previously,” he notes. The result is that firms are moving towards outsourcing and heavier investment in technology to become more efficient. Hong Kong’s cross-border infrastructure, including Stock Connect, adds another layer of complexity. The response, Kalis believes, is simplification across operations. “Currently, there are still a lot of systems… a mixture of back office, middle office, front office,” he says. “Getting to a unified back-, middle- and front-office solution will help significantly.” Broadridge’s 2026 Digital Transformation & Next-Gen Technology Study https://www.broadridge.com/insights/2026-digital-transformation-study?utm medium=PaidSearch&utm source=Google&utm campaign=2026-Dig-Trans Q3FY26 SE ENT Paid-Search-2026-DT&utm content=v1&content id=04927&campaign id=701RN00000dRpMaYAK&gad source=1&gad campaignid=23599123662&gbraid=0AAAAADPVyHbxCmDfICSZFNNHH v5dWG-w&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIz-n0--GxlAMVJmhHAR13sTCLEAAYASAAEgKSr D BwE found that 84 per cent of Asia-Pacific firms said they consider it important to integrate front-, middle- and back-office systems into a unified platform. The goal, Kalis says, is efficiency and resilience. “From an operational perspective, I think a single platform reduces risk, because you get more integration of your data, you get less risk of errors.” In addition, consolidated data also strengthens AI capabilities. As markets adjust to T+1 trading day plus one business day settlement cycles and extended trading hours, operational readiness is becoming a strategic issue rather than a purely technical one, he explains. Tokenisation: from sandbox to impact If trading modernisation defines the near-term agenda, tokenisation represents the longer-term transformation. Hong Kong’s regulators, particularly the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, have encouraged experimentation through sandbox-style initiatives. But Kalis believes adoption must be tied to practical use cases: “It needs to solve specific market issues.” Broadridge’s 2025 global tokenisation survey https://www.broadridge.com/insights/next-gen-markets-the-rise-and-reality-of-tokenization?utm medium=DigitalAsset&utm source=LandingPage&utm campaign=2025-Tokenization-Report Q2FY26 WB ENT,CM 2025-Tokenization-WP&utm term=Pressrelease&content id=03424&campaign id=701RN00000Wt9UrYAJ& gl=1 17o7jph up MQ.. ga MTc1NjA4MjQ0MS4xNzEzNDQ5MzY1 ga C8WF5M11DE czE3Nzg1MjA4MzIkbzQ0OSRnMCR0MTc3ODUyMDg0NiRqNDYkbDAkaDA. found that 91 per cent of tokenisation-active custodians believe the practice improves efficiency and transparency, while 55 per cent of Asia-Pacific firms reported moderate to large investments in digital asset infrastructure. Distributed Ledger Repo DLR platform https://www.broadridge.com/capability/middle-and-back-office-solutions/post-trade-processing/distributed-ledger-repo-solutions . “Repo by itself is quite complex,” Kalis says. With tokenised collateral and smart contracts, “the ability to move the collateral and the cash becomes instant. Nobody’s waiting on each other. It creates liquidity by the minute.” The implications are significant. Broadridge recently reported that its DLR platform achieved nearly 300 per cent year-on-year growth and processed an average of US$368 billion in daily repo transactions during April, with volumes totalling nearly US$8 trillion. “That could really change the whole liquidity management,” Kalis says, particularly for banks operating across jurisdictions. Governance as a competitive edge For Kalis, innovation must still reinforce trust. “Firstly, solid governance and regulatory infrastructure is key for people to build trust and to invest in Hong Kong,” he says. “Moreover, transparency and shareholder participation remain equally important as IPO activity increases.” On the digital front, Broadridge has been extending governance infrastructure into digital assets. The company recently went live with on-chain governance for tokenised equities, enabling investors to vote and receive communications across traditional and tokenised shares through a single platform. Technology is also reshaping governance more broadly, with AI-driven voting advisory tools aggregating issuer data and news into data-based reports. As Hong Kong works to expand its equity market, Kalis believes governance will help determine whether the city can become “the New York Stock Exchange of Asia”. “Good governance will be critical… because it will give the trust to investors,” he observes. Broadridge is working with clients in Hong Kong across each of these three areas — helping firms simplify trading operations through more integrated front-to-back infrastructure, supporting the development of tokenised market use cases such as distributed ledger repo, and enabling stronger governance through technology that improves transparency and shareholder participation. If Hong Kong can combine a unified trading infrastructure, scaled tokenisation and strong governance, its revival may prove not temporary, but transformational.