The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) released the Hong Kong Fintech Promotion Blueprint on 3 February 2025, which showcased several initiatives to enable responsible innovation and fintech advancement.
The blueprint, published in collaboration with KPMG China and Quinlan & Associates, focuses on five core technology enablers and foundational pillars: AI, Distributed Ledger Technology, High-Performance Computing, Data Excellence and Cyber Resilience.
Source: HKMA
Arthur Yuen, Deputy Chief Executive of the HKMA, shared,
Four flagship projects will be implemented soon.
This series of projects, among others, supports DART, the Fintech 2030 key strategic pillars, which are “Creating Next-Gen Data and Payment Infrastructure”, “A New Holistic Artificial Intelligence Strategy”, “Enhancing Business, Technology, and Quantum Resilience, and “Tokenisation of Finance”.
For context, Fintech 2030 sets out a comprehensive portfolio of over 40 initiatives, the blueprint highlights.
Source: HKMA
According to HKMA’s LinkedIn post, four flagship projects would be implemented soon: a Quantum Preparedness Index, a New Risk Data Strategy, a Fintech Cybersecurity Baseline and Competency Development Support.
As high-performance computing advances, including in quantum computing, HKMA states that it has become increasingly important to assess how prepared the banking sector is to adopt these technologies and manage security risks in the post-quantum era.
The first step towards the index’s creation involves setting a baseline for the sector’s overall readiness to adopt quantum computing tech and transition their security frameworks to include PQC.
The said assessment will be carried out through a number of information collection activities, market research and interviews.
The key function of the Quantum Preparedness Index is to serve as a structured way to track the adoption nd integration of post-quantum cryptography across the banking sector, all while measuring the progress in quantum readiness more broadly.
The Hong Kong Fintech Promotion Blueprint underscores that well-managed, high-quality data is essential to reaching the full potential of AI, high-performance computing and distributed ledger technology.
In support of this, the HKMA has proposed the New Risk Data Strategy, an initiative which aims to build a collaborative program with industry stakeholders.
Over time, the strategy is expected to enable more intelligent risk management and agile supervision.
The HKMA will also engage selected participants to gain insights into their data strategies, needs, and challenges, covering structured and unstructured data.
The resulting best practices will be shared within the industry by the HKMA and aid in shaping a comprehensive roadmap of risk data strategy initiatives, incorporating feedback through consultation sessions.
The HKMA plans to build on existing talent research and ongoing industry engagement to gain clarity on current and emerging needs for AI and DLT skill requirements, as well as professional capability-building needs.
This will help clarify where capability gaps exist and guide efforts to develop the right professional skills, in tandem with evolving market expectations.
The HKMA will explore ways to strengthen continuous learning support for fintech practitioners within financial institutions.
The overarching goal is to help build a more resilient, adaptable, and future-ready banking workforce.
Under this initiative, HKMA plans to “establish a standardised, industry-led Fintech Cybersecurity Baseline” curated for fintech solution providers.
The goal behind this is to streamline the due diligence process for financial institutions when they assess and onboard fintech partners.
By setting clear and consistent cybersecurity benchmarks, especially around emerging tech risks linked to advanced fintech applications (like AI and Distributed Ledger Technology), the baseline aims to strengthen trust and resilience across the ecosystem.
Its development draws on leading international standards and regulatory approaches, as well as close engagement with industry stakeholders to zero in on practical challenges and gain a holistic perspective. Guidance materials will be provided to support fintech firms in aligning with the defined standards.
Ultimately, the Fintech Cybersecurity Baseline will provide fintech companies with greater clarity on what banks and regulators expect on security, reliability and safety when deploying new fintech solutions. This would, in turn, strengthen credibility while building trust with investors and partners, which is crucial.
Featured image edited by Fintech News Hong Kong based on image by Frolopiaton Palm on Freepik
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