Hong Kong insurers shrug off crackdown fears: CGS International
CGS International says legal mainland Chinese purchases are not being targeted.
Hong Kong insurance companies are expected to maintain solid growth despite recent investor fears over tighter cross-border financial regulations, which analysts at CGS International call overdone.
The market saw heightened stock volatility following a series of regulatory updates in May and June 2026.
These included fines levied by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) on three brokerages for unlicensed operations and a directive from Hong Kong regulators requiring banks and wealth managers to perform stricter identity checks and secure written statements verifying that investment funds originate from lawful sources outside mainland China.
Additionally, Clement Cheung, Chief Executive Officer of the Hong Kong Insurance Authority, stated on 15 June 2026 that the agency is stepping up enforcement to penalise businesses bypassing rules on broker fees and policy rates.
Despite the heightened scrutiny, analysts clarified that legitimate cross-border insurance purchases by mainland Chinese visitors (MCVs) are not considered illicit, as the measures primarily target high-risk broker channels and products lacking protection features.
Data shows that by the end of 2024, MCV insurance purchases in Hong Kong reached$8.1b, representing a 6.5 % year-on-year increase and accounting for 28.6% of total new office premiums.
CGS International estimates the potential financial impact from near-term broker restrictions to be limited, affecting roughly 10 % of AIA's 2025 value of new business and 6 % of Prudential’s 2025 new business profits.
The firm continues to list China Life, Ping An, AIA, and Prudential as its top stock recommendations, citing robust expectations for double-digit value growth in new business from 2025 through 2027.