Swiss banks eye Hong Kong clients for pro-democracy ties
Global wealth managers are examining whether their clients in Hong Kong have ties to the city’s pro-democracy movement, in an attempt to avoid getting caught in the crosshairs of China’s new national security law, according to six people with knowledge of the matter.
Bankers at Credit Suisse Group AG, HSBC Holdings Plc, Julius Baer Gruppe AG and UBS Group AG, among others, are broadening scrutiny under their programs that screen clients for political and government ties and subjecting them to additional diligence requirements, these people said.
The designation, called politically exposed persons, can make it more difficult or altogether prevent people from accessing banking services, depending on what the bank finds about the person’s source of wealth or financial transactions.
The checks at some wealth managers have involved combing through comments made by clients and their associates in public and in media, and social media posts in the recent past, these people said. The new law prohibits what Beijing describes broadly as secession, subversion, terrorism and collusion with foreign forces, with up to life in prison for offenders.
The sources, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation, said the broadened scrutiny of clients also applied to Hong Kong and Chinese officials who had implemented the law in anticipation of any U.S. sanctions against them.
One banker at a global wealth manager that holds more than $200 billion in assets said the audit of its clients could go back as far as 2014 in some cases to gauge a client’s political stance since Hong Kong’s 2014 pro-democracy “umbrella” movement. Protesters at the time used umbrellas to shield themselves from tear gas and pepper spray deployed by police.
Reuters could not learn the identities of any people who had faced enhanced scrutiny or whether the banks had decided to take any action against people identified as politically exposed.
Albert Ho, a veteran Hong Kong democrat who runs a law firm and helps organise an annual candlelight vigil to commemorate victims of the June 4, 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, said he feared that people like him may face “difficulties in the times to come.”
“There’s not much you can do, actually, unless you cease all your financial and banking activities in Hong Kong,” Ho said, adding he had not faced additional scrutiny from his bank as of last week. He declined to disclose the name of his bank.
HSBC declined to comment specifically on the security law or any U.S. move to sanction local officials. In an emailed statement, it said, “We already have a stringent set of policies and rigorous processes in place which we apply globally.”
Credit Suisse, Julius Baer and UBS declined to comment.
In an emailed statement, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said the financial hub implements anti-money laundering requirements “based on international standards including with regard to politically exposed persons.”
“The relevant international standards and our guidance to the banking industry have not changed,” the city’s de facto central bank said.
China’s foreign ministry, the Liaison Office in Hong Kong and the State Council’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office did not respond to requests for comment.
Banks in focus
Global banks have long examined the backgrounds of their clients, including screening them for political ties, to satisfy regulatory requirements. Politicians, government officials and senior executives at state-owned enterprises, as well as their family members, are typically considered politically exposed persons.
The rules are meant to enforce laws such as international sanctions and to prevent people from using the banking system to launder ill-gotten wealth.
The banks’ move to subject supporters of Hong Kong’s democracy movement to a similar review comes at a time when the stance of some firms on the Chinese law has drawn scrutiny from Western lawmakers and activists.
HSBC and Standard Chartered Plc, which have expressed support of the national security law, for example, have faced criticism from UK officials that their actions enabled Beijing to undermine the rule of law in the former British colony.
The two London-headquartered banks have said they believed the law would restore stability in Hong Kong.
Both Hong Kong and Chinese officials have said the law was vital to plug holes in national security defences, rejecting criticism from governments, including the United States and the United Kingdom, that China was violating its promise to safeguard Hong Kong’s freedom for 50 years after the 1997 handover.
Regulatory risks
Some wealth managers in Hong Kong say they are worried about
the regulatory and reputation risks to their banks if charges
under the sweeping security law are brought against some of
their politically linked clients, three of the sources said.
A top executive at a regional wealth manager said that his
firm’s risk and compliance team prepared a list of top 10 Hong
Kong individuals identified in local media as pro-democracy
sympathisers within a couple of days of the enactment of the law
on July 1, the anniversary of the handover.
The executive said their firm checked its internal database
to see if they had existing relationship with any of them and
were “quite relieved” to see that they didn’t.
Several elements of the law deal with the seizure of assets,
including provisions to give a new police unit greater powers to
freeze and confiscate funds and property as well as greater
powers to obtain information. Companies can also face penalties,
ranging from fines and suspension to the loss of business
licenses.
One investment manager at a Hong Kong-based hedge fund said
he expected more people to come under scrutiny from their
bankers now. “I think that if even a moderate democrat came
through the door wanting to invest, you’d be thinking long and
hard after this law,” the fund manager said.
(Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Edward Tobin)
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