LC Ideas: Views & Insights
4.6.2026

Lighthouse Canton's North Asia Strategy: Taiwan AI Partnership Signals New Growth Push

Singapore-headquartered Lighthouse Canton is expanding along capital mobility corridors rather than country-specific growth stories, as private wealth allocators consolidate with wealth management platforms that can execute across borders at scale.

Territories like Taiwan and Hong Kong remain central to that regional extension.

As a part of its North Asia strategy, the asset and wealth manager has recently announced a strategic partnership with Taiwan-based AI FinTech firm Draco Evolution, combining Lighthouse Canton's international asset allocation expertise with Draco's AI-driven quantitative research capabilities to deepen collaboration across the Taiwan-Singapore corridor. 

"Taiwan has opened up a special economic zone and is part of our growth strategy," shared Shilpi  Chowdhary, Group CEO at Lighthouse Canton. 

“Hong Kong continues to be extremely relevant for our growth,” Chowdhary added, pointing to its role as a booking and distribution center for Asian wealth and cross-border allocation.

Beyond North Asia, Chowdhary identified India and the Middle East as the company’s highest-conviction growth markets for business expansion. “If I were to personally focus, I would spend more time in two markets,” he said. “One is the Middle East and the second is India.”

In the Middle East, Lighthouse Canton is focusing on operating depth, particularly in the UAE.
“The potential in the UAE itself is quite huge,” Chowdhary explained. “We are still really scratching the surface.”

India, meanwhile, remains central to both regional footprint and two-way client activity.



“The primary area of investments will be India in Asia,” Chowdhary explained. He framed this focus as a direct response to sustained, existing allocator interest in domestic growth, infrastructure, and alternatives.

Data supports this. 

India’s UHNW story is one of rapid expansion followed by consolidation at scale. Between 2021 and 2026, its ultra-high-net-worth population  (individuals with assets exceeding $30 million+)  surged by 63%, growing from just over 12,000 to nearly 20,000, a reflection of extraordinary wealth creation across technology, industrials, and capital markets, per Knight Frank's Wealth Report 2026.

The cross-border orientation is being reinforced by geopolitical shifts, particularly tensions in the Middle East. Rather than triggering wholesale exits, wealth holders are increasingly adopting multi-center strategies, maintaining core exposures while reallocating liquidity across hubs such as Singapore, Hong Kong, and India.

Against this backdrop, Lighthouse Canton’s focus on cross-jurisdictional capabilities is becoming more relevant.

“Advisory around diversified booking centers and international structuring, previously framed as a strategic advantage, is now being applied more actively as clients seek flexibility in how and where capital is deployed,” explained Chowdhary.

The strategy aligns with broader wealth trends. While North America remains the largest wealth hub, Asia and the Middle East continue to drive new ultra-high-net-worth growth and migration.

Source: Henley & Partners

Also read: Lighthouse Canton enters its next growth phase with a client-first push to double AUM in two years

TAIWAN EMERGES AS NORTH ASIA WEALTH MANAGEMENT GATEWAY

Going deeper into Taiwan, Chowdhary explained how it is becoming a more defined pillar within Lighthouse Canton’s North Asia strategy. Beyond market access, the asset and wealth manager is positioning Taiwan within a broader cross-border wealth and technology corridor, particularly linking it with Singapore.

The ecent strategic partnership with Taiwan-based AI fintech firm Draco Evolution underscores that intent, combining Lighthouse Canton's international asset allocation expertise with AI-driven research capabilities.

“DRACO’s R&D strength is rooted in Taiwan but validated globally,” said Draco Evolution managing director Jack Fu, talking about the partnership. “Partnering Lighthouse Canton allows us to connect that capability with international asset allocation and wealth advisory.”

He added that the collaboration is aimed at bringing a more global investment lens into Taiwan’s financial ecosystem. 

“This is about integrating technology, research, and cross-border expertise to create a more internationally aligned platform for investors.”

Chowdhary pointed to Taiwan’s significant capital base, multi-generational wealth, and an ongoing shift toward independent wealth management as some of the key reasons the Lighthouse Canton is going deeper into the region. 

The partnership also aligns with Taiwan’s ambition to position itself as an Asian asset management centre, creating a more conducive environment for global firms.

Taiwan’s relevance extends beyond financial services.

“It plays a critical role in advanced manufacturing and global technology supply chains,” Chowdhary shared, reinforcing its importance for allocators seeking exposure to long-term industrial and innovation trends.

By combining local market access with international structuring and research capabilities, Lighthouse Canton is positioning Taiwan as both a distribution point and a strategic bridge into the broader North Asia wealth corridor.

ASSET DEPTH, ACQUISITIONS, AND ALLOCATOR EXPECTATIONS

As Lighthouse Canton enters its second decade, its conversations with allocators are also evolving.
“Everybody wants more scale from us,” Chowdhary said.

Investors are increasingly testing whether platforms can absorb larger commitments while maintaining execution discipline. In response, the firm is scaling existing asset platforms and selectively pursuing acquisitions.

Chowdhary said acquisitions are evaluated for depth and complementary capability rather than footprint expansion.

Life sciences real estate remains a core focus for Lighthouse Canton.

“We are currently managing close to 1.5 million square feet,” Chowdhary said. “The idea is to take that to around 5 million square feet over the next three to four years.”

Adjacencies are being pursued where expertise compounds.



“That can include specialty warehousing, senior living, and hospitals,” he said. Discipline, however, remains explicit, keeping the firm out of operationally distinct sectors. “We are not going into data centres,” he noted, emphasising the firm's preference for asset classes that align with its existing life-science capabilities. 

TECHNOLOGY, AI, AND CAPITAL MARKETS AS WEALTH PLATFORM SCALE ENABLERS

Technology is central to Lighthouse Canton’s ability to scale efficiently.


“Technology is improving productivity and margins,” Chowdhary said, positioning it as an operating lever. 

Capital markets, structuring, and treasury management are also being strengthened as core capabilities. “When you focus on the ultra-ultra-high segment, you need stronger capital markets capabilities,” Chowdhary said.

He described these functions as enhancing client experience and platform stickiness rather than acting as standalone revenue lines.

Treasury management is emerging as a scalable adjacency as clients seek efficiency across jurisdictions. Together, these capabilities support the company’s ability to service larger, more complex allocations.

As allocators consolidate relationships and prioritise execution, Chowdhary said Lighthouse Canton’s strategy is centered on alignment of regions, assets, technology, and capital rather than expansion for its own sake.

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