LC Ideas: Views & Insights
17.7.2026

Why Wealthy Families Are Keeping Capital in the Region

For decades, the formula for wealthy Asian families was straightforward: build wealth in Asia and preserve it in offshore locations.

Today, that equation is changing.

"A lot of clients are actually bringing assets back into Asia," says Charlene Lin, Managing Director, Wealth Management, Greater China and Asia Markets, at Lighthouse Canton. "The discussion is no longer about whether wealth should be in Asia or outside Asia. Families are increasingly looking at how they can structure and transition wealth within the region."

The shift comes at a pivotal moment for Asia's private wealth industry. The numbers tell the story. 

  • According to BCG's 2026 Global Wealth Report, Asia-Pacific remains a primary engine for global wealth creation, projecting 7% to 9% annual growth through 2030. 
  • The cross-border landscape has also already reached a major milestone: Hong Kong officially surpassed Switzerland in 2025 to become the world's largest cross-border wealth centre, hitting $2.9 trillion in assets. 
  • Singapore, meanwhile, continues to rapidly expand its wealth ecosystem, with the number of single-family offices surging from around 400 in 2020 to more than 2,000 today.

Taken together, the developments point to something bigger than asset growth. Asia is evolving from a place where wealth is generated into a place where wealth is managed, preserved, and transferred.

WHY ASIAN HNWIS ARE REPATRIATING OFFSHORE WEALTH

The assumption that wealthy Asians automatically look west for wealth preservation is becoming increasingly outdated.

Families remain globally diversified, but many are no longer convinced they need to anchor their wealth structures outside the region.

Part of that reflects the maturation of Asia's financial ecosystem. Family office capabilities have expanded rapidly. Wealth advisory services have become more sophisticated. Regional financial centres now offer many of the capabilities that previously pushed families towards Europe or North America.

But another factor is also emerging.

The world has become harder to read.

Geopolitical tensions, shifting tax regimes, and changing regulatory frameworks have created uncertainty across multiple jurisdictions. Rather than chasing the next jurisdictional advantage, families are increasingly looking for structures that are easier to understand and easier to manage.

"When families begin transferring wealth across generations, they want clarity around ownership, governance, and taxation," says Lin. "The more fragmented the structure becomes, the harder it is to navigate."

The result is not deglobalization.

It is regionalization.

Families are becoming more intentional about keeping wealth closer to where they live, operate businesses, and make long-term decisions.

ASIA'S $124 TRILLION WEALTH TRANSFER AND HOW SUCCESSION IS RESHAPING CAPITAL FLOWS

If one force is pushing wealth towards Asia, it is the region's looming intergenerational transfer of assets. 

According to Cerulli Associates, an estimated US$124 trillion is expected to change hands globally through 2048. A growing share of that wealth will originate from Asia, where many first-generation entrepreneurs are now approaching succession.

Lin says this year's conversations feel markedly different from previous years.

"There has been a substantial increase in wealth transfer activity. Families have spent years discussing succession, but we are now seeing them actively execute those plans."

That distinction matters.

For many families, succession planning is no longer theoretical. It involves deciding where assets should sit, how future generations will access them, and which jurisdictions are best positioned to support long-term family objectives.

As those decisions move from discussion to implementation, proximity is becoming more important. Families often discover that managing succession across multiple countries, tax systems, and legal frameworks is significantly more complex than building wealth across them.

The practical outcome is that many are simplifying structures and consolidating parts of their wealth ecosystem closer to home. 

Also read: Asia's family offices shift gears as generational wealth, and portfolio strategy evolve

HONG KONG VS SINGAPORE: THE DUAL-HUB MODEL FOR ASIAN FAMILY OFFICES

One of the most interesting insights emerging from the region is that wealthy families are increasingly rejecting the idea of a single wealth hub. Historically, the question was whether wealth should be booked in Hong Kong, Singapore, London, or Zurich.

Today, families are asking a different question: How many centers do they need?

"Hong Kong remains the first choice for many North Asian families," says Lin. "But increasingly, it is not the only choice."

What is emerging is a dual-hub model.

For many families, Hong Kong continues to provide access to China, North Asian capital markets, and business networks. Singapore offers a different proposition: Southeast Asian connectivity, family office infrastructure, education pathways, and succession planning capabilities.

The two cities are increasingly being viewed not as competitors, but as complementary pieces of a broader wealth strategy.

That shift has implications far beyond wealth management.

Education, residency, and family mobility are becoming part of the capital allocation conversation. Families are not simply deciding where to invest. They are deciding where future generations should live, study, and eventually lead.

The next chapter of Asian wealth, therefore, may not be defined by how much capital the region creates.

It may be defined by how much of that capital chooses to stay.

Also read: How Asia's family offices are recalibrating for permanence and purpose

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Q1: Why are wealthy Asian families keeping more of their wealth in Asia?

Several factors are converging. Asia's family office ecosystem has matured significantly, with Singapore and Hong Kong now offering wealth structuring, governance, and succession capabilities that previously required a European or North American presence. At the same time, geopolitical uncertainty has made multi-jurisdictional offshore structures harder to manage. Many families are finding that keeping wealth closer to where they live, operate businesses, and make long-term decisions reduces complexity without meaningfully reducing optionality.

Q2: What is the dual-hub model for Asian family offices?

Rather than choosing a single booking center, a growing number of UHNW families in Asia are maintaining structures across both Hong Kong and Singapore. Hong Kong provides access to China, North Asian capital markets and business networks. Singapore offers Southeast Asian connectivity, a well-developed family office regulatory framework, and stronger succession planning infrastructure. The two centers are increasingly viewed as complementary rather than competing wealth centers.

Q3: How does intergenerational wealth transfer affect where families structure their assets?

As first-generation Asian entrepreneurs move from wealth creation to succession, the complexity of managing assets across multiple jurisdictions becomes more visible. Families often find that structures built for tax efficiency or offshore diversification are difficult for the next generation to navigate. This is prompting many to simplify and consolidate, keeping a greater proportion of their wealth ecosystem within Asia, where future generations will live, study, and eventually lead the family enterprise.

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