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Opinion | How Hong Kong can distinguish itself as a climate finance hub

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Opinion | How Hong Kong can distinguish itself as a climate finance hub

For decades, New York and London have defined the flow of global capital. But while markets still chase short-term returns in US equities, the next great wave of productive investment is taking shape in East Asia, led by China’s financing, manufacturing and export of the clean technologies that are remaking the global economy.

That contrast has only widened. As the United States retreats from climate leadership, China has doubled down. A day after US President Donald Trump called climate change a “scam”, President Xi Jinping announced China’s first absolute emissions-reduction target and called on the international community to stay focused on the green transition as the “trend of our time”. The message was clear: Beijing intends to lead in the clean technology industries of the future.

China is already deploying renewables, grid infrastructure and storage at a speed and scale unseen anywhere else, and can produce almost a terawatt of new renewable-energy capacity each year, enough to replace more than 300 nuclear power plants. In 2024 alone, clean-energy industries, including solar, wind, batteries, grids and electric mobility, accounted for more than 10 per cent of China’s gross domestic product.

The technologies developed and scaled in China have driven down global costs for everything from photovoltaics to grid batteries, making large-scale electrification economically viable across much of the developing world. As a result, China’s emissions may already be declining, and its exports of low-cost clean-energy systems are speeding up across the rest of Asia, Africa and Latin America.

Hong Kong sits at the centre of this transformation, and Beijing has just reaffirmed its role, emphasising its importance as the bridge between China’s markets and global capital. At the recent Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit, senior Chinese regulators pledged to deepen Hong Kong’s integration with the mainland’s financial system and strengthen its function as a “superconnector” between Chinese capital and global markets.

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Huge solar farm at Mexico City market being built with 32,000 panels from China

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Huge solar farm at Mexico City market being built with 32,000 panels from China

Hong Kong already ranks among the world’s leading financial centres and leads Asia in green and sustainable bond issuance. Its asset and wealth management sector now exceeds HK$35 trillion (US$4.49 billion), supported by strong inflows.

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Solaris Names Steffen Jentsch to Lead Embedded Finance Platform | PYMNTS.com

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Solaris Names Steffen Jentsch to Lead Embedded Finance Platform | PYMNTS.com

Carsten Höltkemeyer, the firm’s CEO, stepped down at the end of 2025, the company said in its announcement last week. Steffen Jentsch, chief information officer and chief process officer for FinTech flatexDEGIRO AG, will take his place.

“Jentsch brings a proven track record in scaling digital financial platforms, along with deep expertise in regulatory transformation and digital banking solutions,” the announcement said.

Höltkemeyer is set to stay on in an advisory role. The announcement adds that Ansgar Finken, chief risk officer and head of its finance and technology area, is also stepping down, but will remain on in an advisory capacity.

Finken will be succeeded by Matthias Heinrich, former chief risk officer and member of flatexDEGIRO Bank AG’s executive board.

“I’m truly excited to join Solaris and lead the next chapter — one defined by durable growth built on regulatory strength and commercial execution,” Jentsch said.

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“Digital B2B2C platforms thrive when cutting-edge technology, cloud-native infrastructure, and strong compliance frameworks work seamlessly together. Solaris has been a first mover in embedded finance and has helped shape the market across Europe.”

The release notes that the leadership change follows SBI’s acquisition of a majority stake in Solaris as part of the 140 million euro ($164 million) Series G funding round last February.

The news follows a year in which embedded finance “moved from consumer convenience to business as usual,” as PYMNTS wrote last week.

During 2025, embedded payments, lending and B2B finance all demonstrated clear signs of maturity — especially when tied to specific verticals and workflows instead of being deployed as generic platforms. The most successful implementations were almost invisible, woven directly into the systems where users already worked, the report added.

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“The embedded finance revolution that transformed consumer payments is now reshaping B2 commerce — with far greater stakes,” Sandy Weil, chief revenue officer at Galileo, said in an interview with PYMNTS.

“In 2025, businesses are embedding working capital, virtual cards and automated workflows directly into their platforms, turning financial operations into growth engines.”

It was a year in which “buy, don’t build” became the overriding philosophy, the report added. Research by PYMNTS Intelligence in conjunction with Galileo and WEX spotlighted the way institutions prioritized speed and specialization over ownership, “outsourcing embedded capabilities rather than developing them internally.”

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3 stocks to watch in 2026

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3 stocks to watch in 2026
Looking to add some new stocks to your portfolio? Gibbens Capital president and chief investment officer Mark Gibbens has three suggestions. Find out what they are in the video above. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination.
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