Technology
HKMA, Dubai's Financial Centre Ink Fintech Agreement As Pacts Flourish

The trend of jurisdictions in Asia and elsewhere forging agreements about how to share fintech expertise and innovations continues.
The Hong
Kong Monetary Authority and the Dubai
Financial Services Authority of Dubai International Financial
Centre have inked co-operation agreement over fintech, continuing
a run of such cross-border pacts around the world.
The agreement was signed last week by Shu-pui Li, executive
director (financial infrastructure) of the HKMA, and Ian
Johnston, chief executive of the DFSA, in Hong Kong.
The authorities will collaborate on referrals of innovative
businesses, information sharing and joint innovation
projects.
The deal echoes that between Hong Kong's Securities and Futures
Commission and the DFSA in August this year. In that pact, both
regulators said they aimed at an "innovations-friendly ecosystem"
in their markets. They promised to share information about
developments and innovations and want to refer innovative firms
to each other’s markets and to provide them with regulatory
guidance.
A number of Asian jurisdictions have signed such agreements to
push ahead fintech development, hoping to win business in
burgeoning areas around artificial intelligence, robo-advisory,
machine learning, Big Data, and robotics. For example, in July
this year, Singapore’s central bank and regulator, the Monetary
Authority of Singapore, forged an alliance with the Bank of
Thailand to foster the growth of both nation’s financial
technology sectors. In late June, the MAS signed a similar deal
with its counterpart in Denmark.