Investors watching Asia’s wealth management sector learned this week that Singapore private banking growth is accelerating well beyond the regional average, with the city-state’s private banks now holding around $200bn in managed global wealth and the broader cross-border asset base already at $2.1 trillion at the end of 2025.
Singapore Private Banking Growth: What the Numbers Show
The $200bn managed-wealth figure covers assets held directly by private banks. The broader picture is considerably larger. According to the Family Wealth Report’s coverage of BCG’s 2026 Global Wealth Report, Singapore held $2.1 trillion in total cross-border wealth at the end of 2025, with BCG projecting that figure to reach $3.3 trillion by 2030.
Just over two-thirds of the funds managed in Singapore originate from outside the city-state, confirming its status as the largest private banking centre in Asia rather than simply a domestic savings pool.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore reported that private banking client assets rose by almost 20% in 2024, with roughly half of that increase coming from net new inflows (fresh client money arriving, rather than existing assets rising in value). That split matters: market-driven gains can reverse; genuine new money is stickier.
Globally, BCG’s 2026 Global Wealth Report shows total cross-border wealth climbed 8.4% to $15.7 trillion in 2025, with the top ten booking centres capturing more than 90% of new flows. Singapore is positioned squarely inside that elite group.
Who Is Moving Wealth to Singapore, and Why
Tommy Leung, head of South Asia at HSBC Private Bank, points to mainland Chinese entrepreneurs as a core driver. ‘Singapore is very encouraging at the highest end of the market, which plays into how mainland Chinese entrepreneurs are layering diversification into their investment portfolios,’ he says.
The typical journey, according to Leung, starts in Hong Kong as the nearest offshore booking centre. ‘But as their wealth increases, horizons expand and needs broaden. That is when other jurisdictions come into play, and Singapore is the obvious choice within Asia for cultural and business reasons. It tends to attract slightly older entrepreneurs who are further along their wealth planning journey.’
Around two-thirds of HSBC Private Bank’s Singapore clients are entrepreneurs. Legacy planning rather than pure asset accumulation is increasingly the goal. ‘We are seeing more entrepreneurs across Asia looking beyond growth to legacy, how to transition their success to the next generation,’ Leung adds.
Lillian Liao, market executive for Singapore and Malaysia and head of Asia South investment counsellors at Citi Private Bank, frames the appeal around geopolitics as much as finance. ‘Singapore has cemented its position as a global wealth management hub by cultivating a uniquely secure and dynamic environment for international capital,’ she says. ‘At its core, its appeal lies in its geopolitical stability and strong rule of law.’
Liao also highlights Singapore’s role as a gateway into the broader ASEAN region, positioning it as more than a passive repository. ‘More than just a booking centre, Singapore channels international capital into the real economy to support long-term investment across sectors, rather than short-term financial flows.’
Not every observer is bullish on the traditional model. Nithi Genesan, country head for Singapore at Waystone, notes a ‘shift away from traditional private banks, as clients increasingly prioritise independence, fee transparency and conflict-free advice.’ The implication is that some of the growth in assets under management may migrate toward independent wealth managers rather than consolidating inside the big bank platforms.
The Longer-Term Asia Backdrop
The structural tailwind behind Singapore private banking growth extends across the whole region. The BCG Asia Generational Wealth Report, produced with UOB Private Bank and NUS Business School, projects private wealth across Asia reaching $99 trillion by 2029. The BCG 2025 Global Wealth Report puts Asia-Pacific annual financial wealth growth at approximately 9% through 2029, ahead of North America at 4% and Western Europe at 5%.
Those growth differentials help explain why global institutions are deepening their Singapore infrastructure rather than treating it as a satellite outpost.
One concrete example arrived this week. Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp (OCBC) announced that from 10 June 2026, institutional clients and customers of its private banking arm, Bank of Singapore, can buy, sell and store physical gold bars through a fully Singapore-based vault platform. Kenneth Lai, OCBC’s head of global markets, described the launch as a strategic expansion of the bank’s precious metals market-making capabilities, and said it would form the foundation for a broader range of physical gold investment and risk-management solutions, according to The Asset.
Wealth migration is also physical. Liao points to Singapore’s good class bungalow market (the most exclusive category of landed residential property in the city-state) as a barometer, with ownership increasingly transitioning to new immigrants and globally mobile families. When families relocate alongside their assets, those assets tend to stay.
BCG’s 2030 target of $3.3 trillion in cross-border wealth gives Singapore private banking growth a concrete milestone to watch. Whether the pace holds will depend partly on how Hong Kong evolves as a competing booking centre, and partly on whether independent advisory models chip away at the traditional bank platforms faster than the overall pool expands.

