Hong Kong’s banking history enters a new chapter with the launch of its first virtual lender, ZA Bank.

ZA Bank, co-owned by ZhongAn Online P&C Insurance and Sinolink Group, launched yesterday to become the first virtual bank to kickstart services in Hong Kong. According to its chief executive Rockson Hsu, the name «ZA» represents a reversal of alphabetical order which is a reminder to «think out of the box and view things from a different perspective». 

«It’s good to be bold, contrarian and creative,» Hsu added in a statement.

«‘Z’ and ‘A’ also means ‘end-to-end’, it symbolises our mission to redefine customer journey through technology, from the front-end (mobile app/branch), mid-office (customer service/operation department) to back-end (operating system), from product development to service process.» 

HK$1 Minimum

ZA Bank said it would offer interest rates of 1.4 percent for one-month Hong Kong dollar deposits and up to 2 percent for three, six and 12-month deposits.

Whilst this lags behind traditional lenders in Hong Kong which offer up to 2.2 percent on 12-month deposits, ZA Bank’s minimum size of $1 falls very much well below traditional minimum deposit sizes of HK$10,000. ZA also provides time deposits for U.S. dollars and yuan.

Sandbox

ZA Bank will initially only roll-out services such as remote account opening, multi-currency savings account, time deposits, local transfers and e-statement services only to a select handful of 2,000 users which include friends and relatives of its staff.

The launch falls under the HKMA's sandbox mechanism and once the pilot is deemed successful, services will be made accessible by the general public.

HKMA Response

«We are delighted to note that the first virtual bank has started its trial run today in the HKMA’s Fintech Supervisory Sandbox, thanks to the diligent efforts of various parties,» said Arthur Yuen, Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s deputy chief executive, in a separate statement.

«We believe that as virtual banks gain a better understanding of their customers’ preferences and habits over time, they will leverage financial technologies to offer more personalised products and services, and a new user experience to customers.»

Seven other virtual banks in Hong Kong are expected to launch in the first half of next year.