Singapore challenges London: a new clearing system for gold shifts the balance of power in Asia
Singapore is launching a large-scale program aimed at becoming Asia's leading gold trading hub. The idea has been backed by six of the world's largest banks, which have joined in creating a new clearing system for physical gold that will be stored on the island. This puts Singapore in direct competition with Hong Kong, which plans its own clearing system for the precious metal in July.
On June 15, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong presented a package of initiatives from the Singapore Exchange and the Monetary Authority of Singapore. The city-state aims to take a leading position in the region: Asia accounts for 70% of global gold demand, yet key prices are still set in London and New York.
How Singapore is becoming a gold leader
The Singapore Exchange will launch an over-the-counter (OTC) clearing system for physical gold stored in Singapore by the end of 2026. Participants include DBS, Deutsche Bank, ICBC Standard Bank, JPMorgan, OCBC, and UOB. Interbank trading is expected to begin in 2027.
Starting in October, the Monetary Authority of Singapore will offer gold storage services for foreign central banks, allowing foreign financial institutions and sovereign funds to hold their reserves in Singapore. Additionally, as part of tax incentives, the 5% limit on investments in physical precious metals will be removed. Funds and family offices will now be able to more freely increase their gold allocation in portfolios.
What the Asian gold market lacks
About 70% of annual global gold demand comes from Asian buyers, but the continent still lacks developed infrastructure to handle such volumes. Gan Kim Yong identified as a systemic problem the fact that key price benchmarks are set by London and New York. This is particularly challenging for Asia: during local trading hours, liquidity drops, making large transactions more difficult.
According to Gan Kim Yong, Singapore does not aim to completely displace existing markets. The authorities want to turn the country into a hub for the Asian region, connecting local demand with global liquidity during daytime hours. OTC deals are better suited for large institutional transactions than exchange-traded ones, as they offer participants more flexibility in timing and trading conditions.
The race for leadership in the Asian gold hub
Singapore has an active competitor. Hong Kong plans to launch its own gold clearing system in July and resume trading in gold futures. To this end, the city has secured support from several banks and established ties with central banks.
Gold has risen significantly in price this year, attracting institutional investors and intensifying competition between the two hubs. One participant in the Singapore system, DBS, is currently preparing to issue tokenized physical gold for retail clients. Its competitor, OCBC, already buys, sells, and stores the precious metal for institutional investors in Singapore.
Which hub will capture the larger clearing volume, Hong Kong or Singapore, depends not only on the speed of launch. But already, six major international banks are ready to support the Singapore system, which is a serious bid for commercial success.
Expert comment: The shift of gold clearing to Asia is not just a logistical change but a fundamental restructuring of the global market. Singapore, backed by leading banks and central banks, could become not just a regional hub but a new global pricing center if it manages to fill the niche before Hong Kong begins full operations.