Hong Kong’s MPF set to report worst performance in 3 years in March
Hong Kong's Mandatory Provident Fund (MPF) is projected to report its worst monthly performance in 3 years for March, with losses exceeding HK$100 billion (US$12.8 billion). This significant drop, impacting 4.8 million members with an average loss of HK$21,542 each in the first three weeks of March, is attributed to sharp declines in global stock markets and uncertainties related to the Middle East conflict.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHong Kong's Mandatory Provident Fund (MPF) is projected to report its worst monthly performance in 3 years for March, with losses exceeding HK$100 billion (US$12.8 billion). This significant drop, impacting 4.8 million members with an average loss of HK$21,542 each in the first three weeks of March, is attributed to sharp declines in global stock markets and uncertainties related to the Middle East conflict. MPF Ratings reported a 6.33% loss in the first three weeks of March, the worst since September 2022. Analysts and the pension regulator are advising members to diversify their investment strategies in response to market volatility. The full-month loss is expected to be the largest since the MPF's inception in December 2000.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe funds posted a loss of 6.33 per cent in the first three weeks of March.
On average, each MPF member lost HK$21,542 during the first three weeks of March.
The 378 MPF investment funds suffered a HK$103.3 billion loss in the first three weeks of last month.
Hong Kong’s MPF is poised to report a loss of over HK$100 billion for March.
Because of the war in the Middle East, the global capital markets in March fluctuated a lot, which negatively affected the MPF’s performance.