Explore how we help
We create a plan tailored to your complex needs
WHO WE HELP
Individuals and families
Your wealth, goals and family priorities
Business owners and entrepreneurs
Your business, wealth and next steps
Corporate executives
Complex income, equity and career transitions
International individuals and families
Life and wealth across multiple countries
UHNW and Family Offices
Significant, complex and multi-generational wealth
YOUR IDEAS & GOALS
Plan for growth
Grow your wealth and open up new opportunities
Live well
Live life to the fullest, today and into the future
Secure your future
Be prepared for whatever may happen
Make a difference
Support the people and causes you care about
WORKING WITH PROFESSIONALS
Intermediaries
Scale, security and investment discipline for your clients
Professional partners
Specialist support to enhance your client offering
Charities
Effective governance, oversight and long-term sustainability
About RBC Wealth Management
Experienced local advisers, backed by global strength
Our offices
Over 30 offices in the UK, Ireland and Jersey
WHO WE ARE
Our history
Generations of clients have relied on RBC Wealth Management and RBC Brewin Dolphin
Awards and recognition
Recognising our service and industry leadership
Leadership
The people guiding our strategy and client experience
SUSTAINABILITY
Responsible investing
Our approach to responsible investment
Community involvement
Supporting communities where we live and work
CAREERS
Work with us
You can thrive here
Diversity and inclusion
Our differences make us stronger
Search careers
Find your opportunity
Explore our solutions
Let’s set your ideas in motion
RBC Private Wealth
Integrated solutions for significant and complex wealth
RBC Brewin Dolphin
Personalised financial planning and investment advice
Brewin Portfolio Service (BPS)
Simple, guided investing through an online platform
RBC International Trusts
Specialist structures for long-term wealth preservation
OUR CORE SOLUTIONS
Wealth planning and management
A bespoke plan to manage and grow your wealth
Investment management
Tailored portfolios aligned with your goals
Pensions and retirement planning
Plan for the retirement you want
Inheritance tax and estate planning
Helping you pass on more of your wealth efficiently
UHNW and Family Office services
Coordinating complex and multi-generational wealth
Banking
Dedicated banking for your personal and global needs
Financial advice for business owners
Guidance for growth, exit and managing proceeds
Responsible and sustainable investing
Invest with greater purpose in line with your values
Philanthropy
Create a lasting impact through strategic giving
Trusts and foundations
Protect and preserve wealth for future generations
Self-directed investing
Choose from a range of ready-made portfolios
Explore our insights and ideas
Analysis, insights and research from our local and global networks
Our newsletter
Subscribe to receive email updates on news, insights and upcoming events
Quarter-century crossroads
Key themes have the potential to shape economic developments and drive certain sectors for decades to come.
Life reimagined: The biotech revolution and longevity
There’s more to a long life than simply a long lifespan. The number of years we spend in good health, or healthspan, is key. With biotech spurring promising medical innovations, we look at how it can fit into investment portfolios.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Insights
Articles exploring the events and trends driving the world and your wealth
Market perspectives
Expert analysis and commentary on current market trends
Case studies
Real experiences showing how we turn ideas into action
Guides
Practical information to help you make informed decisions
Webinars
Conversations with our experts on the topics shaping wealth today
As China enters a new year, we explore its ever-changing position on the global stage.
17 February 2026 | 8 minute read
Janet MuiHead of Market AnalysisRBC Brewin Dolphin
In Chinese astrology, the fire horse symbolises speed, advancement and unpredictability. This symbolism is fitting for the country’s current status, says Janet Mui, Head of Market Analysis at RBC Brewin Dolphin, who examines why this year could prove critical for China as it looks to leverage strategic advantages in technology and resource.
As China enters the Year of the Fire Horse, it faces a mixed economic picture. While deflationary pressures persist and the property market remains weak, there are definite bright spots, particularly in technology and AI innovation. Consumption growth may remain elusive for now, but it also represents significant potential as the country continues its transition from an infrastructure-led model toward one driven more by domestic consumption.
Time and again, China has demonstrated its ability to respond to economic pressure through targeted policy pivots and industrial support, while remaining committed to a long-term strategic vision. This is largely due to a political structure that enables planning on a multi-decade horizon and surgical precision in directing resources into priority sectors.
New technologies, for example, aren’t only developed domestically but are deployed at scale – often faster than in other major economies. AI innovation and adaptation, in particular, has the potential to evolve more rapidly in China, much like a galloping fire horse.
Only a few years ago, many global investors had effectively written China off, with concerns arising primarily from politics rather than economic growth. Regulatory crackdowns in the tech sector created fears that shareholder returns could suffer at the expense of policy objectives, leading Chinese equities to trade at steep discounts.
That perception has gradually shifted as AI has moved to the centre of both policy and corporate agendas, particularly following the arrival of Chinese AI research company, DeepSeek. Policy support is now increasingly concentrated in sectors aligned with national priorities, including semiconductors, electric vehicles, automation and AI infrastructure.
This has resulted in renewed capital markets activity. After several subdued years, Chinese companies have turned to Hong Kong again as a primary listing venue to access international capital. This reflects a return of investor appetite for exposure to China, linked to both the emerging AI economy and investors seeking diversification away from expensive U.S. tech stocks. Increasingly, investors buying exposure to China aren’t viewing it simply as a cyclical growth opportunity, but as a structural bet on its national AI strategy.
For 2026, this shift may still only be in its early stages. AI development has a multi-year runway, and valuations for many Chinese tech giants remain below global peers. And despite the potential here, the road ahead may deliver a bumpy ride. Chinese markets – particularly around speculative IPO positioning – remain retail and sentiment-driven, which can amplify both rallies and corrections. So, while the Year of the Fire Horse may bring bursts of optimism, investors can expect volatility along the way.
China’s domestic economic transition coincides with a broader transformation in global trade. For decades, globalisation was largely driven by efficiency – with production gravitating to the lowest cost locations, while trade norms and rules provided stability. In today’s environment of geopolitical tension and tariff threats, however, resilience has become the dominant priority.
In this new landscape, strategic leverage matters more than low cost, and China has that leverage when it comes to critical minerals and rare earths, not merely because it mines them, but because it processes and refines an estimated 90% of global supply. While deposits exist elsewhere, and the U.S. is accelerating efforts to reduce dependence on China,the bottleneck lies in processing rather than geology. The refinement process is technologically complex, environmentally damaging and, therefore, difficult and slow if not impossible to replicate.
This matters even more in the age of AI because its advanced infrastructure and hardware rely on specialised metals and magnets. Control of these inputs translates into strategic leverage – supply restrictions, or just the mere possibility of supply issues, can influence trade negotiations and shape alliances.
Although many countries aim to diversify supply chains to reduce geopolitical risk, they remain deeply reliant on China’s ecosystem. Even if they wanted to walk away from China, they can’t. In practice, supply chain diversification often means building parallel capacity rather than replacing existing networks – reinforcing rather than displacing China as a superpower.
At the same time, China has gradually diversified its reserves away from U.S. Treasuries while steadily increasing its gold holdings. This trend accelerated following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as sanctions underscored how access to dollar reserves can become a policy tool in geopolitical disputes. According to the World Gold Council, gold as a share of China’s reserves has risen from just above 3% in 2022 to nearly 10% in January 2026.
While the Year of the Fire Horse may bring faster shifts in policy and alliances, the underlying trend is clear: economic leverage increasingly rests on ownership of resources and industrial capacity. For investors, this implies that the demand for real assets, such as commodities, alongside advanced industrial capacity, becomes more structural than cyclical. Amid geopolitical tensions, gold is likely to remain in demand as a strategic reserve asset for China and beyond.
For the UK, these shifts create a delicate balancing act. While the country remains strategically aligned with the U.S., it also aspires to a deeper economic engagement with China through trade, financial services and supply chains – driven in part by economic necessity. With UK growth subdued in recent years, expanding external sources of demand has become increasingly important.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s recent visit to China and meeting with President Xi reflects a pragmatic approach, leading to announcements on financial cooperation, green investment and improved market access. The UK’s positioning is less about choosing sides and more about facilitating economic exchange.
The UK’s competitive strengths lie in financial services, its legal framework and professional services, with the added benefit of a favourable time zone bridging East and West. As a result, financial and business intermediation remains a key competitive advantage. London, for example, is already positioned as a leading offshore Chinese renminbi (RMB) centre – a role that appears set to strengthen. This is more than just market expansion, it provides UK investors with more direct, local access to China-related investments, like sovereign bonds. As the partnership grows, it may encourage cross-listing and access to securities, opening up further investment options.
Trade between the UK and China, however, remains modest relative to the size of their economies. It’s a fun fact that despite China’s economy being roughly 30 times larger than Ireland’s, the UK trades more with Ireland than with China. This underscores how that trading relationship has significant room to expand, both in services and goods.
Overall, the Year of the Fire Horse points to a world that’s moving at speed but becoming less predictable. Yet beneath the volatility, structural trends are emerging. China’s economy will become less reliant on infrastructure and property and more focused on technology, AI and the control of key resources. Rather than decoupling in a fragmented world, China is reshaping its superpower role through its tech ecosystem and rare earth stranglehold, even as other nations invest in their own strategic capacity.
Resource and national security are increasingly shaping global capital spending, supporting demand for commodities, AI infrastructure and the companies enabling this buildout. China remains central to many of these themes, and an important source of opportunity, particularly in sectors aligned with long-term policy priorities.
For investors, maintaining a diversified portfolio across regions, sectors and asset classes offers exposure to these structural forces while reducing reliance on trying to back a single, winning horse.
Head of Market Analysis
Janet Mui, CFA is Head of Market Analysis at RBC Brewin Dolphin and a voting member of the Asset Allocation Committee. She is part of the investment solutions team which generates central investment guidance and manages a range of risk-rated portfolios.
The value of investments, and any income from them, can fall and you may get back less than you invested. Investment values may increase or decrease as a result of currency fluctuations. Information is provided only as an example and is not a recommendation to pursue a particular strategy. We or a connected person may have positions in or options on the securities mentioned herein or may buy, sell or offer to make a purchase or sale of such securities from time to time. For further information, please refer to our conflicts policy which is available on request or can be accessed via our website at www.rbcwealthmanagement.com/en-uk. Information contained in this document is believed to be reliable and accurate, but without further investigation cannot be warranted as to accuracy or completeness.
This publication has been issued by RBC’s Wealth Management international division in the United Kingdom and the Channel Islands which is comprised of an international network of RBC® companies located in these jurisdictions and includes RBC Europe Limited and Royal Bank of Canada (Channel Islands) Limited. You should carefully read any risk warnings or regulatory disclosures in this publication or in any other literature accompanying this publication or transmitted to you by RBC’s Wealth Management international division.
This publication has been compiled from sources believed to be reliable, but no representation or warranty, express or implied is made to its accuracy, completeness or correctness. All opinions and estimates contained in this report are judgements as of the date of this report, are subject to change without notice and are provided in good faith but without legal responsibility. This report is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities. Past performance is not a guide to future performance, the value of investments and income arising can go down, future returns are not guaranteed, and an investor may not get back the amount originally invested. Countries throughout the world have their own laws regulating the types of securities and other investment products and services which may be offered to their residents, as well as the process for doing so. As a result, any securities or services discussed in this report may not be eligible for sale in some jurisdictions. This report is not, and under no circumstances should be construed as, a solicitation to act as a securities broker or dealer in any jurisdiction by any person or company that is not legally permitted to carry on the business of a securities broker or dealer in that jurisdiction. Nothing in this report constitutes legal, accounting or tax advice or individually tailored investment advice.
This material is prepared for general circulation and does not have regard to the particular circumstances or needs of any specific person who may read it. The investments or services contained in this report may not be suitable for you and it is recommended that you consult an independent investment advisor if you are in doubt about the suitability of such investments or services. To the full extent permitted by law none of the entities which comprise the international division of RBC Wealth Management nor any of their affiliates, nor any other person, accepts any liability whatsoever for any direct or consequential loss arising from any use of this report or the information contained herein. No matter contained in this document may be reproduced or copied by any means without the prior consent of RBC Wealth Management.
Clients of RBC Europe Limited may be entitled to compensation from the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) if it cannot meet its obligations. This depends on the type of business and the circumstances of the claim. For further information about the compensation provided by the FSCS scheme (including the amounts covered and eligibility to claim) please refer to the FSCS website FSCS.org.uk. Please note only compensation related queries should be directed to the FSCS. Royal Bank of Canada (Channel Islands) Limited is not covered by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme. RBC Europe Limited is registered in England and Wales with company number 995939. Its registered office is 100 Bishopsgate, London EC2N 4AA. RBC Europe Limited is authorised by the Prudential Regulation Authority and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential Regulation Authority.
Royal Bank of Canada (Channel Islands) Limited (“the Bank”) is regulated by the Jersey Financial Services Commission in the conduct of deposit taking, fund services and investment business in Jersey. The Bank’s general terms and conditions are updated from time to time and can be found at https://www.rbcwealthmanagement.com/en-uk/terms-and-conditions. Registered office: Gaspé House, 66-72 Esplanade, St. Helier, Jersey JE2 3QT, Channel Islands. Deposits made with Royal Bank of Canada (Channel Islands) Limited in Jersey are not covered by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme. Royal Bank of Canada (Channel Islands) Limited is a participant in the Jersey Bank Depositors Compensation Scheme (the Scheme). The Scheme aims to provide protection for eligible depositors of up to £50,000. For further information about the Scheme and to understand your eligibility, please refer to www.jrdca.org.je/jdcs.
Investment services offered by the Bank are not covered by an investor compensation scheme as there is currently no such scheme operating in Jersey, however ‘eligible deposits’ held pursuant to investment services may be protected under the Bank Depositors Compensation Scheme described above – for more information see the Bank’s general terms and conditions. Some of the products that the Bank might recommend to you could be registered overseas and may be covered by a local compensation scheme. Your investment counsellor will provide you with the details of any overseas compensation schemes (where applicable) at the time of making an investment recommendation.
Copies of the latest audited accounts are available upon request from the registered office. ® / ™ Trademark(s) of Royal Bank of Canada. Used under licence.