The online platform will operate in a market worth more than $63 billion in insurance premiums, and will compete with players such as AIA Group and the local unit of Prudential Plc .
More than 80 percent of customers are willing to use digital and remote contact channels including email, mobile apps, video or phone instead of interacting with insurers via agents or brokers, a report by consultancy EY showed.
The licence comes as Hong Kong is pushing a number of financial technology or "fintech" initiatives in an effort to compete better with rival centres such as Singapore and London to reel in more investments.
Hong Kong's Insurance Authority's (IA) "fast-track" scheme was launched last year to speed up applications for insurers operating solely online.
"The IA is closely examining a few other applications under the fast-track and will issue new authorizations as and when ready," the regulator's Chief Executive Clement Cheung said in a statement.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), Hong Kong's de facto central bank and banking regulator, will issue the first licences to online-only banks in the first quarter of next year
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