Shenzhen News Network, September 15, 2025 In the 2025 Global Innovation Index’s list of the world’s top 100 innovation clusters, the Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Guangzhou innovation cluster has become the world’s largest innovation cluster for the first time. Shenzhen’s total R&D investment reached 223.66 billion yuan, an increase of 18.9%, marking the ninth consecutive year of double-digit growth. The R&D investment intensity reached 6.46%. The number of PCT international patent applications has ranked first in the country for 21 consecutive years, and domestic patent grants have ranked first for 7 consecutive years…

Technological innovation has placed Shenzhen in the global first tier. This achievement is inseparable from the continuous nourishment of financial “lifelines.”

From “providing timely help” in the startup phase, to “adding fuel to the fire” during the growth stage, and to “breaking barriers and exploring new paths” in innovation, Shenzhen’s tech finance has given wings to enterprises. This not only solves the core problem of “where the money comes from” for tech companies but also, through continuous innovation, directs financial resources precisely to hard tech and high-growth fields, helping Shenzhen accelerate the building of an industrial technology innovation center with global influence and construct an innovation city in an all-round and deep-seated manner. As of the end of June this year, the balance of technology loans in the city exceeded 2 trillion yuan.

Startup Support: Solving the “First Kilometer” Financing Problem

“We are going to pitch at the Shenzhen Angel Mother Fund and are currently discussing some cooperation intentions.” At the 10th Global Broadcasting Conference, Yang Bang, a 2024 doctoral student in Electronic Science and Technology at Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen), won one of only six global spots for the 2025 IEEE Photonics Student Achievement Award.

The project he and his team developed, the “Data Center Optical Interconnection Intelligent Sensing Module,” has iterated to a second-generation prototype and is now preparing for company registration. “Many cities have extended ‘olive branches’ to us, but we firmly choose Shenzhen.”

Insisting on investing early, small, long-term, and in hard tech—this is the commitment of Shenzhen capital. In recent years, Shenzhen has gradually established a full-lifecycle continuous investment system, successively setting up a trillion-yuan government investment guidance fund, a billion-yuan angel investment guidance fund, and a 2 billion yuan seed fund, attracting Ping An Life, Taiping Insurance, the Social Security Fund’s Bay Area Technology Innovation Special Fund, and the Shenzhen-Hong Kong Technology Innovation Fund to form large-scale sub-fund groups.

Currently, the Shenzhen Angel Mother Fund has invested in 973 seed-stage and early-stage high-tech enterprises, including 6 unicorn companies and 182 potential unicorn companies valued at over $100 million.

For tech companies in the initial stage, “lack of funds, lack of credit, and lack of collateral” are common challenges. Targeting this pain point, Shenzhen has broken the limitations of traditional credit that “emphasize collateral and neglect credit” by creating a dedicated “credit ID” for startups, solving the “first kilometer” financing problem.

Shenzhen, relying on Shenzhen Credit, jointly launched the “Tech Startup Pass” credit product with banks, integrating multi-dimensional data such as social security, taxation, and intellectual property to build a credit evaluation model covering 3 major categories and 12 dimensions, including corporate fundamentals, talent competitiveness, and future growth potential. This “data for credit” model can accurately outline the development potential of startups, helping banks lend more confidently. To date, the “Tech Startup Pass” has granted credit and loans totaling 4.84 billion yuan to 3,761 startup tech companies, allowing many startups with technology but no collateral to invest安心ly in R&D.

Growth Empowerment: Credit Innovation Helps Tech Companies “Take Off”

When tech companies enter the growth stage, their funding needs shift from “startup capital” to “scale investment” for R&D upgrades, market expansion, and even mergers and acquisitions. Shenzhen injects “acceleration” into enterprises through credit model innovation and full-chain listing services.

In terms of credit support, Shenzhen has launched innovative products like the “Soaring Loan” to address banks’ concerns about “daring not to lend or unwillingness to lend.” In traditional credit, banks and enterprises often bear risk unilaterally, but the “Soaring Loan” introduces a profit-sharing mechanism, designing models such as “loan interest rates linked to business performance,” “preferential loans + future financial service priority rights,” and “preferential loans + future

Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Guangzhou innovation cluster

The Shenzhen-Hong Kong-Guangzhou innovation cluster is a globally significant technology and economic hub in southern China, formed through decades of rapid development. Its history is rooted in Shenzhen’s establishment as China’s first Special Economic Zone in 1980, which catalyzed its transformation into a global manufacturing and innovation powerhouse. Today, it is a leading center for electronics, telecommunications, and research, driven by the synergistic strengths of Hong Kong’s financial markets, Guangzhou’s manufacturing base, and Shenzhen’s tech startups.

Shenzhen Angel Mother Fund

The Shenzhen Angel Mother Fund is a charitable organization established in 2013 to provide support and financial aid to mothers who have lost their only child. It was created in response to the social challenges faced by these families, often referred to as “shidu families,” following China’s former one-child policy. The fund offers both material assistance and emotional care to help these mothers rebuild their lives.

Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen)

The Harbin Institute of Technology (Shenzhen) is a satellite campus of the prestigious Harbin Institute of Technology, one of China’s top universities with a history dating back to 1920. Established in 2002, the Shenzhen campus focuses on engineering and technology disciplines, leveraging its location in a major tech hub to foster innovation and industry collaboration.

IEEE Photonics Student Achievement Award

The IEEE Photonics Student Achievement Award is an academic honor recognizing outstanding graduate students in the field of photonics and optoelectronics. It was established by the IEEE Photonics Society to encourage and reward research excellence among its student members. The award highlights significant contributions to the advancement of light-based technologies.

Ping An Life

“Ping An Life” is not a specific place or cultural site, but rather the name of a major Chinese insurance and financial services company, Ping An Insurance (Group) Company of China, Ltd. It was founded in 1988 in Shenzhen and has grown to become one of the world’s largest financial institutions by market value. The name “Ping An” translates to “safe and well” in Chinese, reflecting the company’s focus on providing security and financial services.

Taiping Insurance

Taiping Insurance is a Chinese financial services company founded in 1929, not a historical place or cultural site. It is one of China’s oldest and largest state-owned insurance groups, with a history spanning the Republican era, nationalization, and modern re-establishment.

Social Security Fund’s Bay Area Technology Innovation Special Fund

This is not a physical place or cultural site, but a financial investment vehicle. It is a specialized fund established by China’s Social Security Fund to invest in and support technological innovation companies, primarily in the Bay Area. Its history is rooted in China’s national strategy to foster growth in its high-tech and emerging industries.

Shenzhen-Hong Kong Technology Innovation Fund

The Shenzhen-Hong Kong Technology Innovation Fund is a collaborative financial initiative established to foster technological innovation and economic integration between the two cities. It was created to support startups, research projects, and the commercialization of new technologies in the Greater Bay Area. This fund reflects the broader strategic partnership aimed at building a world-class innovation and technology hub.