Event Coverage

Cyberport Venture Capital Forum 2025

Cyberport Venture Capital Forum (CVCF) 2025 Returns Under the Theme "The Innovation–Venture Nexus: Igniting Transformative Success"

Updated

January 8, 2026 6:34 PM

As the venture capital world recalibrates amid global uncertainty, Cyberport Venture Capital Forum (CVCF) 2025 returns on November 6-7 under the theme “The Innovation–Venture Nexus: Igniting Transformative Success”. PHOTO: CYBERPORT

The two-day forum will once again bring together global and local leaders to explore how technology, capital and collaboration intersect to drive the next wave of growth. Entrepreneurs, investors and innovators will exchange insights on artificial intelligence, digital assets and Web 3.0—technologies that are reshaping industries and redefining both risk and opportunity.

As industries face challenges from geopolitical shifts, regulatory changes and market volatility, CVCF will serve as a platform to address a defining question: How can innovation remain bold and visionary in an ever-evolving funding landscape? Through keynotes, panel discussions and interactive sessions, the forum will spotlight the transformative potential of technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), Web 3.0 and digital assets while offering practical strategies to turn disruption into market advantage.

With investor matching, power pitches, start-up clinics and workshops, CVCF 2025 offers a front-row seat to emerging markets across Asia, the Middle East, the United States and Europe, connecting forward-thinking investors with visionary entrepreneurs. It is not just a conference—it’s a bridge between ideas and investment designed to ignite breakthroughs and foster growth in the global innovation ecosystem. It provides a unique platform for startups and investors to navigate the complexities of today’s economy while seizing new opportunities for collaboration and growth.

To preview the conversations ahead, three speakers share perspectives on trends shaping the future of innovation, investment and entrepreneurship, setting the stage for the discussions that will unfold at CVCF 2025.

Alvin Kwock

Co-founder and CEO, AIFT

Session: Riding the Middle East Momentum — Capitalizing Unique Innovation and Investment Strengths 

As the Middle East accelerates its shift from oil dependence toward digital diversification, the region is becoming a focal point for blockchain and AI investment. In his upcoming session, Alvin Kwock will explore the region’s innovation potential — and here, he shares some of his views on the opportunities shaping that transformation. 

Alvin Kwock, co-founder and CEO of AIFT, oversees operations across three verticals: AI and cybersecurity (Vulcan and Cymetrics), blockchain (OneInfinity and OneSavie) and pet and B2C (OneDegree). With local operations spanning Asia and the Middle East, AIFT is expanding rapidly. 

When asked about the Middle East’s rapid rise as a global innovation hub, Kwock said that the region is shifting from a petroleum-dependent economy to one increasingly diversified through technology and innovation, with markets advancing blockchain and AI technologies. AIFT is prioritizing expansion in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, where AI investment and regulatory openness create immense potential. Hong Kong’s expertise in financial risk management acts as a “confidence anchor” for international markets, allowing AIFT to deliver compliant solutions tailored for emerging markets while developing Sharia-compliant, regulation-aligned technologies. 

“Hong Kong’s storied expertise in financial risk management acts as a ‘confidence anchor’ for international markets.” 

He also noted that the region’s accelerating digital adoption opens unique opportunities for AI, insurtech and fintech. The UAE and Bahrain’ embrace of virtual assets, combined with Hong Kong’s proven frameworks, provide a foundation for localized solutions. By integrating risk oversight and regulatory best practices, AIFT supports stable market growth and delivers specialized insurance to enhance resilience in emerging markets. 

On managing geopolitical risk, Kwock explained that AIFT mitigates exposure through local partnerships, regulatory alignment and cultural understanding. By hiring Arab employees and ensuring operations align with Islamic values, AIFT strengthens Hong Kong–Middle East collaboration. This approach, he said, offers a blueprint for startups: prioritize local engagement and flexibility to balance risk and growth. 

Kang Shen

Founder, Hash Global Advisory Company Ltd.

Session: From Hype to Holdings — Where Smart Money Goes in Digital Assets 2025–2027 

With institutional frameworks for Web 3.0 maturing, investors are increasingly focused on sustainable value creation. In his session, Kang Shen will discuss how smart capital is moving beyond speculation toward real-world utility—themes echoed in his reflections shared ahead of the forum. 

Kang Shen, founder of Hash Global Advisory, applies value-investing principles to the Web 3.0 sector. A graduate of Fudan University and the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), Shen has more than 20 years of financial industry experience with roles at the Industrial Bank of Japan, PIMCO and Bosera Asset Management. 

On the tokenization of real-world assets, Shen observed that the RWA sector remains in its early phase of regulatory and infrastructure development. Over the next two years, as compliance systems mature, scalable projects with tangible value will emerge. For now, his approach remains cautious, focusing on fundamentals rather than inflated market narratives. 

He also shared his optimism for three areas with the most potential upside: Web 3.0 Culture and Entertainment—including projects like Meet48 and Offgrid; Web 3.0 E-Commerce and Payments—with ventures such as WSPN, RD Technologies and Bitgoods; and On-Chain Data and Data Assets—such as Chainbase and Data Dance Chain. These, he noted, represent meaningful real-world applications of Web 3.0 technologies. 

“Web 3.0 is currently undergoing a process of value realignment.”

Shen emphasized that Hash Global has always been committed to applying value-investing principles to the field of digital asset management. As early as 2019, the firm proposed using a monetary equation framework to evaluate ecosystem tokens and recently defined a new class—“Value-Functional Tokens”. He believes Web 3.0 is now undergoing a process of value realignment, where genuine utility will determine long-term worth. 

Eric Liu

Founder and CEO, Zhejiang Linctex Digital Technology Co., Ltd. (Style3D)

Session: Strategic Exits — IPO Paths for Expanding Rapid-Growth Companies 

The fashion and textile industry is undergoing rapid digital transformation. Against this backdrop, Eric Liu will join CVCF 2025 to discuss strategic growth and expansion paths for fast-scaling companies.

Eric Liu, founder and CEO of Zhejiang Linctex Digital Technology Co., Ltd. (Style3D), holds dual master’s degrees in applied computing and molecular biology from VUB University in Belgium and a PhD in Electronic Information Engineering from Zhejiang University. A serial entrepreneur in the textile industry, Liu founded Style3D to drive digital transformation through AI and 3D technology. 

He explained that Style3D’s fusion of AI and 3D technology builds a full-chain digital ecosystem. AI-driven design tools powered by large language models shorten design cycles from weeks to hours, while 3D simulation reduces prototyping costs by 30 percent. The company’s self-developed simulation engine supports virtual fashion shows and sustainability initiatives by optimizing fabric usage.

“Style3D’s fusion of AI and 3D technology builds a full-chain digital ecosystem.” 

On the company’s origins, Liu said that traditional fashion R&D cycles are slow and costly. By integrating AI for pattern generation and 3D for design-to-production links, Style3D overcomes these barriers. With over 200 core patents and an extensive database of 2.3 million fabric properties and 1.2 million garment templates, the company leads digital fashion innovation.

Looking ahead, Liu noted that Style3D reinvests 40 percent of annual revenue into R&D, develops AI-driven trend prediction tools and expands innovation hubs in Paris and Milan. By leading the standardization of “3D Digital Fashion Infrastructure”, Style3D is setting the industry benchmark for the next era of intelligent manufacturing. 

Building the Future Together

As global innovators prepare to gather at CVCF 2025, the forum promises to ignite ideas, discoveries and partnerships that will shape the future of technology and investment. From cutting-edge insights to practical strategies, the conversations starting here are just the beginning of a journey to redefine what’s possible in the global innovation ecosystem.  

Web3.0 Innovation Expo
Web3.0 Innovation Expo

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Talent & Organisation

How Trade Shows Are Evolving to Better Support Small and Mid-Sized Manufacturers

A closer look at PMMI’s FastTrack initiative and why it matters for growing manufacturing firms

Updated

February 13, 2026 10:44 AM

Cardboard boxes in a warehouse. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

Large trade shows are built for scale. But for small and medium-sized manufacturers, that scale often creates distance between what’s on display and what they can actually use. Too many options, too little time, and very few tools designed for companies that are still growing. That mismatch is what PMMI is trying to correct with its new SMB FastTrack Program at PACK EXPO East 2026.

That is the problem PMMI is trying to address with its new SMB FastTrack Program, launching at PACK EXPO East 2026 in Philadelphia.

PMMI — the Association for Packaging and Processing Technologies — is the industry body behind the PACK EXPO trade shows and a central organization in the global packaging and processing sector. Through FastTrack, it has created a program (not an app or a product) designed to help small and mid-sized companies navigate the show more efficiently and connect with solutions that fit their scale.

The idea behind SMB FastTrack is simple: reduce friction. Instead of asking smaller firms to sort through hundreds of exhibitors and sessions on their own, the program curates what is most relevant to them. Exhibitors that offer flexible pricing, right-sized machinery, or SMB-focused services are clearly identified with visual icons in both the online directory and on the show floor. That way, a small manufacturer can quickly distinguish between enterprise-only vendors and partners that are realistically accessible.

The same logic carries into education. Rather than treating all attendees the same, PACK EXPO East 2026 will include a learning track specifically built around SMB realities. These sessions focus on issues that smaller teams actually face—how to hire and train workers, use AI without over-investing, improve food safety, cut operating costs, and adopt technology in stages. The goal is not inspiration, but applicability: content that reflects real constraints, not ideal scenarios.

Planning, too, is built into the structure of the program. Through a dedicated FastTrack landing page, participants can access curated supplier lists, recommended sessions, and planning tools that help organize their time before they ever step onto the show floor. Tools like category search and sustainability finders are meant to narrow choices quickly, turning a massive event into something manageable.

Seen together, these elements point to a broader intention. PMMI is not simply adding features—it is reshaping how smaller manufacturers experience a major industry event. Instead of competing for attention in a space built for scale, SMBs are given clearer paths to the people, tools, and knowledge that match where they actually are in their growth cycle.

What makes SMB FastTrack notable is not the technology behind it, but the intention behind it. PMMI is recognizing that progress for small and mid-sized manufacturers depends less on spectacle and more on fit—solutions that are accessible, affordable, and adaptable. The program is designed to help companies move with purpose, not pressure.

In an industry where visibility often follows size, SMB FastTrack represents a structural shift. It treats small and medium-sized manufacturers not as a subset of the audience, but as a distinct group with distinct needs. By doing so, PMMI is quietly redefining what a trade show can be: not just a marketplace of innovation, but a usable platform for companies still building their next stage of growth.