Normal view

  • ✇Malay Mail - All
  • China tightens private investment fund oversight to channel capital into tech, emerging sectors
    BEIJING, June 5 — China today tightened oversight of the country’s ‌23 trillion yuan (RM13.7 trillion) private fund industry, in a bid to reduce financial risks and channel money into technology innovation ‌and emerging industries.China’s securities regulator said it would raise the bar for private fund registration, crack down on illegal fund activities and encourage long-term “patient” capital to support tech-focused venture capital investments.“Strengthening o
     

China tightens private investment fund oversight to channel capital into tech, emerging sectors

5 June 2026 at 10:29

Malay Mail

BEIJING, June 5 — China today tightened oversight of the country’s ‌23 trillion yuan (RM13.7 trillion) private fund industry, in a bid to reduce financial risks and channel money into technology innovation ‌and emerging industries.

China’s securities regulator said it would raise the bar for private fund registration, crack down on illegal fund activities and encourage long-term “patient” capital to support tech-focused venture capital investments.

“Strengthening oversight of private funds will help remove bad actors, create a sound environment for the industry ...and protect investors,” the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said in a statement.

The announcement came two weeks after ‌China launched a major crackdown on cross-border investment and ⁠tightened capital controls. It’s also ⁠part of Beijing’s broader campaign to ⁠direct resources into the tech ⁠sector, which ⁠is key in the Sino-US power rivalry.

The latest move represents a deepening of clean-up efforts that started in ⁠2023 that saw the de-registration of more than 5,000 private fund managers. Chinese private funds can invest in securities or make private equity investments.

“The industry is big, but not strong. Funding structure is imbalanced. And some ⁠funds have even become the tools for criminals,” the CSRC said.

According to the latest rules, regulators ⁠will set up a cross-agency monitoring platform to identify risks and misbehaviours. ⁠The ⁠watchdog will also step up monitoring of operation by government-backed funds.

The CSRC said it will clamp down hard on ‌illegal activities including illegitimate cross-border flows, illicit fundraising and misappropriation of money. — Reuters

 

  • ✇Hong Kong Free Press HKFP
  • China probes cross-border brokers in crackdown; Hong Kong ‘loophole’ in crosshairs AFP
    China’s market regulator announced a sweeping investigation on Friday against three major brokers running cross-border trading, as it launched a two-year crackdown on investment leaving the country. Photo: David Dennis via Flickr. China does not allow private individuals to directly invest in overseas markets, requiring them to trade assets only through approved third-party channels. However, regulations differ in the semi-autonomous city Hong Kong, and some brokers have been able to l
     

China probes cross-border brokers in crackdown; Hong Kong ‘loophole’ in crosshairs

By: AFP
23 May 2026 at 04:15
foreign exchange

China’s market regulator announced a sweeping investigation on Friday against three major brokers running cross-border trading, as it launched a two-year crackdown on investment leaving the country.

renminbi cash dollar
Photo: David Dennis via Flickr.

China does not allow private individuals to directly invest in overseas markets, requiring them to trade assets only through approved third-party channels.

However, regulations differ in the semi-autonomous city Hong Kong, and some brokers have been able to legally operate there, attracting investors from mainland China to open trading accounts in the Chinese finance hub.

Authorities have sought to regulate the loophole in recent years, and in 2022 barred private Chinese investors from opening accounts with such brokers.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said on Friday it will probe and impose penalties on Hong Kong-registered brokers Futu and Longbridge, as well as New Zealand-registered Tiger Brokers.

Regulators said the brokers had conducted securities-related business in China “without obtaining the necessary approvals or licenses”, violating China’s securities law.

The CSRC said in a separate statement Friday it will join forces with seven other bodies, including the Ministry of Public Security and the People’s Bank of China, to carry out a two-year campaign targeting illegal cross-border securities activities.

The campaign aims to “completely eradicate the illegal cross-border operations of overseas securities, futures and fund management institutions”, it said.

Futu said in a filing that Chinese authorities have proposed a fine of about 1.85 billion yuan (US$271 million).

Futu “has already ceased opening accounts for applicants with mainland Chinese identities… has consistently engaged in active dialogue with regulatory authorities and complied with their rectification requirements”, it said in a statement.

flags exchange business IFC
Photo: Rhoda Kwan/HKFP.

Chinese investors accounted for about 13 percent of the firm’s total client base of 29.2 million users registered globally, it added.

UP Fintech, a US-listed brokerage firm who owns Tiger Brokers, said CSRC fined the company 308.1 million yuan and confiscated 103.1 million yuan of illegal income.

The firm “accepts the penalty with sincerity,” it added.

The two brokers’ CEOs were also fined.

Chinese authorities’ aim “is to gain full control of capital outflows, and to block any loopholes of these illegal activities”, Kelvin Lam, a China-focused economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, told AFP.

“What China is trying to do at the moment is to make sure no overseas branches of these companies… take funds out of Chinese investors and help them to invest overseas,” Lam said.

Hong Kong cross-border brokers have operated in a regulatory grey zone until now, he said, but authorities are seeking to fully stem the flow of Chinese investment out of the country.

“Rather than worrying the fact of capital leaving China illegally, the aim of Chinese authorities is to seek full control of the situation rather than anything else,” Lam said.

Shares in Nasdaq-listed Futu tumbled more than 25 percent in Friday’s trading, with UP Fintech dropping about 20 percent.

❌
Subscriptions