China Warns Unlicensed Brokers Accepting Mainland Clients
Online Chinese brokerages that are licensed outside the country are facing the latest regulatory uncertainty as a central bank official said that all such platforms are operating illegally.
“Cross-border online brokerages are driving in China without a driver’s license. They’re conducting illegal financial activities,” said Sun Tianqi, Head of the Financial Stability Department of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), while speaking at the Bund Summit in Shanghai.
Several Chinese trading platforms are operating with overseas licenses and providing services to Chinese citizens. These brokers mostly provide trading services with Hong Kong or US-listed stocks to domestic Chinese investors.
Moreover, many foreign trading platforms take clients from mainland China without holding any local license.
“Financial licenses have national boundaries,” Sun added. “Overseas institutions with only overseas licenses conducting business in mainland China are [an] illegal financial activity.”
No Broker Was Named
Though the speech does not name any such brokerages, its wrath can be seen on the stock prices of big brokerages listed on overseas exchanges.
Both Futu and UP Fintech, which are listed on US Nasdaq and have major stakes on the Chinese domestic markets, are witnessing massive dumping of their shares, leading to around a 20 percent price drop after US markets opened on Thursday. Both of these brokers were already facing regulatory risks due to China’s forthcoming personal data privacy law.
Sun even pointed out that one such broker registered in the Cayman Islands has 80 percent trading clients from mainland China, while another Hong Kong-based brokerage has 55 percent clients from China.
Futu, which is regulated in the United States, Hong Kong and Singapore, even mentioned in its 2020 annual report that a large number of its clients are from mainland China. After the panic in the industry, Futu Chairman and CEO Hua Li even issued a statement saying that the company has sufficient capital and will not face any ‘bankruptcy issues’.
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