# CSRC
Latest news and articles about CSRC
Total: 93 articles found

The Final Curtain: Futu and Tiger Brokers Shut Down Buy Orders for Mainland Chinese Investors
Futu Holdings and Tiger Brokers will suspend all buy orders and capital inflows for mainland Chinese investors starting June 12, 2026. This move completes a regulatory crackdown on unlicensed cross-border brokerages, allowing only the liquidation of existing positions.

The Slow Implosion of a Green Giant: China’s Former Energy Star Faces Regulatory Ruin
Shenwu Energy Saving (*ST Jieneng) is under investigation by the CSRC for alleged disclosure violations after its stock price collapsed 90% from its historical peak. The company faces a dire future following four years of losses and a stalled attempt to remove its delisting risk warning.

Capital Flight in the Crosshairs: The Mad Scramble for Hong Kong’s Financial Gates
Mainland investors are flooding into Hong Kong to open bank and brokerage accounts as Chinese and Hong Kong regulators move to synchronize their crackdown on cross-border capital flows. While smaller institutions offer a temporary backdoor, new mandatory declarations regarding the 'source of funds' signal a more sophisticated and legally perilous environment for offshore asset allocation.

Closing the Grey Gate: China’s $60 Billion Regulatory Squeeze on Overseas Retail Trading
China has launched a sweeping crackdown on over five million mainland retail investors trading in Hong Kong and U.S. markets, ending a decade of unregulated 'grey' capital flow. By fining major fintech brokers and tightening Hong Kong banking requirements, regulators are forcing offshore wealth management into strictly controlled, compliant channels.

Welding the Backdoor: China’s Crackdown on Offshore Trading Ends an Era for Retail Investors
China has effectively ended retail access to global stock markets by imposing massive fines on cross-border brokers and mandating a two-year exit for mainland users. This move is a strategic attempt to curb capital flight and redirect investment into domestic markets, leaving only high-threshold, state-sanctioned channels available for the wealthy.

The Twilight of the Gray Zone: Beijing Forced Purge of Offshore Brokerages
Major offshore brokerages including Futu and Tiger Brokers are purging inactive and fraudulent accounts following a massive 2.2 billion yuan regulatory fine and a new two-year crackdown by Chinese authorities. The move signals the end of the 'gray market' for mainland investors accessing international stocks through offshore platforms.

Liquidity Hangover: The Delisting of *ST Yan Shi Signals the End of China’s ‘Shell Speculation’ Era
*ST Yan Shi's exit from the Shanghai Stock Exchange marks a historic turning point as the first baijiu-related stock to be delisted in A-share history. Triggered by a massive fraud scandal at its parent entity and failing to meet new, stringent market cap and revenue requirements, the company’s fall underscores the 'zero tolerance' approach of China's latest capital market reforms.

A Three-Year ‘Patch’ for Hangzhou High-Tech: The Fragility of Disclosure in China’s Mid-Cap Market
Hangzhou High-Tech has issued massive corrections to three years of financial reports, revealing significant errors in production data and previously hidden related-party transactions. The disclosure crisis coincides with deepening financial losses and a reliance on a 200-million-RMB bailout from its controlling shareholder.

Closing the Offshore Loophole: Beijing Dismantles the Gray Market for Cross-Border Brokerage
China has initiated a two-year campaign to eliminate unauthorized cross-border securities trading, levying over 2.2 billion RMB in fines on major platforms like Futu and Tiger Brokers. The policy aims to force retail capital into state-regulated channels while tightening control over capital outflows and financial data.

The End of Arbitrage: China’s Cross-Border Brokers Face a $300 Million Day of Reckoning
Chinese regulators have imposed over 2.1 billion RMB in fines on Futu, Tiger Brokers, and Longbridge for illegal mainland operations, effectively ending the cross-border brokerage boom. The firms now face a two-year window to phase out mainland business and must pivot entirely to international markets to ensure survival.

Beijing’s Regulatory Hammer: The 30% Collapse of Futu and Tiger Brokers
Futu Holdings and Tiger Brokers saw their shares tumble by more than 30% at the US market open following penalties from the CSRC. The regulatory crackdown targets illegal cross-border trading, emphasizing Beijing's commitment to capital controls and financial oversight.

Closing the Backdoor: Beijing Sets a Two-Year Countdown for Offshore Brokerages
China has finalized a two-year phase-out plan for offshore brokerage services like Futu and Tiger Brokers, restricting mainland investors to selling only. The plan involves eight government departments and aims to transition retail investors into state-approved channels while purging the internet of trading tutorials and marketing for offshore platforms.