The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) slapped a record-breaking penalty of 1.85 billion yuan (approx worth $271 million) on Futu Holdings. This turns out to be one of the authority’s most aggressive enforcement actions to punish non-compliance.
Futu said the matter remains under review and that it will engage with regulators before any final decision. Data shows that the Futu holdings share price took a massive dip. It dropped by a huge 26% on Friday trading session. It traded at $90.91 at the press time. Futu’s share price is already running down by 46% over the last 6 months.
In its filing, Futu said that the CSRC issued an investigation notice and pre-notification of penalties.
Futu is alleged to have operated a brokerage business, the sale of securities investment funds, and a futures business within mainland China without the necessary approvals. It managed to breach provisions of China’s Securities Law, Securities Investment Fund Law, and Futures and Derivatives Law.
According to reports, Li Hua, CEO of Futu, has been slapped with a penalty of 1.25 million yuan (approx $183,575) by CSRC. However, penalties will only be determined through fair trials.
Another competitor, Tiger Brokers, also saw its shares crash due to the effect of sympathetic trades. It dipped by 23% in a session. Investors’ sentiment took a shock as uncertainties over regulation surfaced. It is being seen to some extent in the business’s reach into mainland China.
Futu mentioned that mainland China represents around 13% of its funded clients as of Q1 2026. The company added that its overseas operations remain unaffected.
Futu’s case is in line with an enforcement cycle that sees the CSRC tightening its measures. The watchdog coordinates with multiple agencies for investigations and penalizing cross-border illegal financial activities.
While several previous cases involved enforcement action against fraud and/or market manipulation in the domestic market. Meanwhile, the recent actions focus on structural violations. This is particularly on those firms that are involved cross-border activities in gray areas.
According to the CSRC enforcement statement, the “Illicit profits will be seized… Penalties will be imposed.”
Overall, analysts suggest that China’s latest regulatory actions have been driven by both the goal of deterring misconduct and force other channels. Even though Futu is not itself an exchange, its precedence can be seen as a signal for how China will pursue foreign financial access.
This regulation seeks to curb the participation of mainlanders in foreign trading platforms, which resonates with the very nature of most crypto exchanges. However, the penalty proposal towards Futu is still under consideration. Remedial actions are already in process.
In general, the incident reflects the changing attitude of Chinese regulators towards their approach. Some of these are restricting onboarding activities and penalizing offshore business operations for violating domestic license requirements.
For foreign fintech companies and those operating in cryptocurrencies, it is evident where the road is going—regulatory tolerance for gray-zone access is narrowing. The global crypto market dropped marginally on Friday. Its cumulative cap stood at $2.57 trillion.
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