Key facts
- Chinese regulators are increasing public enforcement actions against major corporations.
- Recent actions include summoning company representatives and launching high-profile investigations.
- Experts suggest these moves signal a shift toward defending market order, not a return to the 2021 crackdown.
- Zhu Tian, an economist, stated the current actions are not a crackdown.
- China's securities regulator has launched a crackdown on illegal cross-border securities activities.
- Ant Group was fined 7.123 billion yuan for anti-money laundering and other violations.
- Evergrande was fined over 4 billion yuan for fraudulent bond issuance and disclosure violations.
- SAMR is investigating NVIDIA and Google for suspected anti-monopoly violations.
Chinese regulators are increasing public enforcement actions against major corporations, a shift from the low-key approach adopted after the 2021 tech crackdown. Recent months have seen agencies summon company representatives, launch high-profile investigations, and name offenders.
Despite investor concerns, some analysts suggest these actions signal a move toward defending market order rather than a return to the heavy-handed campaign of 2021. The regulatory environment is described as tight, with both private and state firms subject to the full force of the law.
Thursday alone saw at least four regulatory announcements. Zhu Tian, an economist and vice-president of the China Europe International Business School, stated, "It’s not a crackdown." However, he acknowledged that "fresh worries" persist due to the memory of 2021.
China's securities regulator has initiated a significant crackdown on illegal cross-border securities activities, targeting online brokerages operating outside the country's regulatory framework. In July 2023, financial regulators fined Ant Group and its affiliates 7.123 billion yuan for failing to fulfill anti-money laundering obligations and violating laws related to banking financial institution business, fund sales, and consumer protection.
In May 2024, the China Securities Regulatory Commission fined real estate giant Evergrande and its senior management over 4 billion yuan for fraudulent bond issuance and information disclosure violations. The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) has also intensified anti-monopoly enforcement, launching investigations into U.S. tech giants NVIDIA and Google for suspected violations of the Anti-Monopoly Law, though details remain undisclosed.
