The Enforcement Action
On 22 May 2026, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) announced penalties against three cross-border online brokerages for running unlicensed securities businesses that solicited mainland Chinese investors. The charge is straightforward: none of the three held a domestic securities licence, yet all actively marketed to and onboarded clients resident in mainland China.
The fines are substantial:
| Firm | Ticker | Fine | Confiscated | Total (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Futu Holdings | NASDAQ: FUTU | RMB 1.85B | — | ~$271M |
| Tiger Brokers (UP Fintech) | NASDAQ: TIGR | RMB 308M | RMB 103M | ~$60M |
| Longbridge Securities | — | Penalised | — | Undisclosed |
Tiger Brokers CEO Tianhua Wu was personally fined RMB 1.25 million (~$184,000) — a pointed signal that the CSRC intends to hold individuals, not merely corporate entities, accountable.
The combined penalties exceed $330 million, making this the largest cross-border securities enforcement action anywhere in the world in 2026 to date.
Crucially, the action does not stand alone. A joint rectification plan involving eight Chinese government departments — approved by the State Council and published on 9 May — mandates the complete elimination of all illegal cross-border broker operations within two years. This is not a one-off fine. It is the opening move in a sustained campaign.
Market Impact
Markets reacted sharply. Tiger Brokers (TIGR) fell 28% in the regular session after touching a 47% decline in pre-market trading. Futu Holdings (FUTU) dropped 35%. Both stocks had been trading near 52-week highs prior to the announcement.
The financial impact extends well beyond the fines themselves. An estimated one million mainland Chinese investors hold accounts across the three platforms. Tiger Brokers disclosed that mainland China clients represented approximately 10% of its total assets under administration at the end of 2025. Futu's exposure is proportionally larger, given its origins as a Hong Kong-focused platform with deep mainland penetration via word-of-mouth and social-media marketing.
UP Fintech issued a statement saying the company “accepts the penalty with sincerity” and will “strictly implement rectification measures.” Translation: the mainland China business will be wound down. The only question is how quickly.
Why This Matters for EU Forex Traders
The CSRC action is Chinese in jurisdiction but global in implication. Cross-border enforcement is shaping up as the defining regulatory theme of 2026 — and European traders are not exempt from its consequences.
The parallel with ESMA and MiCA
The EU is running its own version of this crackdown, albeit through a different mechanism. The Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) transition period ends on 1 July 2026. After that date, any crypto-asset service provider operating in the EU without a MiCA licence must cease soliciting EU clients. ESMA has been explicit: there will be no further extensions.
The principle is identical to what the CSRC is enforcing. If you service local clients, you need a local licence. The scale of the Chinese fines — $330 million — demonstrates what happens when regulators decide the unlicensed-operation problem has grown large enough to warrant a systemic response rather than case-by-case warnings.
These are not obscure firms
Tiger Brokers holds an ASIC licence in Australia, is regulated by the MAS in Singapore, and operates across multiple jurisdictions. Futu is listed on NASDAQ with a market capitalisation that exceeded $10 billion prior to the announcement. These are well-known, publicly traded companies — not fly-by-night operations. The enforcement action underscores a principle that applies globally: holding a licence in one jurisdiction does not grant permission to operate in another.
EU regulators are doing the same thing
CySEC, BaFin, the FCA, and the AMF all maintain public warning lists of firms operating without authorisation. CySEC alone issued over 40 warnings against unauthorised investment firms in the first quarter of 2026. The FCA's warning list now exceeds 1,200 entries. The difference between EU enforcement and the CSRC action is largely one of scale — European regulators tend to issue warnings and cease-and-desist orders rather than nine-figure fines — but the direction of travel is the same.
The lesson for retail traders
Always verify that your broker holds a valid licence in your jurisdiction. A broker regulated in Australia or Singapore is not automatically authorised to serve you in Germany, France, or Ireland. Under MiFID II, retail clients in the EEA are entitled to specific protections — negative balance protection, leverage caps, segregated client funds, and access to the Investor Compensation Fund — that only apply when the broker is properly authorised.
You can verify regulation status using our broker safety check tool or by consulting the EU investor protection guide. For a full breakdown of what to look for in a regulated broker, see our best regulated forex brokers in the EU comparison.
Timeline of Events
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 9 May 2026 | State Council publishes 8-department joint rectification plan targeting illegal cross-border securities operations |
| 22 May 2026 | CSRC announces penalties against Tiger Brokers, Futu Holdings, and Longbridge Securities |
| 22 May 2026 | TIGR falls 28% (47% at pre-market low); FUTU falls 35% |
| 23 May 2026 | UP Fintech issues statement accepting penalty and committing to rectification |
| May 2028 (deadline) | Two-year rectification period expires — all illegal cross-border operations must be eliminated |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Tiger Brokers or Futu available to EU traders?
Neither Tiger Brokers (UP Fintech) nor Futu Holdings holds an EU-entity licence under MiFID II. They are not authorised to solicit or onboard retail clients domiciled in the European Economic Area. EU traders should use brokers regulated by CySEC, BaFin, FCA, or another EEA national competent authority. See our regulated brokers comparison for verified options.
How do I check if my broker is properly regulated?
Verify the licence number directly on the regulator's public register. For CySEC, use the Investment Firms Register. For the FCA, check register.fca.org.uk. For BaFin, search the BaFin company database. The licence number on your broker's website must match the regulator's records exactly. Our broker safety check tool automates this cross-reference.
What happens to existing clients of penalised brokers?
The CSRC's rectification plan requires the affected platforms to wind down their mainland Chinese operations within two years. Existing mainland clients will need to close positions or transfer assets. Clients in other jurisdictions — Singapore, Hong Kong, New Zealand — are not directly affected by the Chinese enforcement action, though the reputational and financial hit to the parent companies may lead to operational changes globally.
Could a similar cross-border crackdown happen in the EU?
It already happens on a smaller scale. ESMA and national regulators routinely issue warnings and can impose fines or ban operations against unauthorised firms. The MiCA regulation, with its transition period ending 1 July 2026, will bring crypto-asset service providers under the same cross-border enforcement framework. The CSRC action is notable for its scale ($330M+), but the underlying principle — you cannot service local clients without a local licence — is universal across regulated markets.
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