Futu Holdings (FUTU) is under immense pressure on Friday following a massive, coordinated regulatory enforcement action by Chinese authorities.
Investors bailed on FUTU primarily because the swift and severe clampdown struck directly at the offshore brokerage’s core cross-border business model.
The market seems to be repricing the digital brokerage platform after Beijing formalized long-standing regulatory warnings into devastating financial penalties and structural mandates.
Including today’s crash, FUTU stock is down more than 50% versus its year-to-date high.
Futu stock crashes on formal CSRC case filing and penalties
The initial blow came directly from China’s top financial watchdog.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) – alongside its Shenzhen bureau – officially issued a formal Notice of Investigation and an Administrative Penalty Pre-Notification Letter to Futu.
The regulator determined that multiple FUTU entities operating across mainland China and Hong Kong conducted securities trading, public fund sales, and futures brokerage businesses without the requisite domestic licenses.
Under explicit provisions outlined in China’s Securities Law, Securities Investment Fund Law, and the Futures and Derivatives Law, the CSRC intends to confiscate all illegal gains accumulated by the firm’s domestic and foreign-related entities.
FUTU shares cratered on May 22 because, beyond asset seizure, financial penalties are historically severe: the proposed corporate fine stands at RMB 1.85 billion, translating to roughly $271 million.
To ensure personal accountability, the CSRC has also proposed a direct personal fine of RMB 1.25 million ($183,575) on Mr. Leaf Li (Li Hua), Futu’s founder and Chief Executive Officer.
Coordinated nine-agency crackdown is hurting FUTU shares
This aggressive regulatory maneuver marks a dramatic escalation from previous localized warnings, signaling a unified and systemic offensive from the highest echelons of Chinese governance.
FUTU stock is in the “red” because instead of a singular, isolated action by the financial watchdog, this enforcement operates under a sweeping, state-approved initiative.
Approved directly by the State Council, the CSRC acted in lockstep with eight other governmental departments – including the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and Ministry of Public Security – to unleash a comprehensive plan aimed at eradicating unauthorized cross-border financial operations.
The multi-agency coalition noted that unlicensed offshore brokerages have disrupted the country’s domestic market order by leveraging mainland affiliates to illegally solicit retail capital into overseas equities.
By coordinating financial regulators with public security and data authorities, China is closing the operational loopholes that previously allowed these platforms to navigate gray areas of domestic law, leaving virtually no room for corporate legal maneuvers or structural non-compliance.
A mandatory two-year exit order
The most structurally damaging component of today’s announcement is the implementation of a rigid, mandatory two-year rectification window designed to permanently dismantle the unauthorized cross-border trading network.
While China had previously barred FUTU from soliciting new mainland Chinese accounts in late 2022, this new framework dictates the terminal wind-down of all existing retail infrastructure within the mainland.
Under the strict transition rules, existing mainland investors are entirely blocked from executing any fresh buy-side orders or injecting new capital into their accounts.
Instead, clients are restricted exclusively to executing sell orders, liquidating their portfolios, and withdrawing their remaining assets.
The real operational “death blow” occurs at the expiration of this two-year window: Futu Holdings and affected competitors are legally required to completely shut down and dismantle all mainland-targeted websites, trading applications like Futubull, and the domestic backend supporting servers that service mainland users.
Though FUTU notes that mainland clients accounted for roughly 13% of its total funded accounts by the close of the first quarter, the permanent removal of this capital pipeline permanently alters the firm’s long-term growth trajectory.
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