Sidley Updates
Chinese Regulators Clampdown on Cross-Border Brokerage, Investment Fund Activities
The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) and the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), alongside other Mainland authorities, have launched a coordinated enforcement initiative targeting cross-border securities and investment fund-related activities. These developments signal heightened regulatory scrutiny of Hong Kong intermediaries servicing Mainland Chinese investors and a clear expectation of enhanced compliance standards.
The SFC recently completed a sweep of 12 licensed brokers, identifying systemic deficiencies in onboarding controls, beneficial ownership verification, and cross-border account monitoring. The sweep culminated in the SFC circular dated May 22, 2026, which was released in parallel with a notice issued by CSRC and other Mainland regulators targeting illegal cross-border securities, futures, and investment-fund-related activities. Together, these actions reflect deepening regulatory coordination and materially elevated enforcement risk for firms engaged in cross-border wealth and asset management services.
Regulators are focusing in particular on the unauthorized marketing and distribution of offshore private funds, hedge funds, and structured investment products to Mainland residents. This includes indirect subscription arrangements through Hong Kong brokerage accounts, digital promotion targeting Mainland investors, and purported “reverse solicitation” structures that may, in substance, constitute active marketing. Chinese law generally requires that cross-border fund distribution occur through approved mechanisms (e.g., Mutual Recognition of Funds or Wealth Management Connect). Activities conducted outside these frameworks may be characterized as illegal securities business operations.
Scrutiny is also directed at structural arrangements designed to obscure beneficial ownership or facilitate capital movement in circumvention of Mainland foreign exchange restrictions. This includes (i) nominee or third-party Hong Kong accounts acting on behalf of Mainland investors, (ii) omnibus or pass-through accounts aggregating funds into private investment vehicles, and (iii) complex trust or special purpose vehicle arrangements used to subscribe to offshore funds.
While the SFC circular focuses primarily on deficiencies in onboarding controls, beneficial ownership verification, and supervisory oversight, the weaknesses identified create heightened exposure where brokerage accounts are used to access offshore private capital structures and alternative investment vehicles. In such circumstances, opacity of ownership and cross-border capital flows materially increase regulatory sensitivity. The circular underscores that senior management and responsible officers are expected to exercise effective oversight over cross-border business models and intermediary relationships.
Together, these developments represent a material escalation in cross-border regulatory coordination. Investment fund-related activities — particularly private capital vehicles and alternative investments that combine structural flexibility with reduced transparency — are at the center of regulatory concern. Hong Kong intermediaries can no longer adopt a purely formalistic approach to documentation or unquestioningly accept investor representations where cross-boundary fund activity is involved. Firms should anticipate increased inspection intensity, enhanced cross-border information sharing, and potential retrospective review of fund-related activity. A proactive reassessment of cross-border risk governance is strongly advisable.
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