Futu Holdings (FUTU) Stock Plunges 35% After Chinese Regulator Announces Asset Seizure

Table of Contents Shares of Futu Holdings (FUTU) experienced a dramatic decline exceeding 35% during Friday’s premarket session after Chinese regulatory authorities announced formal enforcement measures against the company for conducting unauthorized brokerage services within mainland China’s jurisdiction. Futu Holdings Limited, FUTU The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has initiated formal investigations and distributed preliminary penalty notifications to three offshore brokerage platforms: Futu Securities International (Hong Kong), Tiger Brokers (NZ), and Longbridge Securities (Hong Kong). Regulatory findings determined that all three entities facilitated securities transactions, order execution services, and investment product distribution across mainland China without securing CSRC authorization or obtaining mandatory operating licenses. Premarket trading showed Futu’s shares hovering near $84, representing approximately a 32% decrease from Thursday’s closing price. The stock’s 52-week peak reached $202.53. The regulatory body referenced breaches of three fundamental Chinese financial regulations: the Securities Law, the Securities Investment Fund Law, and the Futures and Derivatives Law. Based on these statutory violations, the CSRC plans to confiscate all unlawfully generated profits from both the mainland-facing and international operations of Futu, Tiger, and Longbridge. Additionally, regulators indicated their intention to levy substantial monetary penalties beyond simple profit forfeiture. The CSRC characterized these cross-border business operations as destabilizing forces in market integrity, declaring they “must be resolutely cracked down upon.” The three companies maintain procedural rights to respond. They may file written statements, offer legal defenses, and request formal administrative hearings prior to finalization of penalty determinations. The enforcement action extends well beyond monetary sanctions. Throughout a designated two-year transitional phase, Futu alongside the other brokerages faces complete prohibition on facilitating purchase transactions or receiving fresh capital deposits from mainland-based customers. Current mainland account holders will be restricted exclusively to liquidating existing investment positions and withdrawing their remaining balances. Upon conclusion of this transitional window, the companies must completely terminate all mainland-oriented websites, trading platforms, and supporting technological infrastructure situated within China. This represents a devastating blow to the fundamental business strategy that powered Futu’s expansion — providing investment services to mainland Chinese retail investors through its offshore platform structure. This regulatory scrutiny isn’t a sudden development. The CSRC initially declared this category of cross-border brokerage operations unlawful in late 2022, which triggered significant share price declines for Futu and Tiger Brokers and compelled them to halt new mainland customer acquisition. Friday’s announcement marks a formal escalation, transitioning from regulatory warnings to official case proceedings and asset seizure orders. UP Fintech Holding (TIGR), the parent company of Tiger Brokers, experienced approximately 37% premarket losses, trading around $3.67. Broader U.S. equity markets remained stable on Friday, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq registering minor advances, confirming the sell-off stems exclusively from this regulatory development rather than broader market factors. Futu’s Q1 2026 financial results remain unreported at this time.