AIA, HSBC and StanChart Shares Tumble as China Tightens Cross-Border Capital Controls
Hong Kong-listed shares of AIA Group, HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered fell sharply on Friday on growing concerns that Beijing’s tighter capital controls could dent the business of global financial firms with exposure to mainland China. Soon after the market open on Friday, AIA was down more than 3 percent, while HSBC fell nearly 2 percent. Standard Chartered dropped roughly 3 percent while Bank of East Asia lost more than 2 percent. CBS News
Overnight, London-traded shares of HSBC, Standard Chartered and Prudential fell sharply, following a South China Morning Post report that residents of mainland China were facing greater constraints on opening offshore accounts at major Hong Kong banks. The declines extended a slide that has accelerated since May 22, when Beijing launched its most sweeping enforcement action against cross-border capital flows in years. CBS News
The Immediate Trigger
The South China Morning Post reported that staff members at a branch of HSBC in Lujiazui cautioned that all funds deposited into investment accounts must comply with Hong Kong’s regulatory requirements. CBS News
The South China Morning Post also reported that the Shanghai branch of the Bank of East Asia had suspended opening Hong Kong accounts that allowed overseas investments for those on the mainland. ThePrint
A spokesperson for Bank of East Asia said it was “following the latest guidelines from relevant regulators to ensure that the account-opening process is compliant and efficient.” CBC News
HSBC, StanChart, Prudential, AIA and Bank of East Asia did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment. CBS News
The May 22 Enforcement Action
The Friday selloff is the market’s delayed reckoning with a regulatory escalation that began a fortnight earlier. On May 22, China’s securities regulator, the China Securities Regulatory Commission, opened investigations and issued administrative penalty pre-notification letters against Tiger Brokers (NZ) Limited, Futu Securities International (Hong Kong) Limited, Longbridge Securities (Hong Kong) Limited, and their related onshore and offshore entities. The Boston Globe
UP Fintech Holding, Futu Holdings and Long Bridge HK were fined a combined 2.3 billion yuan ($338 million). The CSRC stated it intends to confiscate all illegal gains from the three firms. Al Jazeera
The CSRC said the firms had conducted cross-border securities business, public fund sales and futures trading inside mainland China without obtaining the necessary government approvals. Even though these companies hold legitimate, regulated financial licences in places like Hong Kong, New Zealand and the United States, those overseas credentials do not give them a free pass to operate within mainland China’s borders. ClickOrlando
The announcement triggered sharp selling. Futu closed at $89.76, down $34.09 or 27.5 percent, after trading as low as $73.02 intraday. UP Fintech closed at $4.36, down $1.49 or 25.5 percent. The Boston Globe
The SFC’s Role
Beijing did not act alone. On May 22, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission issued a circular titled “Expected controls for account opening and maintaining relationships with clients.” The circular reflects heightened regulatory scrutiny of anti-money laundering, counter-financing of terrorism and cross-border risks in Hong Kong’s securities industry. It was issued following a thematic review of account opening practices at 12 licensed securities brokers, which identified deficiencies in due diligence, and introduced enhanced measures particularly for accounts held by Chinese mainland investors. CNN
The SFC required that prospective customers’ funds originate from outside mainland China. Wikipedia
Prudential’s Hong Kong shares have been on a largely losing streak since May 22, down around 14 percent. AIA’s shares are down around 12 percent over the same period. Friday’s fresh declines extended those losses for both insurers. Wikipedia
What Banks Are Now Doing
Bloomberg reported that HSBC and its affiliate Hang Seng Bank asked clients opening investment accounts to declare that their funds originate overseas rather than in China, while Bank of China Hong Kong began questioning customers on the source of their money. KSAT
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority told locally incorporated banks to impose stricter controls when opening investment accounts for Chinese mainland clients, extending compliance requirements already imposed on licensed brokerages. Al Jazeera
Under the HKMA circular, banks were required within three months to complete reviews related to forged documentation covering accounts opened since January 2023, review dormant accounts, close problematic accounts identified in the forged-documentation review, and close accounts that fail to complete required procedures within six months. Al Jazeera
The Capital Flight Motive
Analysts are direct about what is driving the clampdown. “We believe the main policy purpose is to curb capital outflows, especially in the context of yuan depreciation pressure,” said Shujin Chen, head of China financial and property research at Jefferies. The National
Due to mainland China’s foreign exchange rules, which limit residents to transferring only $50,000 overseas per year, Hong Kong has long served as a channel for circumventing strict capital controls. Platforms like Futu and Tiger Brokers provided an efficient digital bridge for mainland investors to access US and Hong Kong equities, effectively routing capital offshore through licensed entities operating in legal grey areas outside the mainland’s borders. KSAT
The crackdown marks an escalation from late 2022 when China ordered online brokers to rectify illegal business activities and stop onboarding new onshore investors. While Chinese authorities allowed online brokers to continue servicing existing clients at that time, on May 22 they ordered all illegal existing accounts to be liquidated within two years. nus
The targeting of offshore channels follows a broader crackdown on brokerages including Futu, Tiger Brokers and Long Bridge, affecting up to HK$250 billion ($31.9 billion) of mainland-held assets in Hong Kong accounts, the South China Morning Post reported. ThePrint
One mainland investor, a bank employee in Chengdu identified by The Star as Daisy Qin, said she had opened an account with Futu in 2025 using a Hong Kong friend’s address to subscribe to IPOs. She rushed to check with other brokerages at the weekend for workarounds, only to find that account opening requirements had been further tightened. “Some people are now preparing to move to other brokers in Singapore or the United States, but I’m not going to wait for the detailed rules. I also don’t plan to open a new account,” she said. nus
Analysts Push Back on Severity
Not all market analysts agree with the severity of the market’s reaction. Citi analysts said the selloff in HSBC’s and StanChart’s shares appears to be overdone. While a meaningful part of HSBC and StanChart’s wealth revenue relates to Asia or China, a vast majority of net new money from high-net-worth individuals already sits offshore, and the analysts therefore see limited impact from the new rules. Wikipedia
The distinction matters. The new rules primarily target fresh account openings by mainland residents using onshore funds — a flow that major banks have increasingly been moving away from as regulatory risk has mounted. Clients who already hold offshore accounts with established documentation of overseas assets are less directly affected.
The Broader Stakes for Global Banks
The deeper concern for investors is strategic. HSBC, Standard Chartered and Prudential have spent years positioning themselves to capture surging demand for savings, investment and insurance products from China’s expanding middle class. The new controls signal that Beijing’s approach to that cross-border flow can change rapidly and at its discretion — a reminder that the China growth story for global financial firms comes with regulatory strings firmly attached in Beijing. CBC News
The insurance sector faces a specific vulnerability. Insurers are exposed to mainland-linked wealth planning and offshore insurance-linked demand. Tighter checks mean fewer new accounts, slower client conversion and higher compliance costs — pressure on fee income and near-term sentiment. AIA’s 12 percent decline since May 22 reflects the market’s assessment that its mainland-dependent business model carries elevated regulatory risk. Discovery Alert
Background
The May 22 enforcement action marks an escalation of a campaign that began more than three years ago. In a previous phase of this crackdown, China barred brokerages from accepting new mainland clients for offshore trading, with an end-of-October deadline set for the removal of apps and websites soliciting mainland clients. Futu is facing a fine of approximately 1.85 billion yuan, while Tiger Brokers faces a fine of 310 million yuan plus confiscation of 100 million yuan in illegal gains. The CEOs of both companies have each been fined over one million yuan personally. China’s yuan has been under depreciation pressure in 2026, and Beijing has historically tightened capital controls during periods of currency weakness to limit outflows that would amplify the yuan’s decline. nus + 2
What Happens Next
Banks are required to complete their forged-documentation reviews and close problematic accounts within the timelines set by the HKMA circular, with the final deadline for closing non-compliant dormant accounts set at six months from the circular’s issuance. All illegal existing accounts at Futu, Tiger Brokers and Longbridge are required to be liquidated within two years of the May 22 enforcement action. HSBC, Standard Chartered, AIA and Prudential have not issued forward guidance revisions as of Friday, and none has publicly quantified the impact of the new rules on revenue. The Hong Kong Association of Banks has said the tighter rules will have “no significant impact on the account opening process,” a characterisation the market has so far declined to accept. Whether global financials with mainland exposure stabilise or fall further depends on whether Beijing signals the controls are temporary or signals further tightening ahead. Al Jazeeranus



