The chief of a branch of China’s securities regulator, was detained by the Communist Party’s anti-graft body for alleged serious violations of discipline and laws, amid disgruntled equity investors’ uproar over a slumping market.
Beijing-based financial media outlet Caixin said that Ling was apprehended on Monday morning and that his detention might be linked to an entrepreneur based in Yixing, in East China’s Jiangsu province, who is currently under investigation.
The downfall of Ling, a veteran regulatory official, reflects Beijing’s stepped-up effort to clean up the securities sector. A CCDI disciplinary inspection team is conducting a three-month probe into the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and its branches across the country, which is expected to end in July.
“A crackdown on corrupt officials will be interpreted as a move to regulate the stock market and safeguard investors’ interest,” said Ding Haifeng, a consultant at Shanghai-based financial advisory firm Integrity. “The central government still needs to bolster institutional and individual investors’ confidence in the economy and listed companies.”
Beijing has been striving to put a floor under falling stocks and shore up investor confidence since the end of last year with a series of measures, such as stamp duty cuts and suspension of approvals for new share offerings.
The reform measures include fine-tuning the initial public offering (IPO) pricing mechanism and more support for mergers and acquisitions among Star Market-listed companies.
Wu, 59, was dubbed the “brokerage butcher” after he ordered the closure of about 20 insolvent brokerages during a crisis in the securities industry at the turn of the century. He has served as the chairman of the Shanghai exchange and a deputy mayor of Shanghai, where he was a lieutenant to Li Qiang, then the city’s party boss and now China’s premier.
In late 2015, two senior CSRC officials, vice-chairman Yao Gang, and assistant chairman Zhang Yujun, were detained by the Party’s anti-corruption watchdog for violation of discipline and laws, following the country’s expensive but unsuccessful attempt to stem a massive stock market rout in summer that year.