China probes former securities regulator

Bloomberg

Liu Shiyu, the former head of China’s securities regulator, is under investigation for suspected law violations and has turned himself in, authorities said.
Liu, who remains a senior Communist Party official, is cooperating with the probe, according to a statement from China’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection.
He was chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission for three years before being replaced in January by Yi Huiman.
Several financial regulators have been brought down in the past few years as President Xi Jinping’s administration kept up a crackdown on corruption. Last year, Yao Gang, the former vice chairman of the CSRC, was sentenced to 18 years in jail for taking bribes and insider trading. Xiang Junbo, the ex-chairman of China’s insurance regulator, was found to have taken bribes of 19.4 million yuan ($2.8 million). He pleaded guilty last year.
Early in his tenure at the CSRC, Liu vowed take on the “crocodiles” and “barbarians” of the market, presaging a clampdown on market manipulation. Under his watch, the regulator stepped up enforcement, sharply increasing the amount of fines it levied.
Liu joined the Agricultural Bank of China Ltd, the nation’s third-largest lender, in 2014. He had previously been a deputy governor at the People’s Bank of China.

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