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China will enhance regulation of programme trading: CSRC chairman

China’s top securities regulator says new measures needed to ‘prevent someone from abusing the technology’

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Wu Qing, chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, speaks at a press conference on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress in Beijing in March. Photo: Reuters

Enoch YiuPublished: 7:51pm, 6 Jun 2026

Chinese authorities plan to enhance regulation of programme trading to clamp down on market misconduct, the head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said on Saturday.

Hedge funds and institutional investors are increasingly managing their portfolios in China via programme trading, which involves using algorithms to automatically execute a large volume of securities orders based on predetermined conditions.

“Programme trading has become an important trading method in our country and also in other global markets. Besides private equity funds, mutual funds and other institutional investors, some individual investors also conduct a certain amount of programme trading,” said Wu Qing, chairman of the CSRC, at the fourth annual meeting of the Asset Management Association of China in Beijing.

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“Facing such a trend, we have to explore in-depth how to enhance regulation of programme trading to create a fair and well-regulated market,” he said. “We have to prevent someone from abusing the technology to conduct any malpractice, as we are determined to crack down on market manipulation and other behaviour that might disrupt market order.”

Wu praised the development of China’s fund industry over the past few decades. The industry is now the second-largest in the world, with 85 trillion yuan (US$12.56 trillion) of assets under management.

In its development over the past 30 years, the fund industry has undergone an unusual and extraordinary journey

Wu Qing, China Securities Regulatory Commission

But the CSRC head said there was still room for improvement, noting that stock funds accounted for only about 30 per cent of the country’s mutual funds, well below the level seen in other mature financial markets.

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