CSRC fines Zhejiang Ruifengda and affiliates over 41 million yuan; signals stronger enforcement for private asset managers
China’s securities regulator has imposed its largest-ever penalty on privately offered asset management firms, reflecting Beijing’s ongoing push to tighten oversight of the private fund sector and safeguard investor interests.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said on Friday that Zhejiang Ruifengda Asset Management Co Ltd, several affiliated private funds, and their ultimate controller Sun Wei were fined and had illegal gains confiscated, totaling more than 41 million yuan ($5.9 million). Investigations found serious violations including false or misleading disclosures and other breaches of laws governing privately offered funds. Sun has been barred for life from participating in China’s securities market.
The penalties exceed previous records, underscoring the regulator’s zero-tolerance stance. The CSRC also referred case details to police authorities and revoked registrations of the private fund managers involved.
“This sends a clear signal that the private fund sector is no longer a regulatory blind spot,” said sources familiar with the matter. “Any serious misconduct will face comprehensive enforcement.”
Intensified Oversight
The record fine comes amid a broader crackdown on misconduct in the private fund industry. According to CSRC data for 2025:
Over 600 entities and individuals underwent administrative inspections
Around 30 investigations were launched
Approximately 40 cases were referred to police
Regulators have emphasized that violations such as illegal fundraising, misappropriation, embezzlement, and self-dealing will not be tolerated.
Market observers say this enforcement surge reflects China’s effort to professionalize and normalize the private fund sector, aligning it more closely with global market standards.
Why It Matters for Investors
For international investors, the ruling highlights a more predictable and disciplined regulatory environment in China’s private fund sector. While heightened enforcement may introduce short-term volatility for some private fund operators, the move reduces systemic risk and reinforces market credibility, signaling that China is serious about investor protection and transparency in asset management.