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ÇൺϣÄá¶û·­Ò빫˾£¨www.joshualeeproperties.com£©2017Äê5ÔÂ28ÈÕÁ˽⵽£ºChina¡¯s securities regulator has fined three of the country¡¯s largest investment banks for facilitating bearish bets on the stock market by a unit of US-based Citadel Securities during the Chinese market rout of late 2015.

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Citic Securities, China¡¯s largest brokerage by revenue, was fined Rmb308m ($45m) and required to forfeit an additional Rmb62m in profits earned from securities lending and margin financing for a Shanghai account operated by Citadel Securities, a market-making arm separate from the fund founded by Ken Griffin , according to an exchange filing. Two executives were also fined.
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In summer 2015, as China¡¯s stock market was falling sharply after a strong run the previous year, regulators targeted ¡°malicious short sellers¡± whose trading practices they believed crossed the line into market manipulation.
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A particular focus of the crackdown was high-frequency traders, who the regulator claimed were responsible for amplifying market swings. In July, the regulator shut down 24 automated trading accounts, including one operated by Citadel Securities in Shanghai. Citadel Securities is separate from Mr Griffin¡¯s main hedge fund unit, called simply Citadel. Both are considered pioneers in algorithmic trading.
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The China Securities Regulatory Commission said it was concerned about a practice known as ¡°spoofing¡±, in which an investor submits a buy or sell order but withdraws it before a trade is completed. The technique can be used to create the false impression an asset is trading at a particular price. The regulator has not accused Citadel Securities of wrongdoing. The company said at the time it followed all local laws and regulations and did not engage in spoofing.
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For Citic, which is controlled by Citic Group ¡ª China¡¯s largest state-owned financial and industrial conglomerate ¡ª the fines add to the fallout from the 2015 market rout. In late 2015, at least 11 of the brokerage¡¯s senior executives and board members were arrested for insider trading and leaking insider information, including its president Cheng Boming.

¶ÔÓÚÓÉÖйú×î´óµÄ¹úÓнðÈں͹¤Òµ×ÛºÏÆóÒµÖÐÐż¯ÍÅ(Citic Group)¿Ø¹ÉµÄÖÐÐÅ֤ȯ£¬´Ë´Î´¦·£¼Ó´óÁË2015Äê¹ÉÊб©µøµÄ³å»÷²¨¡£2015ÄêÄ©£¬Õâ¼ÒȯÉ̵ÄÖÁÉÙ11Ãû¸ß¹ÜºÍ¶­Ê»á³ÉÔ±ÈËÒòÄÚÄ»½»Ò׺Íй¶ÄÚÄ»ÏûÏ¢±»²¶£¬°üÀ¨Æä×ܾ­Àí³Ì²©Ã÷¡£
At least four later admitted to insider trading, according to the official Xinhua news agency. Citic Securities¡¯ chairman Wang Dongming was forced to resign after failing to prevent employees¡¯ alleged wrongdoing, according to people familiar with the situation.
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Guosen Securities, the country¡¯s eighth-largest brokerage, and its futures unit were fined Rmb105m. Haitong Securities was punished for making a false disclosure when it opened a margin trading account for Citadel Securities. The disclosure allowed Haitong to lend cash and securities to Citadel even though the six-month requirement had not been met.
ÖйúµÚ°Ë´óȯÉ̹úÐÅ֤ȯ(Guosen Securities)¼°ÆäÆÚ»õ·ÖÖ§±»·£¿î1.05ÒÚÔªÈËÃñ±Ò¡£º£Í¨Ö¤È¯(Haitong Securities)ÒòΪÔÚΪCitadel Securities¿ªÁ¢Ò»¸ö±£Ö¤½ð½»Ò×ÕË»§Ê±×÷³öÐé¼ÙÅû¶¶øÊܵ½´¦·£¡£Éæ°¸Åû¶Èú£Í¨µÃÒÔÏòCitadel Securities´û³öÏÖ½ðºÍ֤ȯ£¬¼´±ãÁù¸öÔµÄÒªÇóÉÐδ´ïµ½¡£
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