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‘Deeply sorry’: China hedge fund apologises after trading ban for ‘market disruption’ in first punishment since Beijing’s vow to stem stock rout

  • Lingjun Investment was banned from trading for three days after its transactions on Monday caused rapid declines in benchmark indices
  • The penalty is the first known case since China installed Wu Qing as head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission to help restore market confidence

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An electronic ticker displays stock figures in Pudong’s Lujiazui Financial District in Shanghai on February 19, 2024. Photo: Bloomberg
Jiaxing Li
An award-winning Chinese quant hedge fund has apologised to market authorities and investors, after being punished with a trading ban for dumping stocks on local bourses, the first known case since the nation’s market regulator took aim at trading activities that have perpetuated a three-year market out.

Ningbo Lingjun Investment Management, which has about 60 billion yuan (US$8.3 billion) of assets, said it was “deeply sorry” for the negative impact caused by its trading when the domestic financial markets reopened on Monday after a week-long Lunar New Year holiday, according to a statement on Wednesday.

“As a professional quantitative investment firm, Lingjun Investment has a long-term optimistic view and consistently maintains a bullish stance on the Chinese stock market,” it said on its website. “We will improve trading models, rigorously control trading progress and constraints, and ensure a smooth and balanced trading process.”

The Bund Bull in Shanghai in February 2024. Photo: Bloomberg
The Bund Bull in Shanghai in February 2024. Photo: Bloomberg

The apology came after the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges on Tuesday banned the hedge fund from trading for three days, blaming it for “market disruption.” Beijing this month installed Wu Qing as head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, which has vowed to curb securities lending and short-selling among steps to put a floor under the market sell-off.

The CSI 300 Index, which tracks the biggest stocks listed on both exchanges, slipped as much as 0.9 per cent in the opening hour on Monday, while before closing with a 1.2 per cent gain to catch-up with hefty gains elsewhere during the holiday. The index has climbed less than 1 per cent this year, after a cumulative 41 per cent slide from early 2021.

Cai Meijie, chairwoman and founder of Ningbo Lingjun Investment Management. Photo: Handout
Cai Meijie, chairwoman and founder of Ningbo Lingjun Investment Management. Photo: Handout

The Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges froze all Lingjun’s trading accounts after it “disrupted normal market trading” with computer-generated sell orders on Monday, the bourses said. Those accounts sold 2.6 billion yuan of stocks within the opening minute, contributing to a “sharp and rapid decline” in benchmark indices.

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“We will resolutely implement regulatory requirements and ensure strict and comprehensive supervision,” the exchanges said in separate statements. “We will strengthen supervision and maintain a ‘zero tolerance’ approach towards illegal activities that disrupt normal trading order.”

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Bridge in China swamped with tourists during Lunar New Year holiday

Bridge in China swamped with tourists during Lunar New Year holiday

In mitigation, Lingjun said it made a “significant volume of transactions” within the first minute of trading on Monday, and ended the day with a net purchase of 187 million yuan.

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