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Big China Brokerage Banned From Investing Its Own Money in IPOs

Big China Brokerage Banned From Investing Its Own Money in IPOs

(Bloomberg) -- One of China’s biggest brokerages is barred from investing its own money in initial public offerings, after the firm’s staff failed to meet a deadline to place orders on a new trading venue for technology stocks.

Proprietary accounts of China Galaxy Securities Co. are suspended from this month through January 2020, the Securities Association of China said in a statement Friday. The firm will demote its head of trading and has warned other employees linked to the breach of rules on the IPO of Suzhou TZTEK Technology Co., Galaxy Securities said in an email Monday.

The punishment, meted out by a self-regulated industry body under the China Securities Regulatory Commission, shows how serious authorities are on enforcing compliance as they near the July 22 start of the so-called tech board. The project, announced by President Xi Jinping, is key to policy makers’ goal of deepening capital markets after decades of relying on state-run banks to fund the economy, and could help develop the technology sector that’s being buffeted by the trade war with the U.S.

“Regulators want to make sure every link of the new tech board is rigorously implemented and foolproof,” said Lin Jin, an analyst at Shenwan Hongyuan Securities Co. “IPO subscription rules on the new board are more rigid than on the main board, so one breach will get a broker added to the blacklist.”

Galaxy Securities’s staff bid for shares of Suzhou TZTEK on June 27, and the bid was accepted, but traders didn’t place final orders by the designated time on the July 2 subscription date for institutional investors, the firm said. “Party Committee of Galaxy Securities highly values the new tech board, the company has reiterated that investment banking, brokerage, proprietary investment, and IT departments should be fully prepared for the board,” it added.

The bid was for 6.4 million shares, according to a Suzhou TZTEK filing, worth about 163 million yuan ($24 million) based on the final pricing of 25.5 yuan. Brokerages are typically allotted only a portion of their total bid. Galaxy Securities is ranked No. 10 by market capitalization among Chinese peers.

“Money-wise, the impact of the ban is limited, it’s more a damage on their reputation,” said Wang Jiyue, general manager at Shanghai Pegasus Consulting Co. “A minor mistake like this should not happen and it speaks about the internal risk controls of Galaxy Securities.”

Separately, the National Interbank Funding Center on Monday said China will suspend licenses of traders at Ping An Bank Co. and China Merchants Bank Co. for one year due to their error in repo trading July 2. The lenders conducted a transaction that resulted in an abnormal overnight pledged repo rate of 0.09%, the NIFC said.

Ping An Bank has suspended the trader, transitioned responsibilities, and evaluated its practices to prevent such incidents, the lender said in an email. China Merchants Bank didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment.

Shares of Galaxy Securities were down 3.5% as of 2:29 p.m. in Shanghai on Monday, steeper than the 2.4% drop in the benchmark index. Ping An Bank fell 1.9% and China Merchants Bank declined 2.3%.

--With assistance from Jun Luo.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Evelyn Yu in Shanghai at yyu263@bloomberg.net;Amy Li in Shanghai at yli677@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sam Mamudi at smamudi@bloomberg.net, Jeanette Rodrigues, Charlie Zhu

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg