China Daily

Illegal fundraisin­g cases decline

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

The number of illegal fundraisin­g cases and the amount of money involved has dropped noticeably since 2017, as China stepped up its crackdown on such activities.

Statistics from the interagenc­y task force leading the crackdown on illegal fundraisin­g practices show that in the first three months of this year, 1,037 illegal fundraisin­g cases occurred nationwide, and the number declined by 16.5 percent year-on-year. During the same period, the amount of money involved with these cases fell 42.3 percent year-onyear to 26.9 billion yuan ($3.95 billion).

The decrease followed the same trend in 2017 when the number of illegal fundraisin­g cases during the year fell 2.8 percent year-on-year to 5,052, and the amount of money involved dropped by 28.5 percent to 179.55 billion yuan.

In spite of the achievemen­ts, illegal fundraisin­g is still a serious issue, as the number of people participat­ing in such activities keeps growing and interprovi­ncial cases continue to occur frequently, said Yang Yuzhu, director of the office of the interagenc­y task force leading crackdown on illegal fundraisin­g.

To intensify China’s battle against financial risks, Yang said the interagenc­y task force will push ahead with the launching of stricter regulation­s to prevent illegal fundraisin­g, screen illegal fundraisin­g risks nationwide, and further integrate resources to promote the establishm­ent of a risk monitoring and early warning system.

By the end of 2017, risk monitoring platforms based on big data analytics were put into service in 14 provinces.

According to the interagenc­y task force, illegal fundraisin­g cases conducted by unlicensed financial institutio­ns, including private investment and fundraisin­g companies and online platforms, accounted for more than 30 percent of the total. Recently, many people were found using WeChat, the most used messenger app in China, for illegal fundraisin­g, thus enabling the risks to spread more quickly.

Wang Ning, a senior prosecutor of the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, said: “In recent years, criminals have adopted an ‘Internet Plus’ type of investment model for illegal fundraisin­g, by setting up e-commerce platforms or using the channels of WeChat business, multilayer­ed distributi­on and mobile applicatio­ns.”

Combining online and offline models, many financial informatio­n service providers and asset management companies illegally accept deposits from the public with the promise of high returns, in the name of peer-to-peer lending, a form of borrowing and lending between individual­s and small businesses, Wang said.

From June 1 to July 20, 252 peer-to-peer lending platforms were found to be facing financial problems. Among them, 155 platforms issued statements on overdue loans or suspension of payments, according to the data from p2p001.com, a Shenzhenba­sed internet financial web portal.

Some criminals raised funds illegally in the name of financial technology innovation, using more concealing measures such as initial coin offerings or virtual currencies, said Gong Yan, deputy director of the legal affairs department at the People’s Bank of China, the central bank.

The central bank and related government department­s have jointly issued timely risk alerts on alleged illegal fundraisin­g activities at virtual currency exchanges and have taken actions to restore market order, Gong said.

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