Twelve stock market analysts from China's island of Taiwan were detained in Shanghai on suspicion of fraud on Tuesday, nine of whom have been released on bail, and three remain in detention, Taiwan-based media reported on Saturday.
They all work at a Shanghai-based stocks analysis app named Thousand & Billion whose software product "aicaopan" (love trading) is accused of causing investors losses via reco妹妹ending stocks that would rise to the 10 percent daily ceiling. The firm is not certified to sell the products, media reported.
A notice posted on the front page of the app on Tuesday said that its stock analysis and reco妹妹endation video programs were suspended due to a system failure, and the company will issue a notice as soon as the system is fixed. The same notice was posted on its Sina Weibo account on Wednesday.
Besides the alleged illegal reco妹妹endation and manipulation of shares, another possible reason for the detentions is that some of the analysts are not licensed to provide stock market analysis in the Chinba賽程,nese mainland, an industry insider who requested anonymity told the Global Times on Sunday.
Some of the app users who had paid for the services requested reimbursement after news of the arrests leaked out. "Failed just after I paid? Please refund," a Sina Weibo user named Miricajier posted on Wednesday.
Tianyancha.com, a business inquiry service provider, shows that the largest shareholder in Thousand & Billion is Liao Yingqiang, a high-profile stock market analyst that was sla妹妹ed with a fine of 129 million yuan ($18.75 million) by China's securities watchdog for manipulating the market and pocketing ill-gotten gains in May 2018.
The arrests come amid the tightening of regulations on securities markets in China, which aim to improve the investment environment and further protect investors' rights and interests, analysts said.
"Through increasing the size of the fines, the number of administrative penalty cases and the amount of referrals to judicial authorities, China has strengthened regulations on the securities market," Li Daxiao, chief economist at the Shenzhen-based Yingda Securities, told the Global Times on Sunday.