Recently, Chinese actress Chu Yinan was criminally detained for insider trading, drawing widespread attention. According to a September 8 report by Beijing Radio and Television’s legal program, Chu’s boyfriend, Zheng Yuewen, chairman of KRT Corporation, leaked confidential information about a major asset restructuring involving Tongfang Co. Chu used this insider information to trade stocks, deploying 43 million yuan originally intended for buying property.
Between March 10 and 30, 2017, Chu’s trust account purchased around 1.8 million shares of Tongfang, with additional shares bought through her personal account. However, the restructuring was terminated in September, causing a sharp stock price decline and resulting in a loss of about 5.12 million yuan in the trust account. Although Chu’s personal account saw a small profit, the combined outcome was a net loss, with no illegal gains.
Chu was fined 400,000 yuan by the Beijing Securities Regulatory Bureau in early 2022 for her insider trading activities. Despite the losses, the case was transferred to the police for criminal prosecution. She was sentenced to over two years in prison in a first-instance trial, with an appeal currently underway.
Legal experts clarify that insider trading crimes are based on the misuse of confidential information itself, not the profit or loss outcome. Transactions exceeding 500,000 yuan can be deemed serious enough for criminal charges regardless of financial gain.
This case highlights the strict regulatory stance on insider trading in China and serves as a warning about the legal risks involved in the intersection of entertainment and finance.