UP Fintech, the parent company of Tiger Brokers, saw its stock crater nearly 35% in pre-market trading on May 22, 2026, after China’s top securities regulator formally announced penalties against its Tiger Brokers subsidiary.
UP Fintech Holding Ltd. Sponsored ADR Class A, TIGR
The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) named Tiger Brokers, alongside Futu Holdings and Longbridge Securities, for operating cross-border brokerage services on the Chinese mainland without a license.
The regulator said it intends to confiscate all “illegal gains” from both domestic and overseas entities of the named firms, and will impose severe financial penalties on top of that.
This is not a new problem — the CSRC first declared the cross-border brokerage business “illegal” in late 2022, forcing both Futu and Tiger Brokers to stop accepting new mainland clients. But Thursday’s action marks a clear escalation.
Under the new rules, the named brokers are banned from offering any buy-side services or accepting new fund inflows from mainland clients. Existing clients may only sell their current holdings and withdraw their money.
The two-year transition period gives a firm end date to what was once a thriving pipeline connecting millions of Chinese retail investors to global markets.
When that window closes, these firms must completely shut down their mainland websites, trading apps, and all supporting servers inside China. There’s no ambiguity left.
Futu Holdings (FUTU), Up Fintech’s closest peer, was hit by the same regulatory order and also saw its stock fall sharply in pre-market. The broader U.S. equity market was largely flat at the time, with the S&P 500, Dow Jones, and Nasdaq all near unchanged — making clear this is a company-specific shock, not a broad market move.
Options traders had been positioning for bad news ahead of the announcement. A total of 70,304 put contracts traded in TIGR at roughly 8x the expected level, with the most active contracts being the May 22 and May 29 weekly $5 puts.
UP Fintech currently trades at a P/E ratio of 6.38x, with a forward P/E of 5.98. GuruFocus scores the company a GF Score of 75/100, with strong profitability (8/10) and growth (9/10) ratings, but a financial strength score of just 6/10.
The company’s Altman Z-score stands at 0.43, a level that historically signals financial distress risk.
There has been no insider buying or selling reported in the last 12 months.
The CSRC action leaves the long-term revenue outlook for Tiger Brokers’ core business with significant uncertainty, as the mainland China client base has been its primary growth driver.
The post UP Fintech (TIGR) Stock Drops 35% After China Regulator Moves to Shut Down Core Business appeared first on CoinCentral.


