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China

China accused a top market regulator of ‘disciplinary violations’

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TIME
TIME
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By
TIME
TIME
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September 17, 2015, 3:32 AM ET
Shanghai Corporate Governance Conference
Zhang Yujun, president of the Shanghai Stock Exchange, speaks at the Shanghai Corporate Governance Conference in Shanghai, China, on Friday, April 16, 2010. The conference was sponsored by the Yale School of Management. Photographer: Kevin Lee/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesPhotograph by Kevin Lee — Bloomberg via Getty Images

This article is published in partnership with Time.com. The original version can be found here.

By Nash Jenkins @pnashjenkins

Anticorruption officials in China are investigating a top official at the country’s securities-regulation body in Beijing’s latest attempt to find a culprit behind the recent volatility of the Chinese stock markets, and as part of an ongoing crackdown on graft.

A statement released on Wednesday night by the Communist Party of China’s foremost internal-control agency said that Zhang Yujun, assistant chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), faces suspicions of “serious disciplinary violations” — a term that typically signifies a corruption case, Reuters reported.

The statement on the investigation into Zhang — the first senior official at the securities regulator to face government scrutiny — failed to specify the nature of the case.

After precipitously climbing to hit a seven-year high in June, China’s indices have tumbled nearly 40% in a rout that has sent an echo of panic across markets around the world. But while official confidence has mostly stabilized the situation elsewhere, Beijing’s ongoing effort to dam the sell-off of shares has proved comparatively futile. Certain exercises, such as the repeated slashing of interest rates and the imposition of bans on short selling, have seen temporary climbs that only contribute to the larger pattern of instability.

The government has injected an unprecedented $129 billion into the economy to unsuccessfully buoy it, the South China Morning Post reports. Increasingly desperate authorities have attempted to blame the market slump on individuals who have apparently failed to stymie it. Police have detained top officials at Citic Securities, the biggest brokerage on the mainland, on suspicions of insider trading.

According to The Wall StreetJournal, Zhang was vital in a recent effort to bolster the stock market by buying ailing stocks and financing a state margin lender to encourage further investment. Prior to his appointment at the CSRC, he was the president of the two major Chinese indices — in Shenzhen from 2000 until 2008 and in Shanghai from 2008 until 2012.

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