JPMorgan, UBS dropped hedge fund embroiled in Hong Kong probe

JPMorgan, UBS dropped hedge fund embroiled in Hong Kong probe


Published Fri, Mar 13, 2026 · 09:32 AM

[HONG KONG] JPMorgan Chase and UBS cut prime brokerage ties with the investment firm that was raided by authorities during a probe into alleged insider dealing in Hong Kong well before the investigation was made public, according to sources familiar with the matter.

The two banks stopped providing prime brokerage services to Infini Capital Management months ago, the sources said, asking not to be identified discussing confidential information.

Together with Standard Chartered, they were listed as Infini’s prime brokers in a March 2025 filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

It’s unclear if JPMorgan and UBS ceased to do other business with Infini, beyond prime brokerage services, and what exactly prompted the decision. Representatives for JPMorgan, UBS and Standard Chartered declined to comment. Infini did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Hong Kong’s financial regulators and anti-graft agency on Thursday (Mar 12) said that they had arrested eight people as part of an investigation into a HK$315 million (S$51 million) insider dealing and corruption scheme involving two major brokerages and a hedge fund manager.

While they did not mention the entities involved, sources familiar with the matter said that the local offices of Citic Securities, Guotai Junan International and Infini were raided this week.

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Hong Kong’s financial industry is under increasing scrutiny, in the midst of a resurgence of deal activity. Share placements and initial public offerings (IPOs) have surged in the past year, with first-time share sales setting a four-year high in 2025. Regulators have also warned banks over the quality of IPO applications.

The investigation centres on allegations that executives at the securities firms accepted more than HK$4 million in bribes from a hedge fund manager. In exchange, they allegedly leaked non-public details regarding share placements for several Hong Kong-listed companies.

Infini has emerged as an active player in Hong Kong equity capital markets, in several cases acting as the sole buyer of share placements. Three of the firm’s executives have been unreachable by the company, according to one of the sources. The equity capital markets deals currently handled by the executives have been put on hold, the source said. Several brokers have reached out to clarify the status of the ongoing investigation.

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HSBC is the biggest bank in Hong Kong and employs more than 20,000 staff in the Asian financial hub.

The firm was founded by Tony Chin, a former banker at Morgan Stanley and HSBC Holdings, in 2015 as a proprietary trading firm, according to its website. It later opened to external capital and offers a range of trading strategies, it said. BLOOMBERG

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Liam Redmond

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