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The China draft financial law published by the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) on March 23, 2026 represents the most ambitious attempt in over a decade to consolidate and modernise the country’s financial regulatory architecture. Spanning 11 chapters and 95 articles, the draft financial law 2026 introduces sweeping provisions, from mandatory prior approval and registration for specified financial activities under Article 31 to a unified bank resolution framework that could reshape creditor hierarchies. With the public consultation period running through March and April 2026, banks, nonbank lenders and fintech platforms operating in or lending into China face a narrow window to assess product licensing gaps, revise cross-border enforcement clauses and engage regulators before the legislative pipeline advances further.
This guide provides the practical compliance roadmap those institutions need right now.
Before diving into the detail, every compliance officer, in-house counsel and credit risk manager should understand the five key takeaways from the China draft financial law and the immediate actions they demand.
Key takeaways:
Immediate action list (0–30 days):
The China draft financial law is a comprehensive piece of primary legislation designed to replace or sit above the patchwork of sector-specific laws (the Commercial Banking Law, Securities Law, Insurance Law and others) that currently govern financial services in the PRC. Published by the MOJ on March 23, 2026, it was released for public consultation with the stated aim of strengthening macro-prudential oversight, unifying regulatory standards and addressing systemic risk.
The draft is structured across 11 chapters covering general provisions, financial institution governance, financial product and service management, consumer protection, risk prevention and resolution, supervisory powers, legal liability and supplementary provisions. The 95 articles collectively address the full lifecycle of financial activity, from market entry and product approval through to resolution and exit.
Under the existing framework, licensing and supervision are distributed across multiple regulators with overlapping mandates and jurisdictional gaps. The draft financial law 2026 addresses this by consolidating supervisory authority and introducing several mechanisms that do not exist under current legislation:
Legislative timeline:
| Date | Event | Practical Impact for Lenders and Fintechs |
|---|---|---|
| March 23, 2026 | MOJ publishes Draft Financial Law (11 chapters, 95 articles) | Triggers public consultation; immediate review of Article 31 and bank resolution provisions required |
| March–April 2026 | Public consultation period (published commentary and firm alerts) | Market commentary period; legal risk assessments necessary for product launch decisions |
| Q3 2026 (projected) | Possible revision and integration into formal legislative pipeline | Begin compliance steps and filings; prepare contract amendments for cross-border facilities |
Article 31 of the China draft financial law is the provision generating the most immediate compliance urgency. It establishes that “no entity or individual may engage in financial activities” without first obtaining approval or completing registration with the competent financial regulatory authority. The practical effect is to create a universal gating mechanism for market participation in financial services.
The scope of Article 31 is deliberately broad. It covers activities including but not limited to deposit-taking, lending, payment services, insurance underwriting, securities dealing, fund management and trust operations. Critically, it does not limit its application to traditionally licensed institutions. Any entity, including technology companies, platform operators and cross-border service providers, that engages in a listed financial activity within PRC territory is captured.
For existing licence-holders, the immediate question is whether current licences satisfy the Article 31 requirement or whether a supplementary approval or registration is needed. For entities operating in regulatory grey areas, particularly fintech platforms offering lending, payment or wealth-management products through technology-driven structures, Article 31 could require them to obtain formal approval for the first time.
The compliance implications are significant. Products launched without the requisite approval or registration could be deemed to have been offered in violation of the law, potentially affecting the enforceability of underlying contracts. Industry observers expect that regulators will issue implementing rules clarifying the transitional arrangements, but until those rules are published, the safest approach is to treat Article 31 as immediately applicable to any new product launch.
For licensed commercial banks, Article 31 largely reinforces existing obligations. Most core banking activities, deposit-taking, corporate and retail lending, trade finance, are already conducted under PBOC and CBIRC licences. The key risk for banks lies in ancillary products: wealth management subsidiaries, fund distribution arrangements and cross-border structured products may each require separate confirmation of approval status under the new regime.
For fintech platforms, the impact is more disruptive. Many platforms have historically structured their operations to avoid triggering traditional licensing requirements, for example, by acting as technology intermediaries rather than direct lenders. Article 31 of the financial law appears to look through these structures and capture the underlying financial activity, regardless of the entity’s self-characterisation. Early indications suggest that platforms offering online micro-lending, payment aggregation or automated investment advice will need to secure formal approval or registration.
The draft distinguishes between approval and registration, though the precise boundary between the two is not yet fully defined. Based on the text and commentary from legal practitioners, the likely practical effect will be as follows:
The distinction matters for timeline planning: approval processes in China’s financial regulatory system typically take three to six months, whereas registration may be completed in 30 to 60 days. Institutions should categorise their product lines accordingly and build realistic timelines into their compliance plans.
Beyond Article 31, the China draft financial law reinforces and expands the broader licensing architecture for financial products. Current licensing requirements for financial products in China are spread across multiple regulator-specific regimes: banking licences (PBOC/CBIRC), payment licences (PBOC), securities and fund management licences (CSRC), insurance licences (CBIRC) and trust licences (CBIRC). The draft does not eliminate these individual regimes but adds an overarching approval layer that requires coordination across regulators.
For foreign institutions, a critical question is whether the draft affects the ability to offer new types of financial services in China’s Free Trade Zones (FTZs). FTZs, including the Shanghai, Guangdong, Tianjin and Fujian zones, have historically served as testing grounds for liberalised market access, allowing foreign financial institutions to pilot products not yet permitted nationwide. The draft does not remove FTZ frameworks, but it does introduce a central approval requirement that could restrict the scope of FTZ experimentation. Industry observers expect that implementing rules will preserve some degree of FTZ flexibility, but the regulatory approval for lenders operating in these zones will need to be confirmed on a case-by-case basis.
Fintech compliance in China is particularly affected. Regulatory sandboxes, piloted by the PBOC in cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, have allowed fintech companies to test innovative products under supervisory observation. The draft’s Article 31 requirements appear to apply even within sandbox environments, meaning that sandbox participation alone may not satisfy the new approval or registration obligations.
| Step | Action Required | Documents and Stakeholders |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Product classification, determine whether each product requires approval or registration under Article 31 | Product term sheets; internal legal opinions; regulatory mapping matrix |
| 2 | Gap analysis, compare existing licences against draft requirements | Current licence inventory; NFRA/PBOC/CSRC correspondence files |
| 3 | Pre-filing engagement, initiate informal dialogue with relevant regulator | Regulatory affairs team; external China-qualified counsel |
| 4 | Application preparation, compile approval or registration filings | Corporate constitutional documents; financial statements; compliance manuals; AML/KYC policies |
| 5 | Submission and follow-up, file with competent authority and track review progress | Regulatory affairs team; legal counsel; board-level sponsor for escalation |
One of the most structurally significant provisions of the China draft financial law is the introduction of a unified bank resolution framework. Currently, bank resolution in China operates under a combination of the Commercial Banking Law, the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law and ad hoc regulatory intervention. The draft consolidates these into a single statutory regime with explicit resolution tools and powers.
The resolution framework referenced in the draft grants the NFRA authority to deploy several mechanisms that are standard in international resolution regimes but have not previously been codified in PRC law. These include bail-in powers (the ability to write down or convert unsecured liabilities to absorb losses), bridge-bank mechanisms (transferring critical functions to a temporary institution), and asset separation tools (isolating impaired assets into a bad-bank vehicle).
For lenders with credit exposure to PRC banks, whether through interbank lending, syndicated facilities, bond holdings or derivative counterparty relationships, the implications are immediate. The introduction of statutory bail-in powers means that unsecured claims against a bank in resolution could be written down or converted to equity without the creditor’s consent. This fundamentally changes the risk calculus for pricing, provisioning and collateral management.
The bank resolution provisions in China under the draft also have implications for intercreditor arrangements. Syndicated loan agreements, intercreditor deeds and collateral-sharing arrangements that assume a pari passu distribution in insolvency may need to be revised to account for the possibility that a resolution authority could impose differential treatment on creditor classes.
Lenders should take the following steps to mitigate the impact of the new resolution framework:
A central concern for foreign lenders is whether a loan agreement governed by PRC law, or enforceable against PRC assets, remains fully binding under the draft. The short answer is yes: the China draft financial law does not invalidate existing loan agreements. However, it introduces new caveats that could affect enforceability in specific circumstances.
If a lending product falls within the scope of Article 31 and the lender has not obtained the requisite approval or registration, there is a risk that a PRC court could treat the underlying transaction as having been conducted in violation of mandatory law. Under PRC contract law principles, contracts that violate mandatory provisions of law may be deemed void or unenforceable. This does not mean that all loan agreements are at risk, but it does mean that lenders offering products that may be captured by Article 31 should urgently confirm their approval status.
For cross-border loan enforcement in China, the draft does not fundamentally change the existing enforcement infrastructure, but it adds new variables. Foreign judgments remain difficult to enforce in PRC courts absent a bilateral treaty or reciprocal arrangement. Arbitral awards, particularly those rendered under the New York Convention, continue to be the most reliable enforcement route, though PRC courts retain discretion to refuse recognition on public-policy grounds.
The draft’s resolution provisions add a further layer of risk: if the borrower is a PRC bank or financial institution subject to resolution, the NFRA’s resolution powers could override contractual enforcement rights, including the right to accelerate, set off or enforce security. Lenders should factor this into their cross-border enforcement strategies and loan documentation.
The following clauses should be reviewed, added or updated in all cross-border loan documentation with PRC nexus:
Where a PRC borrower defaults, the recommended enforcement sequence for foreign lenders is: (1) serve notice of default and acceleration under the facility agreement; (2) apply for pre-arbitral or pre-litigation asset preservation in the competent PRC court to freeze the borrower’s assets; (3) commence arbitration at the agreed seat; (4) obtain a final arbitral award; and (5) apply to the relevant PRC intermediate people’s court for recognition and enforcement of the award under the New York Convention. Each step requires coordination with PRC-qualified counsel and must be executed within the limitation periods prescribed by PRC law.
The following phased checklist maps the priority actions that institutions should take in response to the China draft financial law. Assign ownership and track completion against the timelines below.
| Phase | Action | Owner | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immediate (0–30 days) | Product audit against Article 31, identify all products requiring approval or registration | Legal / Compliance | Complete by Day 14 |
| Immediate (0–30 days) | Pause new product launches pending Article 31 classification | Product / Business heads | Effective immediately |
| Immediate (0–30 days) | Review cross-border loan documentation for enforcement clauses | Legal / External counsel | Complete by Day 30 |
| Short term (30–90 days) | Licensing gap analysis, compare existing licences to draft requirements | Regulatory affairs | Complete by Day 60 |
| Short term (30–90 days) | Prepare and submit public consultation response (if within window) | Government affairs / Legal | Before consultation closes |
| Short term (30–90 days) | Engage pre-filing dialogue with NFRA, PBOC or CSRC | Regulatory affairs / External counsel | Initiate by Day 45 |
| Medium term (90–180 days) | Contract amendment programme, update facility agreements, intercreditor deeds and collateral docs | Legal / Transaction management | Complete by Day 120 |
| Medium term (90–180 days) | Update AML/KYC processes to align with any new requirements | Compliance / Operations | Complete by Day 150 |
| Medium term (90–180 days) | Board-level resolution planning, review capital, TLAC and resolution strategies for PRC exposures | Risk / Treasury / Board | Board paper by Day 180 |
Proactive regulatory engagement is essential. The China draft financial law signals a shift toward consolidated supervision, meaning that the NFRA is the likely first point of contact for most banking and nonbank financial activities. However, PBOC retains authority over monetary policy and payment systems, and CSRC continues to supervise securities and fund management activities. Institutions should identify the correct regulator for each product line and initiate informal pre-filing discussions before submitting formal applications.
Public consultation submissions should be detailed, technically grounded and submitted through the channels specified in the MOJ release. The likely practical effect of the draft’s disclosure obligations will be to require financial institutions to notify regulators of material changes to products, ownership structures and risk profiles on an ongoing basis, not merely at the point of initial licensing. Institutions should begin building internal processes and governance frameworks to support continuous regulatory reporting, anticipating that implementing rules will impose specific filing timelines and formats.
The China draft financial law is not yet enacted, but its provisions, particularly Article 31 and the bank resolution framework, are already reshaping the compliance landscape for banks, lenders and fintechs. Three actions should be prioritised above all others: first, complete an Article 31 product audit to identify approval and registration requirements; second, update cross-border loan documentation to address enforcement and resolution risks; and third, engage regulators early through pre-filing dialogue. Institutions that act now will be best positioned to maintain market access and protect their lending positions as the legislative process advances. For tailored compliance guidance, consider consulting a qualified banking and finance practitioner through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin Hu at MHP Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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