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china draft financial law

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China's Draft Financial Law 2026, a Practical Guide for Cross‑border Lenders, Borrowers and Deal Lawyers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: May 14, 2026

The China draft financial law, published for public consultation on March 23, 2026, by the Ministry of Justice (MOJ), represents China’s most ambitious attempt to create a unified statutory framework governing banking, securities, insurance, trusts and fintech activities. Spanning 11 chapters and 95 articles, the Draft introduces expanded powers for the National Financial Regulatory Authority (NFRA), a statutory bank‑resolution regime complete with bail‑in and bridge‑bank mechanisms, tightened anti‑money‑laundering (AML) obligations, new prior‑approval requirements for establishing and restructuring financial institutions, and significantly higher administrative fines for non‑compliance.

For international banks, cross‑border lenders, borrower counsel and deal lawyers with exposure to China‑linked financings, the financial regulatory changes China is proposing demand immediate attention, from due diligence workflows through to loan documentation, intercreditor arrangements and enforcement playbooks.

This practical guide distils the Draft’s key provisions into actionable guidance. It maps the legislative timeline, analyses the headline changes that affect cross‑border lending in China, provides a lender due diligence checklist, explains the new bank resolution and bail‑in rules, assesses the impact on loan documentation in China, and offers sample clause language that deal teams can adapt today. The consultation period may have closed, but industry observers expect further rounds of revision before the National People’s Congress (NPC) or the State Council formally adopts the law, meaning the window for stakeholder influence and pre‑compliance planning is still open.

1. Legislative Context, Timeline and Scope of the Draft Financial Law China

China has historically regulated its financial sector through a patchwork of sector‑specific statutes, the Commercial Banking Law, the Securities Law, the Insurance Law and various State Council regulations. The draft financial law China proposes to sit above these individual statutes as an overarching “basic law” for the financial sector, harmonising supervisory principles, establishing uniform resolution tools and closing regulatory gaps that have emerged as fintech and cross‑sector products have blurred traditional boundaries.

1.1 Who Decides Laws in China?

In China’s legislative framework, national laws are enacted by the NPC or its Standing Committee. Major administrative regulations are promulgated by the State Council. Ministry‑level rules and normative documents are issued by bodies such as the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and the NFRA. The current Draft was published by the MOJ on March 23, 2026, opening a formal public consultation period. Following consultation, the Draft will likely undergo multiple readings, inter‑ministry coordination and possible revision before submission to either the NPC Standing Committee or the State Council for formal adoption.

1.2 What the Draft Covers: Sectors and Activities

The Draft’s 11 chapters regulate the following activity categories: banking and credit, securities and capital markets, insurance, trusts and asset management, financial holding companies, emerging fintech services (including digital payments and online lending), and cross‑border financial activities. Critically, the Draft applies not only to PRC‑incorporated entities but also to foreign branches, subsidiaries and offshore entities conducting regulated financial activities within mainland China.

Date Event Practical significance
March 23, 2026 MOJ publishes Draft for public consultation Full text available for review; stakeholders can submit comments
April 2026 Public consultation period closes Last window for formal written submissions
H2 2026 (expected) Inter‑ministry review and revision rounds Deal teams should track amendments affecting resolution and AML chapters
2026–2027 (expected) NPC Standing Committee or State Council adoption Final text triggers compliance deadlines and document amendment obligations

2. Key Changes in the China Draft Financial Law 2026

The Draft makes sweeping changes across supervision, resolution, AML and enforcement. For cross‑border financings, three clusters of provisions matter most: the NFRA’s expanded mandate, the statutory resolution framework and the elevated penalty regime.

2.1 NFRA China, Remit and New Powers

The National Financial Regulatory Authority (NFRA China) is positioned under the Draft as the principal cross‑sector supervisory body, consolidating powers that were previously scattered across the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC), the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and, to a degree, the PBOC. The Draft grants NFRA authority to conduct on‑site inspections, require data submissions and, crucially for lenders, to initiate resolution proceedings for any financial institution it deems systemically significant or critically distressed.

Regulator Key powers under Draft Practical impact on lenders
NFRA Cross‑sector supervision; resolution trigger; licensing and approval authority; power to impose conservatorship and temporary management Lenders must assess whether borrower or guarantor falls under NFRA’s enhanced supervisory net; include enhanced regulatory‑event reps
PBOC Monetary policy; macro‑prudential oversight; systemic risk coordination; lender‑of‑last‑resort role Cross‑border capital flow controls and FX approval gating may tighten; factor into fund‑flow mechanics
CSRC Securities and capital markets supervision; listing and disclosure rules Borrowers with listed securities face additional disclosure triggers when resolution events occur

2.2 AML and Prior‑Approval Changes

The Draft strengthens AML supervision and imposes new prior‑approval requirements for establishing, merging and restructuring financial institutions. According to reporting by Reuters, the proposed rules would require regulatory sign‑off before any change in control or significant shareholding restructuring of a licensed financial institution, a provision with direct implications for acquisition financings and leveraged buyouts involving Chinese banks, insurers or trust companies. Lenders providing acquisition finance must now factor approval timelines and conditionality into their commitment letters and long‑stop dates.

2.3 Administrative Fines and Enforcement Levers

The Draft significantly raises the ceiling on administrative fines for regulatory breaches. While specific thresholds will be confirmed in the final text, the direction of travel, as noted by practitioner commentary from Hankun Law, is toward fines that are multiples of illegal gains or revenue, rather than flat‑cap amounts. For lenders, this raises counterparty credit risk: a borrower hit with a major regulatory penalty may face material adverse change triggers, covenant breaches or liquidity stress.

Entity type New Draft obligations (summary) Practical impact for lenders
Systemic banks Expanded NFRA supervision; subject to statutory resolution measures (bail‑in, bridge powers) Lender must assess resolution exposure; include bail‑in carve‑outs and enhanced cure rights
Non‑bank financial institutions Licensing and approval requirements; tighter AML controls Need additional sponsor/borrower covenants and pre‑closing authorisations
Foreign branches / offshore lenders Cross‑border coordination obligations; potential notification requirements Lenders should add reps and update enforcement playbook

3. Practical Impact on Cross‑Border Lending China Transactions

The china draft financial law reshapes the risk landscape for every cross‑border lending transaction touching PRC counterparties. Lenders need to widen due diligence, tighten covenants and rethink pre‑closing conditions.

3.1 Due Diligence Checklist for Lenders

Lender due diligence China workflows must now cover several additional layers triggered by the Draft:

  • Regulatory licence and status verification. Confirm whether the borrower, guarantor or any obligor holds a financial licence subject to NFRA oversight. Request certified copies of all licences and recent regulatory correspondence.
  • Resolution exposure assessment. Determine whether the borrower or any group company is designated, or could be designated, as systemically important. Review the NFRA’s public registers and any internal classification notices.
  • AML/KYC records audit. Request evidence of the borrower’s internal AML controls, suspicious‑transaction reporting history and any pending regulatory investigations. Under the Draft, AML deficiencies could trigger operational restrictions.
  • Shareholder and corporate structure review. Map beneficial ownership with reference to the Draft’s new approval thresholds for significant shareholdings. Identify any pending restructuring that would require prior NFRA approval.
  • Onshore security and pledge review. Assess all existing encumbrances, registration status and priority of PRC‑situs security. Cross‑check against resolution‑related enforcement stay provisions.
  • Intra‑group guarantee analysis. Verify that upstream and cross‑stream guarantees comply with the Draft’s requirements for group‑level supervision and do not breach capital‑adequacy or connected‑lending limits.
  • Pending government approvals. Compile a register of all approvals required under the Draft for the proposed financing, including SAFE registrations, NDRC filings and any NFRA‑specific notifications for cross‑border lending.
  • Previous regulatory enforcement. Search for any historical enforcement actions, fines or sanctions against the borrower or its directors, and model the impact of the Draft’s higher penalty regime on the borrower’s financial position.

3.2 Risk Allocation and Covenant Changes Lenders Should Demand

Standard LMA or APLMA‑style facility agreements will need targeted amendments to address the financial regulatory changes China is introducing. Key areas include:

  • Negative pledge and permitted encumbrances. Tighten carve‑outs to ensure that resolution‑related security interests created by or at the direction of regulators are expressly addressed, either carved out with notice obligations or treated as events of default.
  • Financial covenants. Consider adding a regulatory‑capital adequacy covenant specific to borrowers subject to NFRA oversight, with trigger levels set above minimum regulatory requirements to provide an early‑warning buffer.
  • Representations and warranties. Add reps confirming (a) no pending or threatened resolution proceedings, (b) compliance with all Draft‑related licensing and AML requirements, and (c) accuracy of regulatory classification status.
  • Material adverse change (MAC) clauses. Expand the definition of “material adverse change” to capture regulatory events, including the imposition of conservatorship, temporary management, bail‑in or bridge‑bank measures under the Draft.
  • Information undertakings. Require immediate notification of any NFRA inspection, investigation, enforcement notice or resolution action affecting the borrower or any material subsidiary.

3.3 Pre‑Closing Conditions and Sanctions

Condition precedent schedules should be expanded. A sample condition precedent provision might read:

“It shall be a condition to Initial Utilisation that the Borrower has delivered to the Agent evidence, in form and substance satisfactory to the Majority Lenders, that all approvals, consents and registrations required under the Financial Law [Draft] and any implementing regulations, including NFRA licensing confirmation, SAFE cross‑border lending registration and NDRC foreign debt filing, have been duly obtained and remain in full force and effect, or that the Majority Lenders have waived such condition in writing.”

Where approval timelines are uncertain, industry observers expect lenders to insist on extended long‑stop dates and break‑fee structures that allocate regulatory delay risk to the borrower.

4. Bank Resolution China: Bail‑In, Bridge Bank and Creditor Treatment

The Draft’s most consequential innovation for creditors is its introduction of a statutory bank resolution regime in China. For the first time, resolution authorities, led by the NFRA, would have an explicit legal basis to impose bail‑in measures, establish bridge banks and override contractual rights in the interest of financial stability.

4.1 What Bail‑In Rules China Means for Syndicated Lenders and Bondholders

Under the Draft’s bail‑in provisions, resolution authorities could write down or convert creditor claims into equity in a distressed financial institution. According to analysis published by IFLR, the Draft envisages a creditor hierarchy that broadly follows insolvency priority, with depositors afforded enhanced protection, but leaves significant discretion to the resolution authority regarding the treatment of unsecured and subordinated claims.

For syndicated lenders, the implications are substantial. Cross‑default clauses in multi‑facility structures may be overridden or stayed by resolution orders, potentially preventing acceleration across a borrower group. Subordination waterfalls in intercreditor agreements may be disrupted if resolution authorities treat creditor classes differently from contractual priorities. Netting and set‑off rights could also be affected if the Draft grants resolution authorities power to cherry‑pick contracts for transfer to a bridge entity.

4.2 Bridge Bank and Temporary Measures

The Draft empowers resolution authorities to establish a bridge bank, a temporary entity to which performing assets and liabilities of a failing institution can be transferred, and to appoint temporary management to run a distressed institution pending resolution. As noted by WilmerHale in its client alert, these powers would likely include the ability to impose enforcement stays, preventing creditors from exercising contractual remedies (including security enforcement and contract termination) for a specified period following a resolution order.

The likely practical effect will be that lenders with security over onshore assets of a resolved institution could face an enforcement moratorium of uncertain duration. Early indications suggest the Draft does not specify a maximum stay period, a gap that practitioner commentary from Hankun has flagged as a source of considerable uncertainty for secured creditors.

4.3 Practical Lender Responses

Lenders should take the following steps in anticipation of the bail‑in rules China is introducing:

  • Contractual bail‑in acknowledgment clauses. Include provisions requiring the borrower to acknowledge that the lender’s claims may be subject to bail‑in and to cooperate with the lender in exercising any residual rights post‑resolution.
  • Notification and cure provisions. Draft immediate‑notification obligations tied to any resolution trigger event, with a defined forbearance window during which the borrower must propose remedial measures before the lender may accelerate.
  • Intercreditor coordination. Update intercreditor agreements to address scenarios where resolution authorities treat classes of creditors differently from the agreed waterfall, including fallback provisions for pro rata sharing of recovery proceeds.
  • Netting and set‑off protections. Ensure that close‑out netting provisions comply with PRC enforceability requirements and include express carve‑outs for resolution scenarios, to the extent permitted.

A sample bail‑in notification clause might read: “The Borrower shall, within two (2) Business Days of becoming aware, notify the Agent in writing of any decision, order or notice issued by any Resolution Authority in respect of the Borrower or any Material Subsidiary, including any bail‑in action, bridge transfer or temporary management appointment, together with copies of all related documentation.”

5. Security, Perfection and Enforcement in China Under the Draft Financial Law

Secured creditors face a recalibrated risk profile under the china draft financial law. The interaction between the Draft’s resolution powers and the existing PRC security regime creates new enforcement uncertainties that must be addressed at the structuring stage.

5.1 Secured Creditor vs Resolution Authority: Enforcement Windows and Likely Stays

The Draft’s resolution tools include powers that could override secured creditors’ enforcement rights. Where a resolution authority imposes a stay, security enforcement, whether over pledged shares, mortgaged real property or receivables assignments, may be suspended. Industry observers expect the implementing regulations to specify stay durations and conditions, but at the Draft stage, the absence of these details requires lenders to plan for worst‑case scenarios, including indefinite stays coupled with forced transfer of secured assets to a bridge entity at administratively determined values.

5.2 Steps to Strengthen Security

In light of these risks, lenders structuring PRC‑situs security should consider:

  • Priority ranking. Perfect all security interests promptly after execution. Under PRC law, pledge priority generally follows the date of registration (for registrable security) or delivery (for possessory pledges). Delays in perfection could leave lenders subordinate to subsequently created, but earlier perfected, interests.
  • Registration completeness. Confirm registration with the correct authority: the China Securities Depository and Clearing Corporation for publicly traded equity pledges, the SAMR‑affiliated Credit Reference Centre for receivables, and local real property registration bureaux for mortgages. Obtain certified registration confirmations.
  • Structural protections. Where feasible, take security at the offshore holding‑company level as well as onshore, creating a dual‑layer enforcement option that may not be directly subject to PRC resolution stays.
  • Collateral monitoring. Require regular collateral valuations and top‑up obligations tied to loan‑to‑value covenants, so that security coverage remains adequate even if enforcement is delayed by a resolution stay.

5.3 Cross‑Border Enforcement Practicalities

China does not have a general treaty for reciprocal enforcement of foreign court judgments, although bilateral arrangements exist with certain jurisdictions and the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements offers a limited framework. For cross‑border lending transactions, arbitration, particularly under CIETAC, HKIAC or ICC rules, remains the preferred dispute‑resolution mechanism, given the New York Convention’s applicability to enforcement of arbitral awards in China. However, even arbitral award enforcement could be complicated if the respondent is subject to resolution proceedings. Lenders should consider specifying offshore arbitration seats and structuring security to permit enforcement outside mainland China where possible.

6. Contract Drafting: Recommended Changes and Sample Clauses Under the China Draft Financial Law

The impact on loan documentation China‑linked financings requires extends well beyond standard boilerplate. Below are five priority amendments with sample language summaries.

Clause Purpose Quick drafting tip
Bail‑in notification and cure Protect lender expectations during resolution Require immediate notice of any resolution action; preserve netting rights; allow limited forbearance before acceleration
Regulatory approval condition precedent Mitigate prior‑approval risk Make utilisation conditional on receipt of NFRA, SAFE and NDRC approvals; include lender waiver option
Regulatory MAC expansion Capture resolution and enforcement events Expand MAC definition to include conservatorship, temporary management, bail‑in, bridge transfer and licence revocation
Enhanced regulatory reps Allocate disclosure risk to borrower Borrower to represent no pending resolution proceedings, full AML compliance, accurate regulatory status classification
Escrow/blocked account for FX and AML Ring‑fence funds against regulatory freeze Establish offshore escrow for debt service; include mechanics for release subject to SAFE verification and AML clearance

Sample regulatory MAC clause: “A ‘Regulatory Event of Default’ shall occur if any Resolution Authority takes any action (including bail‑in, bridge transfer, conservatorship, temporary management or licence revocation) in respect of any Obligor that, in the reasonable opinion of the Majority Lenders, has or could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.”

Sample escrow release provision: “Amounts standing to the credit of the Escrow Account shall be released to the Debt Service Account upon delivery to the Escrow Agent of (a) evidence of valid SAFE registration, (b) confirmation from PRC counsel that no AML hold or regulatory restriction applies, and (c) written instruction from the Agent on behalf of the Lenders.”

7. Deal Execution Checklist and Lender Playbook

The following immediate steps form a practical playbook for lenders with exposure to China‑linked transactions:

  1. Expand due diligence scope to cover NFRA regulatory status, resolution exposure and AML compliance of all PRC obligors.
  2. Update internal negotiation playbooks and term‑sheet templates to reflect Draft‑specific covenants, reps and conditions precedent.
  3. Model bail‑in and bridge‑bank scenarios for each significant PRC counterparty, quantifying potential write‑down or conversion exposure.
  4. Run enforcement simulations testing security enforceability under a resolution stay, including offshore fallback strategies.
  5. Review and update intercreditor agreements to address resolution‑driven waterfall disruptions and pro rata recovery provisions.
  6. Refresh KYC/AML onboarding processes to align with the Draft’s enhanced CDD requirements for financial institutions.
  7. Obtain sign‑off from PRC‑qualified counsel on all security packages, confirming perfection, priority and resolution‑risk mitigation.
  8. Reassess long‑stop dates and break‑fee mechanics to accommodate extended regulatory approval timelines.
  9. Establish monitoring protocols for NFRA announcements, implementing regulations and further legislative readings.
  10. Engage with industry bodies (APLMA, LMA) on standardised clause language for China resolution and bail‑in provisions.

8. Conclusion, Navigating the China Draft Financial Law

The china draft financial law represents a generational shift in how China supervises, resolves and disciplines its financial sector. For cross‑border lenders, borrowers and deal lawyers, the time to act is now, before the Draft becomes final law. Widening due diligence, strengthening contractual protections and planning for resolution contingencies are no longer optional steps but essential elements of prudent deal execution. Qualified counsel with on‑the‑ground PRC experience is critical to navigating these changes effectively. To find a qualified lawyer with China banking and finance expertise, consult the Global Law Experts directory.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified counsel for guidance on specific transactions.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Justice, English release: Draft Financial Law (public consultation)
  2. Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) Economic Watch / Explanation
  3. Reuters, China proposes stricter financial oversight in draft law
  4. IFLR, How China’s financial law draft redraws bank resolution rules
  5. WilmerHale, China’s Draft Financial Law and key regulatory insights
  6. Hankun Law Firm, Draft Financial Law: summary and practical takeaways
  7. Lexology, Practitioner alerts on China’s Draft Financial Law
  8. China Daily, National press reporting on the Draft Financial Law

FAQs

What is NFRA in China?
NFRA is the National Financial Regulatory Authority, a cross‑sector supervisory body with expanded powers under the Draft Financial Law. It oversees banks, insurers and non‑bank financial institutions and has authority to initiate resolution proceedings for distressed entities.
The Draft proposes a unified, system‑level law covering banking, securities, insurance, trusts and fintech activities, establishing common principles for supervision, resolution and AML across all regulated financial sectors in China.
National laws are enacted by the NPC or its Standing Committee. The Draft Financial Law was published by the Ministry of Justice on March 23, 2026, for public consultation before proceeding to formal legislative readings and adoption.
Key regulators include the NFRA (cross‑sector supervision and resolution), the People’s Bank of China (monetary policy and macro‑prudential oversight), and the CSRC (securities and capital markets). The Draft clarifies and expands their respective mandates.
Bail‑in rules China could expose lenders to write‑downs or debt‑to‑equity conversion. Syndicated lenders should revise documentation to include notification rights, netting carve‑outs and intercreditor coordination provisions addressing resolution scenarios.
Verify borrower licence status, onshore security perfection, AML/KYC compliance records, shareholder structure, prior regulatory enforcement history and all pending government approvals required under the Draft and existing regulations.
Enforcement may be stayed or complicated by resolution measures. Lenders should assess reciprocity arrangements, consider arbitration with offshore seats and structure security to permit enforcement outside mainland China where feasible.

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China's Draft Financial Law 2026, a Practical Guide for Cross‑border Lenders, Borrowers and Deal Lawyers

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