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Last reviewed: 17 June 2026
Security enforcement in China has entered a new phase. The Draft Financial Law, published for public consultation on 23 March 2026, introduces a unified framework for bank resolution, expanded supervisory powers for the National Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA), and look‑through rules that can reach the ultimate controllers of financial institutions. For cross‑border lenders with exposure to Chinese borrowers, the draft creates immediate questions about whether existing collateral structures remain enforceable, how creditor priority may shift during a regulator‑led resolution, and what documentation changes need to happen now. This guide delivers the practical answers, step‑by‑step enforcement procedures, a clause bank, checklists, and a comparison of the pre‑draft and post‑draft regimes, that transaction teams need to act on today.
The Draft Financial Law of the People’s Republic of China (中华人民共和国金融法(草案)) was released by the Ministry of Justice on 23 March 2026 for a period of public consultation. The draft comprises 11 chapters and 95 articles, covering the modern central bank system, financial institutions, financial regulation, risk resolution, and supervisory accountability. It is the first overarching, cross‑sector financial regulatory statute proposed at the national level in China, sitting above and building upon existing legislation governing banking, securities, insurance, and trusts.
The draft establishes a unified framework for draft financial law bank resolution. Industry observers expect the following powers, once enacted, to significantly reshape how distressed financial institutions are handled:
The NFRA already conducts unified supervision and regulation of the financial industry except the securities sector. The draft would solidify and expand this mandate into a comprehensive resolution authority role.
For secured creditors, the critical changes relate to timing and consent. Under the current regime, enforcement of security interests generally proceeds through the PRC courts once a default is established and the relevant registration and procedural requirements are met. The draft introduces the possibility that a regulator‑imposed stay could delay or suspend enforcement during a resolution window. Industry observers expect the likely practical effect to be that lenders will need to factor in regulatory clearance or at minimum formal notification before pursuing enforcement against a financial institution in resolution. Additionally, the look‑through provisions mean that offshore security structures and nominee arrangements will face greater scrutiny, making it essential that security documentation clearly traces beneficial ownership and enforcement authority.
PRC law recognises three principal categories of security interest, each with its own enforcement mechanics. Cross‑border lenders must understand the distinct routes to enforce collateral in China for each type:
Where the borrower or obligor is a financial institution subject to NFRA oversight, the Draft Financial Law introduces an additional regulatory layer. Early indications suggest that enforcement actions may be subject to a statutory stay during the resolution period, and that the resolution authority may redirect enforcement proceeds into the resolution estate. Lenders should assume that court enforcement against a financial institution in active resolution will require advance notification to (and potentially approval from) the resolution authority.
| Asset Type | Normal Enforcement Route | Resolution Constraints (Draft Financial Law) |
|---|---|---|
| Real estate mortgage (抵押) | Court‑ordered judicial sale or auction; private sale by agreement | Potential statutory stay; asset transfer to bridge institution may override sale; regulatory notification likely required |
| Equity pledge (股权质押) | Sale, auction, or set‑off via court order or agreement; AMR registration required | Equity may be frozen or transferred by resolution authority; look‑through rules may challenge nominee structures |
| Movable property pledge | Possession‑based enforcement; auction or agreed sale | Physical assets may be seized by resolution administrator; enforcement potentially stayed |
| Receivables pledge | Collection or sale of receivables; PBOC Credit Reference Centre registration | Receivables may be swept into resolution estate; priority may be contested if resolution claims are given preference |
| Guarantee (onshore/offshore) | Civil litigation or arbitration against guarantor | Cross‑default enforcement against related financial institution guarantors may be stayed; SAFE registration essential for cross‑border guarantees |
Regardless of asset type, lenders and their enforcement counsel should take the following steps immediately upon a default event or early warning of resolution:
Under the PRC Civil Code, secured creditors enjoy priority over unsecured creditors with respect to the proceeds of the charged assets. This principle has been a cornerstone of secured lending in China and remains intact in the Draft Financial Law. However, the draft introduces provisions that could modify priority treatment in the specific context of bank resolution, raising creditor priority concerns that cross‑border lenders must address proactively.
| Topic | Pre‑Draft / Normal Insolvency | Draft Financial Law / Resolution Regime |
|---|---|---|
| Ability to enforce security | Generally permitted post‑default subject to local registration and procedures | May be constrained by NFRA resolution actions; enforcement may require regulator notice/consent or be subject to statutory stay |
| Priority treatment | Standard PRC priority, secured creditors ranked ahead of unsecured | Draft introduces look‑through and possible priority adjustments for resolution claims, potential reordering in systemic resolution |
| Typical timeline | Judicial sale/auction (typically several months) | Regulator‑led resolution can be faster but may impose administrative freezes; creditor remedies may be delayed or channelled through resolution body |
The look‑through rules are particularly significant for cross‑border structures. Where an offshore entity holds security through a nominee or multi‑layered SPV, the resolution authority may pierce the corporate veil to assess who truly controls the security interest and whether the arrangement was designed to circumvent resolution tools. Early indications suggest this could result in challenge or recharacterisation of security interests that lack clear beneficial ownership documentation.
Lenders face the greatest risk of priority dilution in scenarios where:
Protective measures include inserting contractual provisions that require the borrower to notify the lender immediately upon the commencement of any regulatory investigation or resolution action, covenanting to maintain all registrations in good standing, and granting the security agent broad enforcement authority that is not conditional on borrower consent. Lenders should also consider adding a priority preservation clause that expressly states the lender’s intention to maintain priority over resolution claims to the maximum extent permitted by applicable law.
Before initiating any enforcement action, assemble a complete picture of the security package and the borrower’s status:
Serve a formal default notice on the borrower in accordance with the contractual mechanics. The notice should specify the events of default, demand immediate repayment of all outstanding amounts, and state the lender’s intention to enforce security if payment is not received within the contractually stipulated cure period. Ensure that the notice is served in both English and Chinese where required by the loan agreement, and retain proof of delivery.
In syndicated transactions, the security agent should formally assume its enforcement role and issue instructions to PRC enforcement counsel. Key tasks at this stage include:
The principal enforcement routes for realising secured assets in China are:
Once enforcement proceeds are realised, cross‑border lenders face an additional step: converting RMB proceeds into foreign currency and repatriating them offshore. This requires compliance with SAFE regulations, including submission of evidence that the enforcement was lawfully completed and that the original cross‑border loan and security were properly registered. Delays in FX conversion can be significant, and lenders should budget for a processing period of several weeks to several months depending on the amount and the local SAFE branch.
Before signing or during a periodic review of existing China facilities, confirm that the following documents are in order:
Cross‑border lenders should incorporate the following protective provisions in new and, where possible, amended existing finance documents:
Clause 1, Security Agent Enforcement Authority:
“The Security Agent is hereby irrevocably authorised, without further consent of the Borrower or any Obligor, to take all steps necessary to enforce any Security Interest created under the Finance Documents, including but not limited to filing applications for judicial sale, auction, or pre‑litigation preservation with any competent court of the People’s Republic of China, engaging local counsel, and directing the distribution of enforcement proceeds in accordance with the Intercreditor Agreement.”
Clause 2, Resolution Carve‑Out:
“Notwithstanding the commencement of any resolution, restructuring, or regulatory administration proceeding in respect of any Obligor, the rights of the Finance Parties under the Security Documents shall continue in full force and effect to the maximum extent not mandatorily prohibited by applicable law. The Borrower undertakes to provide immediate written notice to the Security Agent upon becoming aware of any resolution action, regulatory investigation, or supervisory measure initiated by any Governmental Authority.”
Clause 3, SAFE Registration Covenant:
“The Borrower shall, at its own cost, procure and maintain in full force and effect all registrations required by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) in connection with the Facilities and any Security Interest created in favour of the Finance Parties. The Borrower shall provide to the Security Agent evidence of each SAFE registration within [10] Business Days of completion and shall promptly notify the Security Agent of any amendment, suspension, or cancellation thereof.”
Cross‑border lenders face a distinct set of regulatory hurdles that purely domestic creditors do not encounter. Security enforcement in China for offshore lenders is incomplete without proper SAFE compliance and a clear repatriation pathway.
Cross‑border loans and guarantees must be registered with SAFE. The registration serves two functions: it validates the cross‑border nature of the transaction for FX purposes, and it is a precondition for the lawful repatriation of enforcement proceeds. Failure to register, or to maintain registration throughout the facility’s life, can block the conversion and remittance of RMB proceeds offshore entirely.
After a successful enforcement, converting RMB realisation proceeds into foreign currency and remitting them to an offshore account requires submission of supporting documentation to the designated FX bank, including the court judgment or arbitral award, evidence of the SAFE registration, and the original loan and security documentation. Processing times depend on the local SAFE branch and the amounts involved.
Lenders should also note that PRC courts have limited mechanisms for recognising and enforcing foreign court judgments absent a bilateral treaty or reciprocity finding. Where enforcement must originate offshore, it is generally preferable to structure disputes for arbitration under a convention (such as the New York Convention) that China has ratified, ensuring that the resulting award can be enforced through the PRC courts.
The interaction between standard PRC insolvency proceedings (under the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law) and the new resolution regime proposed by the Draft Financial Law creates a strategic decision point for lenders. The choice between pushing for immediate enforcement versus participating in a structured resolution or insolvency process depends on the nature of the obligor, the type and value of the collateral, and the regulatory landscape at the time of default.
| Factor | Direct Enforcement | Insolvency / Resolution Process |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | Faster if collateral is clearly identifiable and uncontested; judicial sale may take 6–12 months | Resolution may be faster for systemic institutions but subject to regulatory timeline; standard insolvency can take 1–3 years |
| Recoverable value | Higher if collateral is liquid and well‑valued; full priority for secured claims | Recovery may be diluted by resolution costs, bail‑in, or priority adjustments; cram‑down risk in restructuring plans |
| Regulatory risk | Lower for non‑financial institution borrowers; higher if obligor is under NFRA supervision | Significant, resolution authority has broad powers to stay enforcement, transfer assets, and restructure claims |
Industry observers expect that for non‑financial institution borrowers, direct enforcement will remain the preferred route. For regulated financial institutions, however, lenders will increasingly need to engage with the resolution process and coordinate with other creditors to protect their position. Set‑off rights, where the lender holds deposits or other claims against the borrower, should be exercised early before any resolution stay takes effect. Creditor committees, where formed, offer a mechanism for influencing the resolution plan and ensuring that secured creditor interests are represented.
The Draft Financial Law marks a turning point for security enforcement in China. Cross‑border lenders should act now rather than wait for the final enacted text. The three immediate priorities are:
For tailored advice on enforcement of security interests in China, structuring compliant collateral packages, or navigating the Draft Financial Law’s resolution framework, consult a qualified Chinese banking and finance lawyer through the Global Law Experts 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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