SFC Joins IOSCO Global Anti-Finfluencer Initiative with 17 Regulators
Summary
The SFC announced participation in IOSCO's Global Week of Action Against Unlawful Finfluencers (April 20, 2026), with 17 IOSCO members joining—nearly double last year's participation. The SFC reported concrete enforcement outcomes including a custodial sentence against an unlicensed finfluencer providing paid investment advice, a compliance advice letter for promoting overseas virtual asset platforms without authorization, and submission of 12 reports covering 33 suspicious posts/accounts to social media platforms with over 90% removal rates. The SFC also highlighted its AI-powered social media monitoring system (SENSOR) launched in Q3 2025 and investor education partnerships with the HKMA and Chinese Banking Association of Hong Kong.
“With financial promotions becoming increasingly prevalent on social media, it is vital for regulators around the world to work together to protect investing public from unlawful financial promotions, and foster a fair online environment.”
The SFC's reported outcomes—criminal conviction with custodial sentence for unlicensed investment advice, compliance advice letter for virtual asset platform promotion, and 90%+ removal rate via platform cooperation—demonstrate a multi-track enforcement approach that compliance programs should factor into social media risk assessments. The near-doubling of IOSCO participation in Global Week suggests this is a coordinated, not isolated, regulatory priority.
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What changed
The SFC announced its participation in IOSCO's second annual Global Week of Action Against Unlawful Finfluencers, highlighting a near-doubling of participating regulators from approximately 8-9 last year to 17 in 2026. The SFC detailed enforcement outcomes including a custodial sentence against a finfluencer convicted for providing unlicensed paid investment advice in a social media chat group, a compliance advice letter issued for promoting overseas virtual asset trading platforms without authorization, and submission of 33 suspicious posts/accounts to social media platforms with over 90% removal rates.
Firms engaged in digital financial marketing or partnerships with social media influencers should note the SFC's demonstrated willingness to pursue criminal enforcement against unlicensed investment advice. The expansion of IOSCO's coordinated response signals that cross-border regulatory action against finfluencer misconduct is intensifying, and the SFC's high removal-rate cooperation with social media platforms demonstrates an active enforcement posture.
Archived snapshot
Apr 24, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
SFC joins global regulatory effort again to combat unlawful activities of finfluencers
24 Apr 2026
The Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) is joining forces with securities regulators across the globe to tackle the unlawful activities of financial influencers (finfluencers) (Notes 1 and 2).
Recognising that unlawful activities of finfluencers are a global phenomenon, members of the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) participating in the “Global Week of Action Against Unlawful Finfluencers” (Global Week) during the week of 20 April 2026 are almost twice as many as last year when the initiative was first launched (Note 3). A total of 17 IOSCO members, including the SFC, are joining this year’s regulatory initiative (Note 4).
This initiative aims at disrupting the unlawful activities of finfluencers. It involves regulators undertaking regulatory measures ranging from enforcement and supervisory actions to investor education and awareness programmes.
Ms Julia Leung, the SFC’s Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the IOSCO Asia-Pacific Regional Committee, said: “With financial promotions becoming increasingly prevalent on social media, it is vital for regulators around the world to work together to protect investing public from unlawful financial promotions, and foster a fair online environment. The SFC is committed to supporting this global initiative as part of our campaign to combat online scams that often transcend jurisdictional boundaries.”
SFC’s enforcement actions
In the past year, the SFC has made progress in tackling unlawful activities of finfluencers through robust enforcement actions and cooperation with social media platforms in taking down suspicious posts and profiles engaged in unlicensed activities.
The outcomes of the SFC’s actions included:
- securing a custodial sentence against a finfluencer who was criminally convicted for providing paid investment advice on a social medial chat group without licence (Note 5);
- issuing a compliance advice letter to a finfluencer in connection with unlicensed promotion of overseas virtual asset trading platforms to the Hong Kong public;
- submitting 12 reports concerning 33 suspicious posts or accounts to major social media platforms since July 2025 with over 90% of these reported posts or accounts being promptly removed by respective platforms; and
- leveraging social media platforms to combat unlawful activities of finfluencers through joint, local engagement with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority and other authorities in Hong Kong under Anti-Scam Consumer Protection Charter 3.0, as well as regional engagement through the SFC’s leadership role in the IOSCO Asia-Pacific Regional Committee Scams Working Group (Notes 6 and 7). Proactive surveillance
The SFC has been proactive in strengthening its capability in detecting social media financial scams through its in-house artificial intelligence-powered social media monitoring system (SENSOR) launched in the third quarter of 2025. This system leverages AI and natural language processing technologies to monitor social media platforms for, among other red flags, unlawful promotion of financial products by finfluencers (Note 8).
Investor education
The SFC combats unlawful activities of finfluencers with preventative measures focusing on investor education. Notably, the SFC works closely with the Hong Kong Police Force and other regulatory authorities to crack down on misconduct, including fraudulent schemes promoted by finfluencers, through sharing intelligence and emerging trends of deceptive practices.
The SFC also joins hands with other agencies in enhancing public awareness of scams with its coordinated outreach activities extending to diverse community groups. For example, in March 2026, the SFC partnered with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority and the Chinese Banking Association of Hong Kong to host a fraud prevention and investment education session for Mainland-based university students in Hong Kong, as well as sharing anti-scam tips at a Consumer Council event for senior citizens.
End
Notes:
Finfluencers are social media personalities who use their platforms to promote financial products and share insights and advice with their followers. They are not regulated in Hong Kong. While many are acting legitimately and not breaking any laws, some may be touting financial products or services illegally through online videos and posts and without authorisation, where they use the pretence of a lavish lifestyle, often falsely, to promote success. These individuals may not be licensed by the SFC to give advice on securities and futures contracts to investors in Hong Kong.
Please refer to the SFC’s press release about its participation in the “Global Week of Action Against Unlawful Finfluencers” in 2025 dated 6 June 2025.
IOSCO is a global body of securities regulators that develops and promotes adherence to internationally recognised standards for securities regulation. Its members oversee more than 95% of the world’s securities markets across over 130 jurisdictions.
Other IOSCO members participating in the Global Week in 2026 are as follows, demonstrating a broad and global commitment to addressing unlawful financial promotions:
- Australian Securities and Investments Commission, Australia
- Financial Services and Markets Authority, Belgium
- Comissão de Valores Mobiliários, Brazil
- Autorité des marchés financiers, Quebec, Canada
- British Columbia Securities Commission, Canada
- Ontario Securities Commission, Canada
- Danish Financial Supervisory Authority, Denmark
- Securities and Exchange Board of India, India
- Central Bank of Ireland, Ireland
- Financial Markets Authority, New Zealand
- Finanstilsynet, Norway
- Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority, Qatar
- Qatar Financial Markets Authority, Qatar
- Monetary Authority of Singapore, Singapore
- Capital Markets Authority, United Arab Emirates
- Financial Conduct Authority, United Kingdom
- Please refer to the SFC’s press release about the conviction dated 7 November 2025.
Anti-Scam Consumer Protection Charter 3.0 was launched in July 2025 by the SFC and other local financial regulators as a collaborative initiative bringing together social media platforms to combat financial frauds and scams. Please refer to the SFC’s press release dated 9 July 2025.
The IOSCO Asia‑Pacific Regional Committee Scams Working Group brings together regional securities regulators to share information, coordinate responses to investment scams and online harms, and engage with platform providers to promote more consistent and effective anti‑scam measures across the region.
Please refer to the SFC’s Enforcement Reporter for October 2025 about the launch of SENSOR as well as the SFC’s anti-scam efforts, highlighting the specific fraudulent tactics used by finfluencers and warning the public against relying on unverified financial advice on social media.
Page last updated 24 Apr 2026
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