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Chinese’s brokers red flags facing GOP scrutiny

In the world of free and low-commission brokers, Robinhood is the leader, but it faces increasing competition from a startup known as Webull, founded by one of the top executives at China-based e-commerce giant Alibaba.

And Webull's relationship with China, which is increasingly viewed as hostile by the United States, could pose a major obstacle to the company's ambitious expansion plans, The Post has learned.

As the Post reported, Congress has requested information about how U.S. securities regulators are overseeing Webull's storage of customer data.

Now, a group of red state attorneys general has launched an investigation into the company's ties to the mainland and its ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP).


Webull's relationship with China could pose a major hurdle to its expansion plans in the United States. AFP (via Getty Images)

I've heard that China skeptics are likely to be more concerned about the incoming Trump administration and who Trump will nominate for Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of the Treasury Matt Gaetz, and the Treasury Department. are.

Webull's plans to list on the Nasdaq through a special acquisition vehicle (SPAC) are apparently delayed, with interest from various government agencies, people familiar with the matter said.

A Webull spokesperson and the company's outside counsel at Wilmar Hale in Washington, D.C., did not respond to numerous emails and phone calls seeking comment.

The concerns reflect some of the problems U.S. regulators are having with the popular Chinese-owned short video app TikTok. China's surveillance state essentially controls every company in the country, leading to concerns that the Chinese Communist Party is siphoning user data for espionage purposes.

Republicans and Democrats have been debating whether to ban TikTok for years, citing concerns about identity theft in which the Chinese Communist Party collects “biometric identifiers” and search history of 170 million users in the United States. I'm concerned about the possibility.

rough treatment

In 2021, Trump resigned from office before taking any substantive action on TikTok.

(He settled for a forced sale to Oracle, a US company run by his friend Larry Ellison, which never materialized).

Joe Biden actually signed the ban on TikTok, which is scheduled to go into effect in January, the day before he leaves office.

Now that Trump is back in D.C., at least rhetorically, he is trying to reverse his initial hostility and win over the young voters who make up the core of his user base.

Trump sees Tik-Tok as the lesser of two evils in the social media space, which is partially dominated by Mark Zuckerberg's progressive and suppressing MAGA content Facebook. -Tok has a good chance of being pardoned. (Representatives for TikTok and the Trump transition team did not respond to requests for comment.)

Webull could face even harsher treatment from the new administration and the Republican-controlled House and Senate because of the type of information it may obtain from its customers.

Tik-Tok's alleged monitoring of biometric identifiers seems a little confusing.

On the other hand, opening a brokerage account clearly means handing over sensitive personal information, such as your Social Security number, which could be used in more nefarious spying schemes.

And Webull has opened a large number of U.S.-based brokerage accounts. Research from various sources shows that Robinhood controls the largest share of the free and low-commission brokerage market, while Webull has a large presence in the country.

Traders say the company offers fairly sophisticated investment tools, the analysis is sound, and the platform runs very seamlessly.

AG is investigating

Like TikTok, Webull denies misusing customer data, but U.S. officials are not convinced.

In April, Indiana's Red State AG, led by Todd Rokita, sent a letter to the company's lawyers demanding precise ownership details.

Mr. Rokita and his fellow prosecutors sent a second prosecutor on Oct. 9, claiming the company was obstructing the investigation.

“Webull’s June 2024 response reassures us that the company takes the data privacy of its U.S. customers seriously and that their personal data is not or could not be accessed by the Chinese Communist Party or China. It offers little reassurance. [People’s Republic of China]” said the letter, which was obtained by the Post.

“Indeed, important information was clearly omitted from Webull’s response, which raises a number of new questions and concerns.

Protecting the sensitive personal and financial data of our U.S. customers is extremely important, and to ensure that such data is not unauthorizedly disclosed or accessed by foreign parties, Webull Full cooperation with this investigation is essential. ”

In the past, Webull itself seemed vague about China's involvement in the company.

Anthony Denier, CEO of the company's U.S. division, told The Wall Street Journal in 2019 that Webull is “both a U.S. and a Chinese company.”

Rokita said in the letter that it is not sold in the United States.

“Webull appears to have an associated research and development facility (“R&D Facility”) located in Changsha, China, with several hundred employees.

“SEC filings indicate that the research and development facility may provide services and support to Webull's U.S. securities operations,” the letter states.

He added that Webull's initial response to the AG's investigation identified “at least 13 people identified on FINRA's Broker Check website as current or former registered representatives of Webull who are believed to be Chinese nationals based in Changsha, China. There was no mention of this person,” he added.

The newspaper has learned that Mr Wable asked whether he would have until December 11 to obtain the information he needed to be satisfied with Mr Rokita's letter.

A Rokita spokesperson said: “Even though they haven't answered us, we continue to put pressure on them.”

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