Wu Chaoming, a researcher with the People’s Bank of China, and Sun Zhen, a former secretary in China’s national statistics bureau, had allegedly been leaking data related to China’s gross domestic product, inflation, fixed-asset investment, money supply and credit figures to 15 people in the securities industry for nearly two years, said Li Zhongcheng, a state prosecutor in Beijing on Monday. The pair was sentenced to six and five years in prison respectively, based on charges that they had acted in exchange for payments and favours from brokerages that allegedly used the information to predict domestic equity and bond market movements before official data releases. Four securities industry officials were also being held for questioning at press time.
According to Li, the punishments had been the toughest measures ever taken by the government so far in a campaign designed to stop selective disclosures that undermine China’s stock markets and give an unfair edge to some investors.
“A message is being sent as a deterrent,” said Sean Callow, a Sydney-based senior currency strategist at Westpac Banking Corp in an interview with Bloomberg. “It’s for anyone who doubts the seriousness with which the issue is being taken.”