China’s Market Regulator Fines Luxshare and Wingtech Over Their Unwinding Deal
May 27, 2026 – 10:15 am
The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) has penalized Luxshare Precision Industry and Wingtech Technology for procedural violations related to their collapsed asset sale, reflecting Beijing’s increasingly stringent merger enforcement.
According to a Reuters report, the fine is the latest development in a deal that began as a forced divestment for Wingtech due to US sanctions and has since unraveled into an arbitration case. The transaction involved Wingtech selling its product assembly business to Luxshare for approximately 4.4-4.6 billion yuan ($630 million).
The deal immediately faced challenges, including the seizure of local manufacturing assets in India on national security grounds. Despite paying a significant upfront sum, Luxshare was unable to complete the transfer.
In January 2026, Luxshare initiated arbitration at the Singapore International Arbitration Center (SIAC) to unwind the Indian portion of the deal and recover its deposit. Wingtech has counterclaimed, arguing that Luxshare’s termination attempt constitutes a breach.
SAMR’s fine focuses on the procedural integrity of the deal rather than its competitive implications. China’s amended Anti-Monopoly Law gives SAMR expanded powers to penalize merger control breaches, including notifications failures ("gun-jumping"), with fines reaching up to 10% of a party’s prior year turnover.
The wider context is one of increasing regulatory scrutiny. SAMR has recently shown a more assertive stance on deals that fall below formal notification thresholds but are deemed consequential. The Luxshare-Wingtech fine reinforces this trend and serves as a warning to other Chinese electronics companies facing pressure from US sanctions. It also highlights the challenges faced by companies attempting forced divestments under such circumstances, without assuming relaxed regulatory scrutiny due to geopolitical context.