Futu Holdings (FUTU) Faces Class Action Filed by Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman
Investor-rights law firm Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman, LLC has filed a class action lawsuit against Futu Holdings Limited (NASDAQ: FUTU) and certain of its officers, alleging investor harm. The New York firm, which describes itself as nationally recognized in the investor-rights space, announced the action on July 2, 2026. The lawsuit seeks to recover damages on behalf of Futu Holdings investors.
Investor-rights law firm Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman, LLC has filed a class action lawsuit against Futu Holdings Limited (NASDAQ: FUTU) and certain of its officers, alleging investor harm. The New York firm, which describes itself as nationally recognized in the investor-rights space, announced the action on July 2, 2026. The lawsuit seeks to recover damages on behalf of Futu Holdings investors.
What the Filing Targets
The complaint names Futu Holdings Limited — the Nasdaq-listed online brokerage and wealth management platform — along with certain of its officers as defendants. Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman framed the action as seeking relief for investor harm, though the truncated press release does not specify the class period, the precise legal theory, or the categories of alleged misconduct at issue. No dollar figures, loss estimates, or named individual defendants were disclosed in the announcement.
Who Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman Is
Bronstein, Gewirtz & Grossman, LLC is a law firm that identifies itself as focused on investor rights and class action litigation on behalf of shareholders. The firm is based in New York. Its July 2 announcement urged Futu Holdings investors to act, a standard call-to-action in securities class action notices that typically signals an invitation for affected shareholders to seek lead-plaintiff status before a court-imposed deadline.
What Investors Should Watch For
Securities class actions against companies listed on U.S. exchanges require investors who wish to participate to file a motion for lead plaintiff within a window set by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act — typically 60 days from the first published notice. Futu Holdings investors who believe they suffered losses in the relevant period should consult legal counsel to evaluate standing and timing. No court has adjudicated the merits of these allegations, and neither Futu Holdings nor its officers have been found liable. The company had not issued a public response as of the announcement date.
Related reading
Filed by the macro desk of MarketPR on July 2, 2026. Source: MarketPR. Indicative figures are not investment advice.