Business Standard

Wirecard’s India deal started with fraud: UK judges

- JONATHAN BROWNING 1 March BLOOMBERG

A series of controvers­ial deals that took place before Wirecard AG purchased an Indian business appeared to be an “evolving internatio­nal fraud”, a panel of London judges has said.

The transactio­ns in 2015 are being scrutinise­d in courts in London and Chennai, with the former minority holders of Hermes I-tickets saying they were cheated of millions of dollars. They allege that they were duped into selling their stake in the business to the company’s majority shareholde­rs only to see it sold on again at a vastly inflated price to Wirecard.

On Monday, UK appellate judges said that the minority shareholde­rs were right to be suspicious of the “substantia­l” misreprese­ntations told by one of the purchasers as they overturned part of a lower court ruling.

“It was a continuing fraud because of the concerns and suspicions of the” minority shareholde­rs, the judges said.

While much of the attention on Wirecard’s demise focuses on Germany, the UK court case has shed light on the complexity of the task facing investigat­ors trying to decipher some of the company’s overseas transactio­ns. Hermes was sold at a valuation of $40 million, before being acquired by Wirecard for more than $250 million.

Wirecard isn’t part of the suit, but former Chief Financial Officer Jan Marsalek — who is now a fugitive — played a key role negotiatin­g the purchase of Hermes, said the judges.

The lower court ruling failed to properly take into account the “substantia­l” falsehoods told by brothers Ramu and Palaniyapa­n Ramasamy, the former majority shareholde­rs of Hermes, the judges added.

A lawyer for the Ramasamys didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Minority holders of Hermes I-tickets say they were duped into selling their stake to majority shareholde­rs, only to see it sold on again at a vastly inflated price to Wirecard
PHOTO: REUTERS Minority holders of Hermes I-tickets say they were duped into selling their stake to majority shareholde­rs, only to see it sold on again at a vastly inflated price to Wirecard

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