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Wirecard says missing US$2.1B likely did not exist

German firm auditor EY refuses to sign off accounts

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MUNICH: Scandal-hit German payments firm Wirecard AG yesterday said a quarter of

€1.9bil its assets totalling (Us$2.13bil) that auditor EY has been unable to account for likely did not exist in the first place.

The company, whose stock has plummeted 75% since EY refused to sign off its 2019 accounts last week, also said it has withdrawn its preliminar­y 2019 and first-quarter 2020 financial results as well as forecasts.

“The management board of Wirecard assesses on the basis of further examinatio­n that there is a prevailing likelihood that the bank trust account balances in the amount of 1.9 billion EUR do not exist,” the company said in a statement.

The developmen­t comes after chief executive officer Markus Braun quit on Friday with the company scrambling to secure a financial lifeline from its banks, while its search for the money hit a dead end in the Philippine­s.

The Philippine central bank said none of the money appeared to have entered the country, after Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) and BDO Unibank Inc said documents purporting to show Wirecard had deposited funds with them were false. Both said Wirecard was not a client.

BPI, however, told Reuters it had suspended an assistant manager whose signature appeared on one of the fraudulent documents. BDO told the central bank one of its marketing officers appeared to have fabricated a bank certificat­e.

“The central bank is actually doing its own investigat­ion,” Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas governor Benjamin Diokno told channel ANC yesterday. “To the extent we are very strict on knowing our clients, I think we should also be strict in knowing the officers of the bank.”

Munich-based Wirecard has been lauded as a home-grown fintech success and was propelled into Germany’s blue-chip DAX index in 2018 at the expense of Commerzban­k AG.

On Thursday, it said auditor EY refused to sign off its 2019 accounts as it was unable to confirm the existence of 1.9 billion euros in cash balances in trust accounts, representi­ng about a quarter of Wirecard’s balance sheet.

EY had regularly approved Wirecard’s accounts in recent years, and its refusal to sign off for 2019 confirmed failings found in an external investigat­ion by KPMG in April, which in turn followed probing reports by the Financial Times.

Wirecard, which has long been a target of short sellers questionin­g its financials, on Friday said it may be the victim of “fraud of considerab­le proportion­s”.

Yesterday, it said it is examining a range of measures to ensure continued operations, including cost reduction, restructur­ing, disposal or terminatio­n of business units. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? Scandal hit: The entrance to the headquarte­rs of fintech company Wirecard in Aschheim,
€1.9bil southern Germany. Wirecard admitted that auditors say are missing from its accounts likely ‘did not exist’, fuelling fraud suspicions that saw its CEO resign.
— AFP Scandal hit: The entrance to the headquarte­rs of fintech company Wirecard in Aschheim, €1.9bil southern Germany. Wirecard admitted that auditors say are missing from its accounts likely ‘did not exist’, fuelling fraud suspicions that saw its CEO resign.

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