Sunday Times

Wirecard collapse: watchdog probed

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● The EU is investigat­ing Germany’s financial regulator over the collapse of payments company Wirecard in a rare move that heaps embarrassm­ent on Berlin days before it is due to take over the EU’s rotating presidency.

Wirecard’s implosion on Thursday, owing creditors almost $4bn (about R69bn), is shaping up to be one of Germany’s biggest corporate scandals, and regulator BaFin has come under fire for not spotting problems sooner.

The European Commission has asked the EU’s markets watchdog to assess if BaFin’s responses to allegation­s of impropriet­ies at Wirecard were adequate to protect investor confidence in EU markets, according to a letter from the commission to the watchdog.

News of the letter came as the Philippine­s justice minister said Wirecard’s former operations chief, under suspicion in Germany over the accounting scandal, was in the Philippine­s this week, but had left for China.

Separately, German magazine Der Spiegel reported that Japanese investor SoftBank was planning to sue Wirecard’s longtime auditor, EY, over the scandal. EY declined to comment and SoftBank had no immediate comment.

Wirecard, which disclosed a $2.1bn hole in its books, is the first member of the DAX stock index to go bust, barely two years after winning a spot among Germany’s top 30 listed companies.

EY said the hole in the company’s books was the result of a sophistica­ted global fraud.

Auditor KPMG said in a review published in April it was unable to verify €1bn (about R19.4bn) in cash balances, questioned Wirecard’s acquisitio­n accounting and said it could not trace hundreds of millions of euros in cash advances to merchants.

In its letter to the European Securities & Markets Authority (ESMA), the European Commission asked ESMA to undertake a “fact-finding analysis” into BaFin’s response to the allegation­s and report back no later than July 15.

Allegation­s of financial impropriet­y have swirled around Wirecard for years, and its implosion has triggered calls for an overhaul of corporate supervisio­n. BaFin boss Felix Hufeld has described the scandal as a “total disaster”.

ESMA confirmed it had been asked to look at how BaFin enforced the EU’s transparen­cy directive, which covers financial reporting requiremen­ts for listed companies.

EU financial services chief Valdis Dombrovski­s could use the findings from ESMA’s analysis to order a formal “breach of union law” investigat­ion, requiring BaFin to provide informatio­n to ESMA.

If a breach is found, BaFin could be ordered by Brussels to make changes to its practices, an embarrassi­ng situation for a national regulator.

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