Wirecard says it will continue operating despite filing for insolvency
German payments provider Wirecard said on Saturday (June 27)
that it would continue to operate despite filing for insolvency following a
vast accounting fraud scandal.
The group admitted this week that €1.9 billion (S$2.97
billion) missing from its accounts likely does not exist, in a spiralling saga
that has stunned Germany and evoked memories of the Enron scandal in the United
States.
Just hours after Wirecard opened insolvency proceedings at a
court in Munich on Thursday, auditing company EY accused the company of
carrying out an "elaborate and sophisticated fraud" across the world
"with a deliberate aim of deception".
But on Saturday, the group said its business activities
"will be continued".
"The management board is of the opinion that
continuation is in the best interests of the creditors," it said in a
statement.
"With the exception of a small development branch
office, no insolvency applications have been filed by Group companies at
present."
Payments for merchants of the firm's banking arm, Wirecard
Bank, "will continue to be executed without restrictions", it added.
The insolvency filing did not include the Wirecard Bank
unit, which holds an estimated €1.4 billion in deposits and is already under
emergency management by BaFin, the German banking regulator.
The firm is also "in constant contact with the credit
card organisations", the statement said.
Credit card giants Visa and Mastercard are considering
cutting ties with Wirecard, according to a Bloomberg report.
Britain's financial watchdog FCA meanwhile has frozen
Wirecard's operations there to protect its users' funds.
The hundreds of thousands of users of British subsidiary
Wirecard Card Solutions have lost access to their funds, with some taking to
Twitter to express their dismay.
Wirecard said it was in talks with the FCA about Wirecard
Card Solutions and was hopeful that it will implement measures that allow it to
resume operations.
Wirecard's former CEO Markus Braun was detained last week on
suspicion of falsifying accounts before being released on bail.
The group's statement said that interim CEO James Freis
"took a new approach to investigating the known allegations immediately
upon taking office" on Monday.
"A number of new advisers were commissioned to ensure
neutrality," it said.
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