Crypto card provider Wirecard kept up fraud during investigations
Even while under investigation, the abandoned payments company Wirecard—which serviced several crypto debit cards—continued cash handouts that would destroy the company.
That’s according to new details released by the Financial
Times, who found that approximately €155 million ($180 million) were paid out
as unsecured loans in the first three months of 2020.
According to a timeline provided by the Financial Times,
global accounting firm KPMG had been investigating Wirecard since October of
2019.
The investigation looked into whether Wirecard executives
were willfully defrauding company investors, precipitating a spectacular
collapse that proved a substantial setback for digital asset businesses
intending to work with Wirecard to provide Visa-like crypto debit card
products.
Wirecard came under investigation by the Financial Times as
early as 2015, and internal investigations in Wirecard Singapore offices kicked
off in March 2018.
Wirecard shares peaked in value in August 2018. The
following two years saw a roller coaster of cash infusions and increasing
scrutiny from regulators and auditors, until Wirecard admitted in June 2020
that more than $2 billion was missing that had been recorded in the company’s
financial statements.
Documents received by the Financial Times indicate that
loans in early 2020 included more than $115 million paid to Ocap, a mysterious
Singapore-based shell company that had already failed to repay previous
Wirecard loans by the end of 2019. Ocap was previously run by a former Wirecard
executive, whose wife served in a senior position at the company when the 2020
loans were extended.
The collapse of Wirecard created issues for customers of
crypto debit card firms TenX and Crypto.com in the UK and mainland Europe,
preventing them from adding value to the cards. Service was restored for some
customers when Wirecard was authorized to resume regulated activity several
days later.
The Financial Times found that Wirecard also made loans
worth more than $45 million to a second Singapore-based company, Ruprecht
Services.
Loans were allegedly made as pre-payments to card payment
processing partners to whom Wirecard outsourced work outside their financial
jurisdiction. By March 2020, more than $1 billion had been loaned to Asia-based
partners found to be highly suspicious or outright fraudulent companies.
The Wirecard collapse was a serious blow to the European
fintech sector and caused untold millions in losses for investors and
customers. But it also serves as a warning to crypto enthusiasts interacting
with the traditional financial system, reminding us that without verification,
fraud can lurk in places few expect to find it.
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