The Borneo Post

Germany bans speculativ­e attacks on Wirecard stock

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: German and European financial market watchdogs ordered a ban on short-selling shares in payment processing firm Wirecard, sending the stock price soaring after a weeks-long rollercoas­ter ride over fraud allegation­s.

In Bonn, market supervisor Bafin said in a statement that it issued a decree “forbidding the establishm­ent of new net shortselli­ng positions in Wirecard AG shares or to increase existing net short- selling positions” for two months.

Short-sellers borrow shares, sell them on the market and later buy them back.

If the price of the shares has fallen, the difference in price is profit for the short-seller, making the practice in essence a bet on falling stock prices.

In a separate statement, the European Securities and Markets Authority ( ESMA) backed Bafin’s move, saying Wirecard’s woes were “a serious threat to market confidence in Germany” to which the ban was an “appropriat­e and proportion­ate” response.

Munich- based Wirecard said in a statement that it welcomed “all measures” by regulators that contribute to “quickly clearing up” the matter.

The financial wunderkind’s troubles over the past three weeks are all traceable back to allegation­s of fraud in its Singapore office.

A series of investigat­ive articles in the Financial Times ( FT) alleged accounting trickery to pad the books in the firm’s Asian operations.

Wirecard has called the allegation­s “defamatory” and said it plans legal action against the British newspaper.

Meanwhile Bafin and Munich prosecutor­s have launched investigat­ions into market manipulati­on in relation to the reports.

Senior Munich prosecutor Anne Leiding told AFP Monday that “we have one concrete criminal complaint against a Financial Times journalist”, while another potential investor claimed to have known in advance of an upcoming FT article on Wirecard.

“Any allegation against the FT or any of its reporters or staff of market manipulati­on or unethical reporting in relation to Wirecard is baseless and false,” a spokeswoma­n for the financial daily said.

It is far from the first time Wirecard – a puzzle to many investors thanks to its complex business model – has been subject to attacks by short- sellers, with previous episodes in 2008 and 2014 also linked to fraud allegation­s.

The firm was launched in 1999 as a processor for electronic payments, at a time when major banks were ignoring the field and the embryonic financial technology or ‘ fintech’ scene. — AFP

 ??  ?? A man walks past the Wirecard booth at the computer games fair Gamescom in Cologne, Germany. — Reuters photo
A man walks past the Wirecard booth at the computer games fair Gamescom in Cologne, Germany. — Reuters photo

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