A law firm probe into fraud charges in Wirecard’s Asian subsidiary found no “criminal liability” in the firm’s head office (Christof STACHE)

Berlin (AFP) – Stocks in German payment processing firm Wirecard leapt Tuesday following the publication of a legal report which dismissed accusations of corruption and played down the financial impact of suspicious transactions.

By 1530 GMT, shares in the Munich-based firm were up 24.85 percent to 123.60 euros, helping push the DAX up 0.63 percent, after the report found no evidence of “criminal liability” in the firm’s German headquarters.

The surge reduced Wildcard’s stock price loss to seven percent since January 1 following a disastrous start to the year fuelled by a series of negative media reports.

In a statement Wirecard said the investigation conducted by Singaporean law firm Rajah & Tann into charges of fraud in the fintech’s Asian subsidiary had not found any “inaccuracies with material impact on the financial reports”.

Several sums — 2.5 million euros ($2.8 million) in 2017 and three million euros in 2018 — were “poorly recorded in the balance sheet”, but this was corrected later, said Wirecard.

The investigation’s report also did not “find any case of corruption or round-tripping” — a business strategy to sell assets to another business to be bought back at a later date, which can boost balance sheets artificially. 

The Rajah & Tann report released by Wirecard found no “criminal liability” in the firm’s head office but said “some local employees” could be held criminally responsible under Singapore law.

A local police investigation is ongoing in the city-state.

Wirecard, the rising star of Germany’s finance sector, was shaken by a series of Financial Times articles earlier this year accusing the Bavarian company of making false accounting entries in the Asian region.

As a result, nine billion euros was wiped off the company’s value on the stock market, prompting BaFin, which supervises Germany’s financial markets, to issue a temporary ban on negative speculation on Wirecard.

The firm was hailed as an early success story on the fintech scene when it started in 1999, providing electronic payment services, a niche then ignored by major German banks.

The company expanded with the boom of online commerce, ensuring the settlement of transactions to help professional customers such as airlines and online pharmacies.

Disclaimer: This story is published from a syndicated feed. Siliconeer does not assume any liability for the above story. Validity of the above story is for 7 Days from original date of publishing. Content copyright AFP.