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"I have no intention to step down at this moment because my responsibility is to fix this company," Takayama said. He acknowledged a possibility that Olympus may have to face delisting from the Tokyo Stock Exchange over the scandal. The camera and medical equipment maker had denied wrongdoing over the $687 million payment to the Wall Street financial adviser as part of a $2 billion purchase of U.K.-based Gyrus Group Plc. The payment represented more than a third of the acquisition price. Fees for advisers are normally 1 to 2 percent of the deal value. The company was to announce its latest earnings report Tuesday but has postponed it until later this month. Woodford, the former Olympus CEO whose revelations triggered the scandal, has turned over documents to the U.K. Serious Fraud Office. The FBI is also reportedly investigating. Woodford, a British national, has said he was dismissed because he questioned the $687 million fee as well as the prices Olympus paid for three small money-losing Japanese companies between 2006 and 2008. Olympus wrote down more than three quarters of their value in fiscal year ended March 2009.
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