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						Wirecard says probes find no evidence of criminal 
						misconduct
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		 [February 04, 2019]   
		By Douglas Busvine and John Geddie 
 FRANKFURT/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Wirecard 
		and its law firm said on Monday that they had found no conclusive 
		evidence of criminal misconduct by any employee of the company, after 
		the Financial Times last week alleged financial wrongdoing at its 
		Singapore office.
 
 The response lifted shares in the German payments firm by 15 percent at 
		the market open, partly reversing losses of 40 percent last week that 
		were triggered by the FT's allegations of forgery and falsification of 
		accounts.
 
 Munich-based Wirecard had initially dismissed the two FT reports on 
		Wednesday and Friday as "inaccurate, misleading and defamatory".
 
 It issued a more detailed response on Monday, saying that a member of 
		its Singapore team had in April 2018 raised concerns about the alleged 
		actions of a finance team member there.
 
 The company then started an investigation, which found no evidence to 
		support the allegations. "Furthermore, there were indications that the 
		allegations could be related to personal animosity between the employees 
		involved," the company said.
 
		
		 
		
 Wirecard hired Singaporean law firm Rajah & Tann for a review which is 
		about to be completed, but which has so far not found evidence of 
		criminal misconduct, the electronic payments company said.
 
 Rajah & Tann, in a statement, confirmed that it had sent a letter to 
		Wirecard on Feb. 3 which stated that its inquiry was ongoing. "To date 
		we have made no conclusive findings of criminal misconduct on the part 
		of any officer or employee of the company," said the letter, posted on 
		Wirecard's website.
 
 Singaporean police on Monday said they were looking into the reports of 
		alleged financial irregularities.
 
 SHORT SELLERS' FAVORITE
 
 Wirecard, founded in 1999, has been a perennial target for speculative 
		short sellers - market players who seek to profit from falls in a 
		company's share price - who have questioned its accounting methods and 
		rapid international expansion.
 
 These speculative attacks have caused huge volatility in Wirecard's 
		stock, though its share price has rebounded repeatedly, with the company 
		last year entering the blue-chip DAX index.
 
		
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			People walk past the Wirecard booth at the computer games fair 
			Gamescom in Cologne, Germany, August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Wolfgang 
			Rattay 
            
			 
These allegations have not, however, led to any investigations of the company by 
Germany's financial regulator or state prosecutors. Instead, prosecutors are 
investigating the short sellers on suspicion of market manipulation.
 The Munich state prosecutor's office on Friday said it had found no evidence of 
the alleged wrongdoing reported by the FT.
 
 Most sell-side analysts are bullish on Wirecard, with 10 out of 28 rating the 
stock a 'strong buy' and a further 13 a 'buy', according to Refinitiv data. 
Their median price target is 208 euros - 70 percent above where the stock was 
trading after it bounced on Monday.
 
 Wirecard said in its statement that the allegations by the Singapore staffer 
related to potential compliance breaches between 2015 and 2018.
 
These related to revenues of 6.9 million euros ($7.9 million) and costs of 4.1 
million, as well as an internal transfer of intellectual property worth 2.6 
million.
 Markus Braun, the CEO of Wirecard and its largest shareholder with a 7 percent 
stake, played down the latest allegations as a "non-story".
 
 "We have examined everything," he told the Handelsblatt business daily in an 
interview.
 
 "There is no risk. We did not have to make any corrections or adjustments to our 
accounts."
 
 Wirecard reported on Jan. 30 that its fourth-quarter revenues grew by 40 percent 
and core earnings by 37 percent, and confirmed its guidance for profits of 740 
million-800 million euros ($847-$916 million) this year.
 
 Wirecard is set to hold a conference call on Monday at 1300 CET (1200 GMT/2000 
Singapore time).
 
 ($1 = 0.8735 euros)
 
 (Additional reporting by Aradhana Aravindan in Singapore and Arno Schuetze in 
Frankfurt; editing by Jason Neely and Keith Weir)
 
				 
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