Thomas Eichelmann, a former chief financial officer of the
Frankfurt Stock Exchange, was elected by the supervisory board
after Chairman Wulf Matthias, 75, resigned for personal reasons,
Wirecard said in statement late on Friday.
Eichelmann, 54, was brought in last year and heads the audit
committee at Wirecard, which was founded during the first
internet boom and has grown to command a slot in Germany's DAX
blue-chip index.
The company has for years been a favorite target of short
sellers, who seek to profit from share-price falls resulting
from the release of negative information. It was hit a year ago
by allegations in the Financial Times that its Singapore office
made fake book-keeping entries to 'pad' its revenues.
In-house auditor EY investigated those claims and gave Wirecard
management a clean bill of health. The company denied the
allegations and sued the FT, which stands by its reporting.
Further allegations - including that the finance team sought to
inflate sales and profits at its units in Ireland and Dubai -
led Wirecard to hire KPMG last autumn to conduct an outside
audit that is expected to be completed by March.
A source close to the supervisory board has told Reuters that
the KPMG audit was supported by the entire board, and that it
had been given a mandate to investigate all allegations made by
the Financial Times.
Matthias, who joined as chairman in 2008, will remain a member
of the board, the company said.
German daily Handelsblatt reported last year Matthias would not
stand for a second term.
Wirecard last year struck a strategic partnership with Softbank
that has yielded payments cooperation deals with some of the
companies in the $100 billion Japanese venture fund's portfolio.
(Additional reporting by Bhargav Acharya in Bengaluru; Editing
by Aditya Soni and Jane Merriman)
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