Accounting Fraud in History
Accounting Fraud in History
Accounting Fraud in History
In early 2019, The Financial Times had an interview with a whistleblower who
claimed that Wirecard had been manipulating sales transactions to increase
profits and that there had been an anomaly in accounting procedures. The
fabricated financial figures caused the company's stock price to rise, increasing
its valuation to $28 billion. In a statement released on Monday, the IT company's
board said that after "further examination," it is "preponderantly likely" that the
€1.9 billion ($2.1 billion) in cash that was supposed to be in its accounts does not
exist. But according to Wirecard the two major Philippine banks, BPI and BDO,
have received the funds. The banks and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas denied
this, claiming that the cash never entered the country's financial system, as
stated by BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno. On Thursday, June 18, 2020, Ernst &
Young, the auditors, verified this, saying they were unable to find 1.9 billion euros
in cash that was supposed to be in trustee accounts at two Philippine banks.
Der Spiegel, a German news organization, claims that Mark Tolentino, a Filipino
lawyer, is the trustee accountable for the lost money. Tolentino, however, refuted
this, claiming he was unaware of the Wirecard scam and was the victim of
identity theft. One of the BPI's workers was suspended while an inquiry into the
bank was conducted. A fake document about the claimed deposits to the bank is
said to have been signed by the employee. The Philippines National Bureau of
Investigation filed a complaint on May 31, 2021, alleging that Filipino trustee
Mark Tolentino and Wirecard COO Jan Marsalek committed accounting fraud
worth $2.5 billion and broke both the New Central Bank Act and the Cybercrime
Prevention Act. They were also accused of forging paperwork related to the
Cybercrime Prevention Act.
Wirecard faces now multiple investigations into its accounting practices and at
the end of September the company faced an outstanding debt of 1.8 billion euros
and filed for insolvency. Munich prosecutors had already opened an inquiry into
Braun and other senior board members for "market manipulation" after they
published revisions of the KPMG audit results of their previous accounts. This
event was considered the biggest accounting scandal in European history.
References
France-Presse, A. (2020, June 25). 5 things to know about the Wirecard scandal.
https://www.rappler.com/business/264874-explainer-things-to-know-wirecard-sca
ndal/
Riley, C. (2020, June 22). Wirecard says missing $2 billion never existed. Its stock is
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/22/tech/wirecard-missing-money/index.html
Rivas, R. (2021, June 4). NBI files complaint vs Wirecard execs for $2.1-billion
https://www.rappler.com/business/nbi-files-complaint-vs-wirecard-accounting-frau
d-june-2021/
Taub, B. (2023, February 27). How the Biggest Fraud in German History Unravelled.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2023/03/06/how-the-biggest-fraud-in-germ
an-history-unravelled
Wirecard says €1.9bn of cash is missing. (2020, June 18). Financial Times.
https://www.ft.com/content/1e753e2b-f576-4f32-aa19-d240be26e773