Key Words: German finance minister on Wirecard oversight — ‘the supervisory institutions did their job’

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If you think the German establishment might be feeling red-faced about the implosion of payment processing giant Wirecard, think again.

Olaf Scholz, the German finance minister, spoke to the Frankfurt Financial Summit and wasn’t apologetic, according to Reuters.

“I think the supervisory institutions worked very hard and they did their job — this is what we see today.”

— Olaf Scholz

Longstanding observers of the WDI, -33.41% situation disagree.

Wirecard last week said its auditor, Ernst & Young, couldn’t find €1.9 billion of cash on its balance sheet, and on Monday the company conceded the money probably was never there in the first place.

The stock has dropped 84% since last week’s revelation.

After the Financial Times ran a series of stories alleging Wirecard overstated profit and sales at subsidiaries in October, the financial regulator BaFin implemented a short selling ban that ended up lasting two months.

It also filed a criminal complaint against two Financial Times journalists.

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