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Commerzbank sues EY over €200 million Wirecard loss

Commerzbank is suing EY for the recovery of €200 million in losses from the collapse of disgraced German payments firm Wirecard.

1 comment

Commerzbank sues EY over €200 million Wirecard loss

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

Wirecard was a rising blue chip star before its implosion following the discovery of a gaping €1.9 billion hole in its balance sheet.

Wirecard had a credit facility of €200 million with Commerzbank, of which about 90% was drawn at the time of its undoing. ING, ABN Amro Bank and Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg all had a similar exposures.

As a court case against Wireccard executives proceeds in Munich, fingers have been pointed at EY, the accounting firm which for ten years approved Wirecard's books, even as red flags about the company's financial position were being raised by journalists.

Speaking on the Commerzbank suit an EY spokesperson told Reuters: "Claims against EY for damages do not hold up. EY assumes that the courts will also uphold this position."

EY lost several big audit mandates in Germany, including Commerzbank, DWS and KfW, in the wake of the Wirecard scandal and is preparing to cut 40 partners and shed 380 staff in a bid to stem the damage.

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Comments: (1)

Ketharaman Swaminathan Founder and CEO at GTM360 Marketing Solutions

Ten years? OMG.

I know the Netflix TV Series THE KONG OF STONKS is "not about Wirecard" but I never got the impression while watching it that the German payments tech company featured in the show was able to carry out its shenanigans for as long as 10 years!

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