MEPs on the Economic and Monetary Affairs and Legal Affairs committees exchanged views with experts on lessons learned from the Wirecard collapse and shortcomings in supervision.
MEPs
quizzed Dan McCrum, Financial Times investigative journalist, Katja
Langenbucher, Professor at Goethe University Frankfurt, Daniela
Bergdolt, spokesperson for the Deutsche Schutzvereinigung für
Wertpapierbesitz e.V. (DWS) and Matthias Hauer, member of the Deutsche
Bundestag (MdB) and member of the Committee of Inquiry on Wirecard.
The Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON)
committee members focused their questions on changes that need to be
made to the supervisory and regulatory systems to address innovation and
technological changes in the financial sector. They underlined that
audit rules have to be revised in order to break the monopoly created by
the four major companies, address conflicts of interest, shorten the
rotation period for an audit company and introduce co-auditing. Numerous
members called for EU supervision to be enforced more effectively and
better implementation of the existing laws, in particular those on
anti-money laundering and banking supervision.
The Legal Affairs (JURI) committee
members addressed the need for a quality system that would allow
information on EU companies to be collected, focusing on those with new
business models. They stressed that smaller shareholders should be able
to initiate joint legal action and asked about collective redress rules
at EU level and how companies such as audit firms can held directly
liable for gross negligence. MEPs stressed that the whistle-blower
directive is being implemented at national level, but they wanted to
know whether it should be advanced, and whether the level of protection
provided for in the directive goes far enough.
MEPs from both committees asked numerous
questions about provisions that allow shareholders, supervisors and
journalists to access information. Referring to the harassment endured
by Mr McCrum, MEPs reiterated their commitment to protect journalists
and to provide them with the tools to do their job.
Dan McCrum focused on a series of grave
errors made by auditors who gave Wirecard a clean bill of health,
regulators who ignored whistle-blowers, investment banks that helped
Wirecard to raise capital, and finally investors who did not understand
or care about a business in which they were investing. Ms Langenbucher
underlined major weaknesses in the oversight system, such as lack of
enforcement and accountability as well as national bias. She stressed
that national supervisory agencies should be kept, but that they should
report to one EU hub. Ms Bergdolt spoke for smaller shareholders who
suffered damages. They should be able to take collective action and
organisations should be held accountable, she said. Finally, Mr Hauer
focused on steps to be taken in order to make auditing companies more
competitive, the need for increased liability for gross negligence, a
new organisational structure for financial supervisors with more
protection for consumers and a stronger role for whistle-blowers.
Background
Wirecard AG is a German FinTech company
that provided electronic payments processing services and operated
internationally. On 25 June 2020, Wirecard filed an application to open
insolvency proceedings. The insolvency follows the revelation of a
multiyear accounting fraud. The Financial Times (FT) has reported
inconsistencies in Wirecard accounting since 2015, and whistleblower
allegations of fraud followed in 2019. In June 2020, the company
announced that EUR 1.9 billion, supposedly held by an escrow account at
Singapore’s OCBC Bank, did not exist and the fraud was exposed.
ECON
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