Deutsche Bank mulls support for Wirecard's banking unit

Wirecard Bank could be valuable to a potential acquirer because of its relationship with credit card companies

ASCHHEIM, GERMANY - JULY 01: General view of the corporate headquarters of payments processor Wirecard on July 1, 2020 in Aschheim, Germany. According to media reports state investigators are searching Wirecard offices as well as the residence in Vienna of Wirecard CEO Markus Braun. The company recently declared bankruptcy and its executives are being investigated for fraud. (Photo by Lennart Preiss/Getty Images)
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Deutsche Bank is weighing whether to help the banking unit of failed German payments company Wirecard, potentially throwing the business a lifeline after one of the biggest corporate scandals in recent years.

The Frankfurt-based lender is in touch with German regulator BaFin, the insolvency administrator and Wirecard Bank’s management board on possible further steps, a Deutsche Bank spokesman said by e-mail, without elaborating further on the nature of the potential aid.

Deutsche Bank had informal tie-up talks with the scandal-hit FinTech last Spring and isn’t ruling out buying all or part of the bank. Wirecard Bank - which sat at the heart of the firm - could be valuable to a potential acquirer because of its relationship with credit card companies Visa, Mastercard and JCB International, which are also key to other parts of Wirecard.

Wirecard filed for insolvency last week after saying that almost €2 billion ($2.25bn/Dh8.2bn) it previously reported as cash probably never existed, throwing the future of its banking and others businesses into doubt. The company faces a potential avalanche of lawsuits and former chief executive Markus Braun was arrested, though is now out on bail.

While Wirecard Bank isn’t part of the bankruptcy proceedings, the parent ceded control of funds last week after the financial regulator stepped in to prevent the money from being deployed elsewhere.

“We are currently reviewing the possibility of providing Wirecard Bank with financial support,” Deutsche Bank said. “We are in principle prepared to provide this support in the context of a continuation of business operations, if such assistance should become necessary.”

Insolvency administrator Michael Jaffe said on Wednesday that the assets he’s trying to sell are attracting interest from numerous investors. He didn’t say whether he intends to sell Wirecard Bank as well, though said the lender remains solvent.

To fuel its growth, Wirecard had been paying depositors attractive interest at a time when traditional banks increasingly started to pass on negative rates. This year, it began offering a 0.75 per cent interest rate through its Boon app, betting that more deposits will translate into more payments through its systems and lucrative contracts with stores and online merchants.

In addition to the earlier talks on a possible tie-up, the two financial firms had others links. Deutsche Bank is part of a lending group of 15 banks that together are owed about €1.6bn, Bloomberg has reported. Chief executive Christian Sewing has been trying to shift the lender away from its reliance on trading income toward a focus on processing payments for companies, and he’s made the division responsible for the business - known as Corporate Bank - the centerpiece of his large restructuring plan.

Mr Sewing has focused tech investment on the corporate bank but he has also said that the division is being challenged by the low interest-rate environment it’s operating in.

The collapse of Wirecard has prompted criticism of regulators and soul-searching among Germany’s elite grappling for answers over the failure of what was once one of its most lauded companies. BaFin president Felix Hufeld has acknowledged that his institution is among those to blame for not catching the irregularities, which he referred to as “massive fraud” on Thursday in Frankfurt.