Exclusive: German market watchdog bans staff from trades in wake of Wirecard

Reuters

Published Oct 01, 2020 01:11PM ET

BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's financial watchdog BaFin is banning its staff from trading shares and other securities of the companies that it oversees in the wake of the Wirecard (DE:WDIG) accounting scandal, a senior finance ministry official told Reuters.

German regulatory officials bought and sold Wirecard shares in ever higher volumes as the payments company edged towards collapse, the German government has revealed, prompting criticism of the agency that polices finance.

Deputy finance minister Joerg Kukies said the aim was to restrict the trading activities of BaFin employees so that they can make decisions free of conflicts of interest.

"This is a good and necessary step," Kukies said.

The finance ministry had disclosed that one fifth of BaFin staff had engaged in some kind of investment activity in 2019 and 2020, with an increasing interest in Wirecard in the months ahead of its collapse.

The ban affects not only shares, but also bonds and derivatives of the companies BaFin supervises, as well as all EU financial companies.