Famed short-seller Jim Chanos reportedly made $100 million betting against collapsed fintech Wirecard

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Famed short-seller Jim Chanos reportedly made $100 million betting against collapsed fintech Wirecard
Jim ChanosCNBC/Getty
  • Famed short-seller Jim Chanos made $100 million by betting against Wirecard since last year, the Financial Times reported on Friday.
  • He increased his short bets against the German fintech group after the Financial Times launched a public investigation into the company, the paper reported.
  • "If you're a fundamental short-seller, the Wirecard story was a classic," Chanos told the FT.
  • "The buzzwords, the numbers that didn't make sense, the business model that seemingly didn't make sense."
  • Wirecard's troubles deepened this week when ex-CEO Markus Braun was arrested for a second time in Germany on Wednesday.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
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Billionaire short-seller Jim Chanos has reportedly made almost $100 million by betting against the controversial German fintech Wirecard.

Chanos, who made his name forecasting the downfall of US energy giant Enron, carried out the successful trade through several funds managed by his own New York-based investment management firm Kynikos Associates, according to the Financial Times.

The short-seller started building a short position against Wirecard in 2019, and reportedly increased his bets following the FT's investigation, which exposed problems with the company's balance sheet, including a missing $2.2 billion.

"If you're a fundamental short-seller, the Wirecard story was a classic," he told the FT in an interview. "The buzzwords, the numbers that didn't make sense, the business model that seemingly didn't make sense."

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"When people ask, who were the auditors, I always say 'Who cares?' Almost every fraud has been audited by a major accounting firm."

Chanos said that in April, a further indicator of Wirecard's impending downfall came up when its forensic audit with KPMG blundered.

Following several allegations of market manipulation and accounting fraud, Wirecard became one of the biggest targets for short-sellers across Europe

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Two other hedge funds including billionaire Chris Hohn's TCI Fund Management and Paul Marshall's Marshall Wace together made over 1 billion euros ($1.2 billion) from shorting Wirecard in a single week in June.

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Wirecard is at the centre of a long-running investigation by German prosecutors into allegations of fraud at the fintech firm.

It filed for insolvency after revealing that 1.9 billion euros ($2 billion) was likely missing from its balance sheet. Former CEO Markus Braun was arrested for the second time along with other detained executives on Wednesday.

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