The sale of Wirecard’s businesses will be clouded by ongoing probes into its operations after the German payments firm was forced into insolvency by an accounting scandal. Wirecard said last month that almost 2 billion euros ($3.14 billion) it previously reported as cash probably never existed.
However, several Wirecard’s subsidiaries -- including those in Asia -- weren’t part of the insolvency filing. The firm’s administrators have said the assets are attracting interest from many global investors and a sale process involving investment banks is on the way.
Pine Labs is potentially interested in Wirecard’s regional point-of-sale business, which handles merchants’ payments transactions, one of the people said. That is Pine Labs’ core business in India, and any acquisition of Wirecard assets would allow it to expand those operations further in Southeast Asia, the person added.
Pine Labs Chief Executive Officer Amrish Rau declined to comment in an emailed response to questions from Bloomberg News.
Singapore is home to Wirecard’s Asia-Pacific headquarters and the company has been expanding aggressively in the region, which accounted for almost 45% of the group’s reported revenue in 2018, second only to Europe. In the city state, the fintech firm is facing probes by the Monetary Authority of Singapore, the local accounting authority and the police’s financial-crime unit.
Pine Labs, founded by Lokvir Kapoor, processes $30 billion of payments a year and serves some 140,000 merchants via 450,000 network points, according to the company’s website. Incorporated in Singapore, the company counts Temasek Holdings Pte and PayPal Holdings Inc. among its other key investors.