KEY POINTS
  • German payments firm Wirecard said it was assessing the "prevailing likelihood" that the missing cash balances flagged by auditor EY "do not exist."
  • The search for the missing cash seemed to hit a dead-end after the Philippines' central bank said the money hadn't entered the country.
  • Wirecard's latest statement is yet another troubling revelation as the firm fights for survival amid a deepening accounting scandal.

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The lettering of the payment service provider Wirecard can be seen on a laptop screen

Wirecard shares are once again in free fall on Monday after the German payments firm said it was likely that 1.9 billion euros ($2.1 billion) of cash missing from its balance sheet doesn't exist.

The Munich-based company said it was assessing the "prevailing likelihood" that unaccounted cash balances flagged by auditors at EY last week "do not exist." The lost funds represent roughly a quarter of Wirecard's balance sheet.

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