KEY POINTS
  • The Wirecard accounting scandal has raised fresh questions about corporate governance, with some experts calling it the "Enron of Germany."
  • German financial regulator BaFin has come under fire for its handling of the situation, with the government now calling for regulatory reform.
  • There are also questions about why EY, Wirecard's auditor, didn't pick up on accounting irregularities that date back years.
The Wirecard logo is seen at the payment company's headquarters in Aschheim near Munich, southern Germany, on June 24, 2020.

Wirecard's dramatic fall from grace has thrust corporate governance and industry regulation in Germany firmly in the spotlight.

The Munich-based payments processor filed for insolvency on Thursday, reportedly owing creditors 3.5 billion euros ($3.9 billion). The company's collapse follows a series of investigative reports from the Financial Times into claims about accounting irregularities.