Inside the Financial Times investigation that took five years and nearly destroyed the reporter who exposed Wirecard

Five years. €1.9bn in cash that turned out not to exist. One DAX 30 listing wiped out in a week. Behind those numbers sits a single Financial Times reporter, Dan McCrum, who spent half a decade being followed, hacked, smeared as a market manipulator, and threatened with criminal prosecution by the German state, for being right.

By the time Wirecard collapsed in June 2020, McCrum had been investigated by BaFin, surveilled by private intelligence operatives, and warned that travelling to Munich could expose him to arrest. The Munich prosecutor’s office had a file open on him. His own phone was sending emails he had not written.

He kept filing.

Financial Times newsroom London

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The tip that wouldn’t go away

The story arrived as a tip, routed to McCrum through a hedge fund contact who told him to look at a German payments company most people in London had never heard of. McCrum was an Alphaville blogger at the time, working inside the FT‘s markets desk, which had a habit of calling out accounting oddities long before the wider press noticed. He started writing about Wirecard in a series titled The House of Wirecard.

The first posts were technical. Cash flows that did not match reported profits. Acquisitions in places like Mauritius and the Philippines where due diligence was difficult. A pattern of revenue parked in offshore partners that auditors struggled to pin down.

Wirecard’s response was immediate and ferocious. Short sellers were briefed against. Anonymous bloggers attacked McCrum by name. German retail investors, many of whom had piled into the stock as it surged past €100, then €150, then €190, flooded the FT‘s comment sections accusing him of running a coordinated short attack.

The story should have died there. Most do.

The fortress closes ranks

What McCrum had stumbled into was not a normal corporate fraud. It was a fraud the German establishment had decided, for a long time, to treat as an attack on a national champion rather than as a warning about one.

BaFin, the country’s financial regulator, did not begin by exposing Wirecard. It investigated the people raising questions. After McCrum and colleague Stefania Palma published a series of stories citing internal documents from Wirecard’s Singapore office, BaFin imposed a two-month ban on short-selling Wirecard shares, a step the University of Texas’ Ethics Unwrapped project later described as part of the regulator’s move against the Financial Times rather than the company.

BaFin then filed a criminal complaint against McCrum and Palma for suspected market manipulation. The Munich prosecutor’s office opened a file. German lawyers told FT management that if their reporters travelled to Germany, arrest was a realistic possibility.

Around the same time, McCrum noticed his phone behaving strangely. Emails he had not sent sat in his sent folder. He later learned, through reporting by his own paper and others, that he had been the target of a surveillance operation involving private intelligence firms and operatives with intelligence backgrounds, hired to discredit the journalists pursuing the story.

Silicon Canals’ full visual investigation looks at how Jan Marsalek’s life after Wirecard turned a corporate fraud story into something darker.

Wirecard Munich headquarters

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What sustained pressure does to a person

McCrum has described the period from 2019 into mid-2020 as the worst stretch of his professional life. He was filing stories that readers, regulators and large parts of the German financial press were treating as fabrications. He was raising small children. He was under instructions from FT security not to discuss the story on unsecured channels. He believed, at points, that he was losing.

That is the part of investigative work that rarely fits into the clean version of the story. From the outside, persistence looks like a character trait. From the inside, it can mean years of legal threats, reputation attacks, source protection, encrypted conversations, family strain and the slow pressure of being told that the thing you can see is not really there.

McCrum has spoken publicly, including in his book Money Men, about the toll. The sleeplessness. The paranoia, which turned out not to be paranoia. The cost to his family. The cost to colleagues who shared the reporting load and the legal exposure. In a normal workplace dispute, the stress is usually contained by the boundaries of the job. In the Wirecard story, the work followed the reporter home. The company was not simply denying the allegations. It was trying to make the people asking questions appear corrupt, unstable or compromised.

The retaliation tax

One of the more under-reported dynamics in long-form investigative work is what happens when the subject of an investigation fights back not on the facts but on the reporter personally. Legal threats are one thing. Reputational attacks are another. Surveillance is something else again.

By 2019, McCrum was dealing with all three. The institution meant to adjudicate truth in this case was BaFin. BaFin had picked a side, and it was not his.

That is why the Wirecard story was never only a story about accounting. It was about what happens when an institution with public legitimacy gives a private company the benefit of the doubt, then turns its scrutiny on the people trying to test the company’s claims. The reporter is not just fighting the subject. He is fighting the structure around the subject.

McCrum did have something many reporters do not: a supportive editor in Paul Murphy and an institution in the Financial Times willing to underwrite the legal bills. The FT‘s own profile now describes him as an investigative reporter whose book Money Men was adapted into the Netflix documentary Skandal! Bringing down Wirecard. That is the tidy version. The untidy version is that the reporting survived because an institution chose not to abandon its reporter when the pressure became expensive.

The KPMG report and the seven weeks that broke it

The turn came in two stages. In April 2020, Wirecard published the results of a special audit it had commissioned from KPMG in an attempt to clear its name. The audit did not produce the clean bill of health the company needed. KPMG could not fully verify the third-party acquiring business that had made up a substantial portion of Wirecard’s reported profits. The auditors could not get all the data they needed. The company’s story held, but only barely.

The stock fell. It did not collapse. The myth held for another seven weeks.

Then, on 18 June 2020, EY refused to sign off on Wirecard’s annual accounts because €1.9bn in cash supposedly held in trust accounts at two Philippine banks could not be located. BPI and BDO, the two banks named, denied that the money was there. The central bank of the Philippines said none of the money appeared to have entered the country’s financial system, a point reported at the time by the Guardian.

On 22 June, Wirecard’s management board issued an ad-hoc disclosure conceding that the missing €1.9bn likely did not exist. Three days later the company filed for insolvency. CEO Markus Braun was arrested. COO Jan Marsalek vanished.

McCrum’s reporting, every disputed line of it, was vindicated inside a week.

What the cost actually looks like

The temptation in journalism is to package the Wirecard story as a triumph: five years of dogged reporting, fraud exposed, regulators humiliated, BaFin president Felix Hufeld eventually pushed out, the German parliament running its own inquiry. All true. McCrum won major prizes. He wrote a book. He kept his job.

The cost is harder to package. McCrum has talked openly about how long it took to recover, about the strain on his marriage and his children, about the people inside the story who took their own lives, and about the colleagues whose careers were dragged into the fight. None of this fits neatly inside an awards citation.

The underlying machinery has not gone away either. Marsalek remains a fugitive. Reporting by The Insider, Der Spiegel, ZDF and PBS Frontline has placed him in Moscow, under Russian protection. Documents on the Novichok nerve agent were reportedly in Marsalek’s possession before he fled. In March 2025, a Russian spy ring operating out of the UK and linked by prosecutors to Marsalek from Moscow was convicted at the Old Bailey. Braun denies wrongdoing and maintains he was deceived; his Munich trial verdict is expected later in 2026.

Why this matters for anyone doing hard work in hostile systems

The Wirecard story has obvious lessons for regulators, auditors and anyone who still believes a DAX listing is a certificate of legitimacy. The less obvious lesson is about endurance.

People who do work like this, including founders pursuing claims that markets refuse to believe, whistleblowers inside companies that retaliate, prosecutors building cases against well-resourced defendants and journalists working against powerful institutions, often assume the system will eventually catch up to the truth. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it takes five years. And in those five years, the person carrying the file pays a price the institution does not see and does not reimburse.

McCrum has described the small things that stayed with him. The sent folder he did not recognise. The instruction not to take certain trains. The children who knew their father was working on something he could not talk about at the dinner table. The walk to the office on the morning of 18 June 2020, before EY’s refusal became public, not yet knowing the file in his hands was about to be the only file that mattered.

The man accused of helping run the money is somewhere in Moscow. The reporter who exposed the fraud is still sleeping in the same house, still answering the same questions, still carrying it.