Spain\\\'s Gowex wifi scandal bruises small firms
Tuesday, 8 July 2014
Investors stunned by massive false accounting at Spanish free wifi provider Let’s Gowex inflicted huge losses on Monday on the shares of a slew of other small and medium-sized firms. Gowex, which offers wifi services in capitals including Paris and New York, said Sunday it was filing for bankruptcy after chief executive Jenaro Garcia Martin admitted faking its results for at least four years. The Gowex board said it had revoked the chief executive's powers and accepted his resignation. Hours later, Garcia Martin announced on Twitter that he had made a ‘voluntary confession in court’. ‘I am willing to face the consequences and cooperate with justice,’ the former wealth management specialist added. Just a day before, even as Gotham City's allegations reverberated through the market, Garcia Martin had Tweeted: ‘Gooooood morning Madrid!!!! Perfect morning to go out for a run.’ The fallout from the scandal, which was revealed in a report last week by the US firm Gotham City Research, spread to unrelated companies listed on Madrid's junior market, the Alternative Equity Market. By the close of trade on Monday, the junior market, which caters to smaller companies seeking equity financing, was awash with red ink. All but one of the 23 companies posted losses. Telecommunications firm Eurona dived 21.88 percent, carbon-fibre specialist Carbures plunged 20.79 percent and biopharmacy firm Bionaturis plummeted 23.91 percent as its rival Neuron BioPharma slumped 18.18 percent.
- 'A charade' -
Four companies -- Carbures, energy group Ebioss and telecommunications firms Ibercom and Eurona -- told investors they plan to switch to the main Madrid stock market, which has more exacting requirements. In a statement, the junior market said the Gowex scandal should not put in doubt the market's "essential" role in raising funds for small and medium-sized companies. On July 1, Gotham City Research issued a highly critical report on Gowex that sparked a two-day, 60-percent plunge in its shares to 7.92 euros at which point the stock was suspended from trading. Gotham City Research, a so-called short-seller that makes money by betting that the share price of certain companies will fall, called Gowex a "charade", said its revenues were far lower than the company had reported, and derided its shares as worthless. On Monday, Gotham crowed about its role in exposing Gowex. ‘Auditors, regulators, lawyers, investment bankers and others rarely detect fraud. Insiders and short-sellers do,’ the company said in a statement. ‘Therefore, perhaps the market participants, the media and regulators should focus on the validity of a short seller’s message rather than shooting the messenger,’ according to AFP.