JOHANNESBURG/FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Steinhoff's (>> Steinhoff International Holdings NV) finance chief stepped down from the role on Thursday to focus on helping the South African retailer plug a 2.4 billion euro (2.1 billion pounds) hole in its finances after an accounting scandal.

The owner of more than 40 multinational retail brands including Conforama, Mattress Firm and Poundland, revealed the "accounting irregularity" last month along with the immediate departure of its chief executive. Its chairman briefly took the reins then also stepped down.

"While the Group has achieved some degree of stabilisation in its operating businesses, significant near-term liquidity is still required in certain of the business units," Steinhoff said on Thursday.

Chief financial officer Ben la Grange, whom the company has cleared of any wrongdoing, will leave his position and Philip Dieperink, the finance chief of Steinhoff's UK business, will become acting CFO.

The company said la Grange would concentrate on "the preservation and procurement of liquidity in the group" and finalising its 2017 accounts.

Turnaround specialist AlixPartners was called in last month to help shore up finances as lenders have started restricting access to credit lines and insurers are cancelling or reducing credit insurance.

Steinhoff, which has debts of around 10.7 billion euros, said it planned to hire a debt restructuring expert in the role of chief restructuring officer.

Earlier this week, Steinhoff said it would have to restate its 2015 accounts and maybe even earlier figures, having already warned on its 2016 numbers.

SHARES REBOUND

More than $10 billion has been wiped off Steinhoff's market value following the disclosure of the scandal that has claimed the heads of CEO Markus Jooste and chairman Christo Wiese. They were key figures who transformed Steinhoff from a modest furniture distributor to a global household goods giant.

Shares in Steinhoff, still down about 80 percent from a month ago, rebounded more than 25 percent on Thursday to 8.60 rand.

This week UK subsidiary Poundland reported strong Christmas trading and European unit, Pepkor Europe, which houses Poundland and Dealz, said it had replaced planned investment from its parent in full with a new independent 180 million pound loan.

Meanwhile, the company's Asia Pacific subsidiary has hired lawyers and a restructuring specialist to advise on the "significant uncertainty" facing its parent.

Steinhoff has so far raised around $400 million from the sale of a portion of its stake in South African investment heavyweight PSG Group (>> PSG Group Limited). It is also due to receive around $1.2 billion in debt repayment from its subsidiary, Steinhoff Africa Retail.

The company, which moved its primary share listing from Johannesburg to Frankfurt two years ago, has been under investigation for suspected accounting fraud in Germany since 2015. Four current and former managers are under suspicion of having overstated revenues at subsidiaries, prosecutors have said.

Steinhoff has previously said that the investigation relates to whether revenues were booked properly and whether taxable profits were correctly declared.

($1 = 0.8284 euros)

(Editing by Georgina Prodhan and Elaine Hardcastle)

By Tiisetso Motsoeneng and Christoph Steitz

Stocks treated in this article : Steinhoff International Holdings NV, PSG Group Limited