In Asia-Pacific (APAC), fraud is becoming an increasingly serious challenge for financial institutions, an issue that has been exacerbated by the rapid adoption of digital transactions and online banking.
To address these risks, financial institutions in the region are adopting new security measures and embracing cutting-edge technologies, a new research by NICE Actimize found.
The study, which gathered insights from 114 fraud risk professionals across nine APAC markets in late 2023, found that payment systems and online banking have emerged as the primary concerns for fraud risk professionals across APAC, identified by 66% of the respondents as the most common type of threat observed over the prior 12 months.
This highlights how the region’s expanding digital consumer base and the proliferation of faster payment systems have led to a spike in cyber-related fraud, the report says, and shows that financial institutions are struggling to keep up with the evolving threat landscape, leaving them vulnerable to increasingly sophisticated attacks.
The frequency of these fraud incidents is also a major concern, with almost half of the respondents (49%) stating that their organizations encounter payments and digital banking fraud at least once a month. This includes 8.5% of respondents who said they encounter such activity “almost daily”.
When asked about trends in digital banking fraud attacks, almost two-thirds (64%) of respondents said they observed an increase over the past 12 months.
Booming digital banking adoption fuels fraud
Over the past couple of years, APAC has experienced a digital banking revolution fueled by technological advancements, supportive regulations, and evolving consumer expectations.
Over 40 digital banks have launched across Asia to date, making the region one of the world’s most developed and advanced digital banking ecosystems in the world.
In 2022, 11 out of the 20 profitable digital challenger banks worldwide were based in APAC, suggesting that APAC digital challenger banks have been relatively more successful than their European or American counterparts. Analysts and industry observers attribute this success to the region’s characteristics that include its large population of unbanked, strong mobile culture and rapidly growing middle class.
However, the rapid pace of digital transformation has also introduced new risk challenges, with several prominent fraud cases highlighting these risks.
In 2016, criminals used fraudulent orders on the SWIFT payments system to steal US$81 million from the Bangladesh central bank account at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The money was sent to accounts at Manila-based RCBC and then vanished into the casino industry in the Philippines. A year later, Kathmandu-based NIC Asia Bank suffered a major heist, with hackers managing to make about US$4.4 million in fraudulent transfers to countries including Britain, China, Japan, Singapore and the United States when the bank was closed for annual festival holidays, according to Reuters.
Top anti-fraud measures implemented by APAC financial institutions
To address escalating fraud threats, financial institutions in APAC are relying on a number of different strategies. The NICE Actimize research found that enhanced monitoring for suspicious transactions (76.6%) is the most commonly adopted measure. This is followed by advanced authentication methods (70.2%), customer education initiatives (68.1%), and the implementation of real-time fraud detection systems (53.2%).
Respondents also said they had adjusted their transaction limits to reduce the impact of fraud losses (53%), enhanced security on their banking apps (40%), undertaken security audits of their mobile banking infrastructure (32%), and partnered with network operators or device makers to enhance security (26%).
The study also found that APAC financial institutions are increasingly embracing information sharing. More than a quarter (25.5%) said their anti-fraud and AML teams now collaborate “very closely”, while almost a third (30%) said such collaboration occurred “often”.
This shift towards greater cooperation is in line with regulatory efforts across various APAC jurisdictions to encourage information sharing as a means to combat fraud.
In June 2023, Hong Kong launched the Financial Intelligence Evaluation Sharing Tool (FINEST), an electronic platform allowing retail banks to share information where there are indications of criminal activity.
Similarly, Singapore regulators launched in April 2024 a digital platform called COSMIC. The digital initiative aims to bolster the defense against money laundering, terrorism financing, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, allowing major commercial banks to share financial crime risk information with one another if stipulated thresholds are met.
APAC financial institutions embrace technology
The research also found that technology is playing a pivotal role in fraud prevention. The largest proportion of respondents (57.4%) said their organizations have invested in advanced analytics or machine learning (ML) tools to enable real-time fraud detection. About 55.3% of respondents reported investments in online and mobile banking security, and 48.9% reported adoption of biometric security solutions.
Despite these investments, the study found that the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and ML in fraud prevention across APAC’s financial services industry remains in its infancy.
Only 27.7% of respondents said that these technologies are fully integrated in their organizations, while 46.8% reported their use only in “specific scenarios” or for certain types of fraud. A further 12.8% of respondents said their organizations are “currently testing” AI/ML and have not yet integrated the technology into their daily operations. Expectations are that the adoption of these tools will increase over time.
Featured image credit: edited from freepik