When it comes to wire and automated clearinghouse (ACH) fraud, global
financial executives agree that the biggest negative impact is
reputational damage. Regionally, North American financial executives are
experiencing less fraud than their global counterparts, according to a
recent survey
from electronic
payment and banking systems leader ACI
Worldwide (NASDAQ: ACIW), which examines global fraud trends in
wholesale/commercial banking.
North American financial executives also perceive an increase in the
rate of online account takeover attacks (63%) compared to their global
counterparts (50%) in the last 12 months. Yet in the same period,
attempted and actual wire and ACH fraud related to account takeover is
lower in North America than at the global institutions, based on survey
responses.
Fraud Protection Focus
It’s no surprise that financial executives surveyed across all
geographies are focused on fraud protection. Because of a heightened
concern and bleaker view of online account takeover fraud, both North
American and global respondents are fighting hard to protect their wire
and ACH accounts—with varying focuses. North American financial
executives are placing more emphasis on utilizing tools that address
device protection, while their global counterparts are more focused on
payment-specific transaction monitoring and online session anomaly
detection.
-
84 percent of North American banks are utilizing device protection
tools (such as device ID, secure browsing and malware protection)
-
89 percent of rest of world banks are utilizing payment-specific
transaction monitoring
Although fraud protection is top-of-mind, when it comes to compliance
with regulations around the security of commercial accounts,
surprisingly 18 percent of all respondents admit to being only mostly or
partially compliant with current security regulations. FFIEC (Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council) guidelines in the US
have brought a spotlight to monitoring online banking activity and are a
likely driver as to why most organizations must continue to shore up
their defenses.
Confidence in Fraud Management Tools
All respondents report confidence in fraud-fighting tools, although they
differ in terms of which tools they believe are most effective. In an
effectiveness scale from 1-5 (with 5 being most effective):
-
North American respondents rank layered security protocols highest
(4.06 ranking), followed by payment transaction monitoring and device
protection
-
Rest of world, payment-specific transaction monitoring slightly edges
device protection as the most effective approach (4.0 ranking)
Real-time settlement in global financial markets has impacted the focus
and need for fraud prevention tools. All respondents agree that
cross-channel fraud monitoring and online session anomaly detection have
the most room for improvement.
“As electronic payment transaction volumes increase, so too do fraud
attacks on those transactions. Financial institutions are faced with not
only increasing scrutiny and regulatory pressures, but also the risk of
reputational damage and loss of customers, which is why they’re working
tirelessly on preventative measures,” said Mike Braatz, Senior Vice
President, Payments Risk Management Solutions, ACI Worldwide. “The
real-time nature of payments has a direct impact on fraud prevention
tactics. Longer ACH settlement times likely contributed to the lower
fraud rates in the US compared to their global counterparts. For
example, Faster Payments in the UK has put increased pressure on banks
to stop attempted fraud in real time.”
To download a copy of the survey results and view the accompanying
infographic, please visit aciworldwide.com/wholesalefraudsurvey.
About the Survey
The survey, titled Strategies to Prevent Attacks on Commercial
Accounts, was conducted by Gatepoint Research on behalf of ACI
Worldwide. Respondents were comprised of 100 senior finance, fraud and
operations decision makers from financial institutions across the globe
(76% director-level or above, 50% vice president-level, 3% CxO-level).
About ACI Worldwide
ACI Worldwide powers electronic payments and banking for more than 5,000
financial institutions, retailers, billers and processors around the
world. ACI software enables $13 trillion in payments each day,
processing transactions for more than 250 of the leading global
retailers, and 21 of the world’s 25 largest banks. Through our
comprehensive suite of software products and hosted services, we deliver
a broad range of solutions for payments processing; card and merchant
management; online
banking; mobile, branch and voice banking; fraud
detection; trade finance; and electronic
bill presentment and payment. To learn more about ACI, please visit www.aciworldwide.com.
You can also find us on Twitter @ACI_Worldwide.
© Copyright ACI Worldwide, Inc. 2013.
ACI, ACI Payment Systems, the ACI logo and all ACI product names are
trademarks or registered trademarks of ACI Worldwide, Inc., or one of
its subsidiaries, in the United States, other countries or both. Other
parties’ trademarks referenced are the property of their respective
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Product roadmaps are for informational purposes only and may not be
incorporated into a contract or agreement. The development release and
timing of future product releases remains at ACI’s sole discretion. ACI
is providing the following information in accordance with ACI's standard
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and enhancements or timing of release of such features, functionality,
and enhancements are at the sole discretion of ACI and may be modified
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