Published by Gbaf News
Posted on September 27, 2018

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Published by Gbaf News
Posted on September 27, 2018

For every dollar of fraud, financial services companies now spend $2.92, compared to $2.67, one year ago.
LexisNexis® Risk Solutions, a unit of RELX Group (NYSE: RELX), today released its 2018 True Cost of Fraud℠ study for the Financial Services sector. The study shows that for every dollar of fraud, financial services companies incur $2.92 in costs, up from $2.67 in 2017, representing a 9.3% year-over-year increase. The lost value of the transaction, plus fees and interest incurred during applications/underwriting/processing stages, labor costs for fraud investigation, fines and legal fees, as well as external recovery expenses are the main costs of fraud for financial institutions according to the study.
Based on a comprehensive survey of 175 risk and fraud executives in financial services companies, including retail and commercial banks, credit unions, investments, trusts and wealth management, the study evaluates how to navigate and mitigate the growing risks of fraud, while highlighting the areas where financial institutions can seek improvement in their fraud prevention protocols.
Fraud costs continue to be higher for mid to large sized digital firms, particularly with international transactions.
The study shows that for mid to large digital financial institutions operating internationally, every dollar of fraud results in $3.27 of fraud costs. They also see fraud expenses eat away at 2.41% of their total revenue, compared with fraud expenses equaling 1.83% of the revenue of mid to large digital banks that do not operate internationally. This highlights the risk that the anonymous remote channel adds to financial transactions.
“Continuing the trend of prior years, the cost of fraud continues to rise for global financial institutions,” says Kimberly Sutherland, senior director, fraud and identity management strategy, LexisNexis Risk Solutions. “Particularly in the digital and international transaction spaces, while these firms are working to combat fraud, they are not doing so in the most optimal way. Fraudsters continuously test for the weakest entry point in the financial transaction system and these institutions should apply a multi-layered approach to fraud prevention to combat this growing issue.”
Other key findings from the study include:
“The growth of new digital and mobile channels, and the increased fraud that comes with them, means that financial institutions must find the right approach to deal with this issue. For identity and transaction-related fraud, having a multi-layered risk model in place will lead to lower fraud costs. There is no one-size-fits-all solution to fraud and having a strong detection and prevention system in place decreases the likelihood of customer friction and lost current and future business.” concludes Sutherland.