Four cyber risks the financial sector should be preparing for
The
financial sector’s risk management approach has changed significantly in recent
years. While some of these changes were expected, such as continued constricted
regulations, others were less expected, including an increasing realisation
that cyber and financial crime are closely-linked, and need to be addressed as
an integrated security risk with an integrated strategy.
Sanjay Samuel,
Head of Financial Crime Asia Pacific at BAE Systems Applied Intelligence, said:
“These changes to risk management have been driven by significant cyber
penetrations driven by financial crime. With the evolution of malware, the
threat landscape has evolved and criminals are specifically targeting financial
organisations; the volume of which is increasing ten-fold.
“In addition to
this, continued problems with compliance monitoring has been uncovered after
the fact, showing these regimes have been ineffective. There are a number of
large financial institutions that have significant and what they have thought
are sophisticated monitoring regimes in place and yet have been unable to
protect themselves effectively when an attack has occurred.
“There is a
lack of cyber security analytics capability and technology in organisations.
Most have a vast array of security technologies but these technologies don’t
talk to one another and are often managed by different teams within the
organisations.
“This means
attacks may go unnoticed or not be responded to from a holistic security
perspective, even though the organisation’s security technologies may actually
have detected the incidents.
“As companies
become aware of these gaps, it has led to higher budgets, increased integration
of risk and security teams, and the emergence of conscious convergence
strategies across cyber and financial crime monitoring services,” she said.
BAE Systems
have identified four key risks financial institutions may be vulnerable to in
the coming months and years:
1. Lack of
integrated approach
One of the
continued risks for the financial sector is the lack of an integrated approach
to cyber and financial crime. This could lead to some institutions being a soft
target for ever more sophisticated fraudsters.
2. Criminals
diversifying their activities
Increasing use
of automation and the growth of identity compromises lets financial criminals
diversify their activity, making it difficult to detect within a single
institution. For example, there is an increase in money mule accounts that are
only used once or a few times before moving on, making them harder to track.
This could be addressed through more cooperation across the financial services
industry.
3. Permeable
boundaries
To service
customers more effectively online in a multichannel environment, financial
institutions tend to make their organisational boundaries more interconnected
and therefore less secure. This security risk must be considered in order to
protect both the organisation and its customers from unwanted perpetrators.
4. Mobile
customer base
A more mobile
customer base requires fast, easy access to services online, posing another
risk to financial institutions as these same services offer fraudsters and
hackers anonymity. It may prove difficult to identify authentic customers while
continuing to provide the same user experience for customers.
“Financial
institutions are increasingly aware of the risks, trends and changes in the
sector. Traditional financial services institutions are geared up to handle
this from a fraud and compliance angle. New entrants, such as telcos, who are
becoming financial services providers in some cases, may have to play catch up
on the types of systems they need to put in place to protect them and their
customers,” Sanjay said.
If you would
like to speak with Sanjay Samuel or would be interested in an article on this
topic, please don't hesitate to contact me.
Kind regards,
Lisa
Lisa Meyvis
Senior Account
Executive
Recognition
PR
Level 2, 51
Pitt Street, Sydney, NSW 2000
Phone: + 61 2 9252 2266
www.recognition.com.au
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