Banks invest in more tech to find synergies between anti-fraud, anti-money laundering

Published: 30 March 2009 y., Monday

 

The increasing amount of overlap and duplication of data, tasks and processes in their anti-fraud and anti-money laundering divisions is driving banks to seek synergies between compliance, risk management and security, according to a new report from Datamonitor.
 
The report “Using Technology to Combat Financial Crime in Retail Banking,” says the current economic crisis exacerbates existing problems that may result in the industry — seeing a new wave of financial misstatements, account manipulations or internal fraud. Reduced vigilance could open new windows of opportunity for money launderers and fraudsters.
 
“Financial crime is no longer simply about the laundering or theft of money. It is about high-profile issues, such as customer data theft, financial misreporting and many others,” said Jaroslaw Knapik, financial-services-technology analyst at Datamonitor and the report’s author. “The extremely severe conditions within the global financial-services industry are likely to increase the risk of potential internal and external fraud attempts. Furthermore, cost-cutting pressures may affect AML/anti-fraud departments, among others. Indeed, some banks have already announced budget and staff reductions.”
 
Banks move from reactive to intelligence-based approach
 
The growing adoption of a risk-based approach to counter financial crime is driving the implementation of advanced deviation detection and risk measurement techniques through the use of technology. To date, the major focus has been on automation of existing methods and business processes.
 
However, these days the focus has shifted toward accuracy. Of 194 banks surveyed globally, 64 percent indicated the top investment priority is technology that provides effective monitoring and detection capabilities with high alert accuracy. All these factors enable banks to move from a reactive stance to a more proactive approach by focusing human resources to deal with the highest risk cases.
 
Growing costs drive increased standardization of business processes
 
Since the emergence of the first significant wave of financial crime detection and prevention programs, costs have far exceeded expectations. Besides the technology expenditure, the total cost of experienced technical and non-technical compliance and anti-fraud experts has significantly increased. The cost is quite often spread over many different business functions, such as operations, compliance, risk and security. It may also overlap with processes that are embedded in regular business practices, such as payment processing or credit-risk analysis.
 
As such, banks may be unable to hold a single unified view of all the associated costs related to anti-money laundering or anti-fraud activities, preventing them from making efficient decisions regarding how best to direct their resources to focus on the major areas at risk of financial crime.
 
As financial crime grows, there is anecdotal evidence that banks are increasingly combining their compliance, fraud and security departments into one single unit to take care of similar risk areas. Datamonitor expects this approach will result in an emerging trend of standardized business processes and technologies to create an enterprise-wide view of compliance and fraud risk within an institution or across business lines, which can be viewed on management dashboards to keep track of various risks across the enterprise.
 
“There is a growing opportunity for business and technology consultants or vendors that can improve a bank’s understanding of the full range of anti-financial crime related processes which exist across the entire organization, and further implement all the necessary enhancements to the existing process," Knapik said. "However, with the purchaser's greatest concern being the ability to acquire a solution that provides high alert accuracy, technology vendors need to focus on providing numeric proof (or benchmarking studies) to their potential clients which demonstrate the reliability of their solutions.”

Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Iraq, its domain and the 'terrorist-funding' owner

The war against Iraq may be drawing to a close but the war over its Internet future is just beginning more »

Windows CE to outship PCs in five years - researcher

In five years' time, more Windows CE devices will be shipping than Windows PCs more »

Government surveillance of online phone calls sparks controversy

Wiretapping takes on a whole new meaning now that phone calls are being made over the Internet, posing legal and technical hurdles for the FBI more »

Hidden cost

The high price of piracy more »

Sex takes backseat to Al-Jazeera site in Internet searches

In spite of being mostly knocked offline, the Web site of Arab satellite news network Al-Jazeera was among the most sought-after on the Internet last week more »

Canada becomes first to ratify NATO expansion

Canada has become the first nation to ratify expansion of the NATO defense alliance, which Latvia and six other nations have been invited to join more »

HP Thinks in 3D for Web Browsing

Hewlett-Packard's future vision of shopping online more »

Writers of Viruses Get Politics Bug

The war hasn't spawned new viruses. Instead, the same old viruses are being sent with new subject lines in the e-mail. more »

Web swarm gathers in the Netherlands

Eyebees, a Dutch-based start-up, has launched a beta version of a software application bearing the company's name that allows users to become either part of or lead an on-line "swarm" as they navigate the Internet more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »