ATLANTA– Based on a survey of lenders, SMB lending fraud has increased significantly during the past 12 months, with many smaller banks, credit unions and fintechs expecting fraud levels to worsen over the next year, according to LexisNexis Risk Solutions.
The findings are included in the company’s latest Small and Midsize Business (SMB) Lending Fraud Study. Overall, 84% of respondents said that SMB lending fraud has increased at an average of 14.5% year-over-year (2021 to 2022), a significant increase from the 6.9% increase experienced the year prior, LexisNexis reported.
“Although bogus business credentials and fake consumer/owner identities remain the most common type of SMB lending fraud, lenders are also experiencing more legitimate business and fake or synthetic identity fraud which they find challenging to mitigate effectively,” LexisNexis Risk Solutions said. “Most lenders attribute increased fraud to multiple factors including lack of effort on curbing SMB lending fraud, market economic uncertainties and the perception that SMBs are an easier target than consumers and online/mobile channel transactions.”
Key Findings
According to LexisNexis Risk Solutions, key findings in the survey include:
- The Overall Impact of SMB Fraud Losses. “SMB lending fraud losses could represent up to 15% of overall losses for the institutions surveyed. About 19% of SMB lending fraud losses stem from post-pandemic acceleration of digital transactions. The average value of SMB lending fraud losses as a percent of annual revenues remains higher than before the pandemic (5.5% overall), with fintechs continuing to experience the highest fraud expenses. This reflects a slight decline representing percentages closer to early pandemic figures after spiking as the pandemic progressed.”
- Remote Channel Risks. “SMBs submit more than half of lending applications through remote channels (online/mobile), with a similar proportion of fraud losses attributed to these channels,” LexisNexis said. “Banks and credit unions are experiencing a limited uptick of in-person loan applications and fraud losses as most banks resume normal in-person operations. In the post-pandemic market, most lenders have changed their approach to detecting and mitigating SMB lending fraud with online and mobile transactions. This includes investing in training, increasing staff and adding fraud detection technology like geolocation and behavioral biometrics.”
- Focusing on Fraud Prevention. “SMB lenders expect that they will continue to invest more in fraud prevention, with smaller banks and credit unions, fintechs and those with mostly digital channels being particularly likely to increase staffing on fraud teams,” the company stated. “Some lenders indicate that they are also launching special fraud prevention initiatives and spending more on vendor solutions to curb SMB lending fraud. While more SMB lenders indicate use of email and phone risk verification than previous years, the use of digital identity and advanced transaction verification solutions remains limited. The most common barriers to investing in fraud mitigation technology include the lack of time to train staff, competing budget priorities and cost of solutions.”
The Best Solution
“The study shows that lenders using a multi-layered anti-fraud approach that integrates anti-fraud measures with digital channel operations can be more effective at detecting and mitigating fraud and its costs early,” said Tom Hunt, director of business risk strategy at LexisNexis Risk Solutions, in a statement released in conjunction with the study. “This also includes solutions that assess both the physical and digital identity attributes, as well as the risk of the transaction itself. Best practice fraud detection and mitigation involves a layering of complementary solutions to address unique risks from different channels, payment methods and products to address every touchpoint across the customer journey.”
Top 3 Recommendations
LexisNexis Risk Solutions offered these three recommendations for preventing SMB Lending Fraud:
- Assess Digital Identity Attributes. “Authentication is about confirming that the person is who they say they are. To minimize fraud, organizations can no longer rely on manual processes with the assistance of limited technologies or point solutions to reduce challenge rates, manual reviews and costs.”
- Multi-Layered Solution Approach. “A point solution approach is inadequate,” the company said. “Devices, geographies and user behaviors, such as transaction patterns, payment amounts and payment beneficiaries, are becoming more varied and less predictable as consumers transact across locations. A multi-layered, strong authentication defense approach should include a single authentication decision platform that incorporates real-time event data, third-party signals and global, cross-channel intelligence.”
- Protect Endpoints. “New account opening is the customer journey point where fraudsters can become established, causing problems at later stages. It is also the first point of contact for many legitimate customers – too much friction and they may abandon the effort. Use technologies that recognize your customers, determine their point of access and distinguish them from fraudsters and malicious bots.”
The full report can be found here.
Feeling the FOMO Fever? CUToday.info Has a Prescription
Are you missing out on the latest news in credit unions? Missing the trends and developments you need to be aware of? We can help. Each morning CUToday.info delivers its daily Fresh Today news update offering the latest headlines and breaking news right to your email, with the easy-to-read headlines format allowing you to click on the stories that interest you most in order to learn more.
And it’s free!
If you haven’t yet signed up for the new email solution on which CUToday.info has partnered with ResponseGenius, you can do so here. Signing up requires less than one minute of your time—and it’s free!
Please note that after signing up you may need to go to your Spam/Junk folder and mark the morning headlines email as safe. CUToday.info does not provide its list of readers and emails to outside parties, and we will not be contacting you to sell you an extended warranty or sending you any links so you may cash in on an inheritance you didn’t know was coming.
And did we mention it’s free?
Please note and/or make your IT department or email administrator aware the emails will be coming from the domains CUTodayinfo.com and CUTodayinfoReply.com
