Banks call for all industries to be accountable for APP fraud
December 13, 2022
Santander is calling for more to be done to combat fraud because the PSR’s mandatory reimbursement plans for APP scam victims will be an unsustainable cost for banks and schemes.
What is this article about? How industry and government can do more to tackle fraud.Why is it important? Payment companies’ could see costs rising as new regulation coming in mandates reimbursing fraud victims.What’s next? The PSR plans to increase APP scam protections once the Financial Services and Markets Bill is passed by parliament in 2023, and by January 2024, banks and regulators will start to feel the pinch.Chris Ainsley, head of fraud risk management at Santander UK, tells The Payments Association that leadership is needed to bring the payments industry, technology companies with social media platforms, and telecom firms together to tackle fraud. Ainsley’s comments follow and other industries to work together to tackle the problem of fraud, and specifically authorised push payment (APP) scams. The PSR will implement its plans to increase APP scam protections and adjust the CRM code within six months of gaining new powers through the Financial Services and Markets Bill, which is expected to be passed by Parliament in 2023. The proposals will mean that reimbursements will become mandatory and quicker. However, The Payments Association understands from its members that payments firms this is not a good idea and would not resolve the underlying issues of fraud. “In reality, the payment system is entirely disconnected from how the risk is being introduced, because our customer is in the middle and they are being attacked by criminals by digital means or via text messages or whatever else,” says Ainsley. “They are being asked to do something in the payments system, and we almost have no sight of what is happening before it comes to us and no feedback process into that.” In October, Santander suggested that banks and payment service providers should follow consistent rules to prevent fraud, including the mandatory confirmation of payee and extra scrutiny of unusual high-value payments. It also recommended the industry should update systems to introduce data-sharing standards developed by Pay.UK as part of the New Payments Architecture – an infrastructure designed to support digital payments. Santander is not alone in its views that the problem of fraud and APP scams cannot be solved by the financial services sector alone. Many speakers at The Payments Association’s Financial Crime 360 conference shared the same view. One bank’s head of fraud prevention stood firm in his belief that banks and financial institutions should not be tackling financial crime alone and that more needs to be done by other industries to focus on prevention. “What we tend to forget as an industry is the criminal and the upstream platform where the scam originated. We forget the mobile networks and the telco tools used to facilitate the fraud before banks can try and intervene to stop it,” says the head of fraud at one high street bank. “If you break down the anatomy of a scam or fraud, there are a lot of vulnerabilities that sit outside the financial services sector, such as the abuse of telephone lines, smishing, phishing and all the things used to hook a customer into providing security credentials or passwords.” “We need to work closely with the technology sector that don’t have the same incentives to do something or liabilities that we do as banks. There is a big potential to share data and to shore up controls. This is what we’ll start to see play out over the next couple of years,” says the head of fraud.