The Evolution of Payments Fraud

The Evolution of Payments Fraud

Fraudsters are taking advantage of the increased number of transactions taking place online in today’s pandemic environment. Thanks to this shift, along with other recent payment trends like BNPL, the digital payments environment looks a lot different than it did just a year ago.

To get a better idea of the specific changes that have taken place, as well as those that have yet to come, we spoke with Vesta CIO Tan Truong. In our conversation, Truong offers his insight on recent payment industry trends, provides advice for merchants, and offers tips on how banks can help their small business clients fight payments fraud.

What recent changes have you seen in the payments space, and what changes do you foresee in the sector next year?

Tan Truong: The pandemic has really supercharged the acceleration of e-commerce growth – by some analyst accounts, the industry has jumped about five years ahead of its already steep growth trajectory. Total online spending in May, at the height of the pandemic, was up 77% year-over-year. But even many brick-and-mortar sales are no longer traditional in-store purchases, thanks to the rising popularity of curbside pickup options that allow consumers to make a purchase online and have merchandise dropped right into their car by a sales associate within minutes.

Unsurprisingly, fraud has also skyrocketed as consumers and retailers both look to prioritize health and safety by embracing contactless transactions. Some researchers are projecting that retailers will lose about $130 billion in revenue due to CNP fraud between now and 2023.

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) is the newest trend in payments. What type of risk management is required in this new frontier?

Truong: Buy Now Pay Later has seen incredible traction in markets like Australia and Latin America, but it has only recently started to take off here in the U.S., particularly among Gen Z shoppers.

One big area of risk here is around disreputable or fraudulent vendors taking advantage of the companies that offer BNPL services. If they haven’t properly identified whether it’s a legitimate or illegitimate merchant, they could easily fall victim to a scheme where a fake merchant submits falsified orders using stolen consumer PII, then collects payments for products it allegedly sold but did not ship. Since BNPL vendors assume the risk on these transactions, they would be left holding the bag.

In terms of risk for merchants, regardless of the payment method it is crucial that merchants follow established best practices to remain one step ahead of bad actors. There are several key areas they should be focused on to eliminate fraud and increase approvals:

  • Prioritize Anomaly Detection: Look for obvious irregularities in ordering habits which may suggest that a buyer is exploitative. These may include orders placed late at night during hours when customers are unlikely to be active, and orders for a high quantity of a specific product or at the upper end of the price scale.
  • Conduct a Digital Footprint Assessment: The four pillars of the digital footprint – device, IP, phone, and email – can provide crucial signals to understand the origins of a payment. For example, the lack of geolocation information or a mismatch between distances from the billing address to the IP geolocation can be a key indicator of fraud. Likewise, email addresses which are either linked to no-name providers or uncommon email hosting firms can be a bad sign, as can those that do not actually feature the name of the buyer. Email addresses that are just a string of letters and numbers are often a sign of randomization, a tactic often used by fraudsters to make identity detection difficult. Also keep a close eye on a customer’s phone number, since having multiple numbers associated with a single device can be a red flag.
  • Implement Data-Driven Machine Learning Strategies: Use fraud prevention tools that can build upon features and profiles targeting a range of factors – like user behaviors, session information, order history, and key attributes like products purchased, order amounts, times those orders were placed and shipping address. This is a much stronger approach than employing a rules-driven reactive strategy.

What are some things most merchants don’t think about when it comes to payments fraud?

Truong: Too many merchants are so hyper-focused on the idea of preventing fraud altogether that they hurt themselves in the long run. Nearly every merchant knows what their fraud rate is, but relatively few know their approval rate or understand the relationship between the two. A very low fraud rate isn’t necessarily a good thing. Depending on how the merchant got there, it may indicate that they are rejecting a large number of transactions. Most merchants don’t know how much revenue they are turning away through their fear of fraud. A shift in perspective is needed.

Fraud is a serious problem, and merchants really have no control over its growth; they can only control their reaction to it. If they are preventing fraud by rejecting any transaction where they’re not 100% certain of its legitimacy, there’s a very high chance they are suppressing revenue and turning away many genuine customers. False declines are a lot more damaging than many merchants realize. According to a recent report from Sapio Research, 33% of U.S. consumers said they would never again shop with a particular merchant if that merchant had falsely declined their payment.

Throttling questionable transactions is short-term thinking: it puts undue pressure on profit margins, reduces sales revenues and the number of good transactions accepted, and negatively affects customer loyalty and brand reputation.

How can banks help their small business clients in fighting payments fraud?

Truong: E- and m-commerce were supposed to be the great equalizer for small and midsized merchants, but they have been hardest hit by fraud as they are unable to match the spending power of larger companies who spend about $4 fighting fraud for every $1 of fraud committed. As a result, many smaller merchants combat fraud primarily by not approving any questionable transactions – an approach that inevitably has them leaving revenue on the table.

Banks can help their small business clients by incentivizing them to find and implement anti-fraud technologies that will go beyond limiting their fraud risk and help them prioritize maximizing revenues.

Vesta recently teamed up with data network provider Plaid. Tell us how this partnership can reduce nonsufficient funds.

Truong: Plaid provides a secure connection between consumers’ banks and the fintech apps they want to use, so the integration was a really important step for us. It allowed us to launch a Guaranteed ACH product that enables automated clearing house payments while reducing fraud and fees incurred from non-sufficient funds. Since Plaid is connected to more than 11,000 banks in the U.S., Canada, and Europe, the real-time visibility they provide allows us to get an accurate sense of a customer’s account status, minimizing a merchant’s risk around fraud or just bad budgeting on the behalf of a consumer.

Merchants have been very reluctant to accept ACH payments due to the time it takes to settle charges and increased risk of fraud involved. At the same time, ACH payments cost significantly less to facilitate than credit or debit card purchases – a gap that is especially eye-opening for large purchases. For example, a $5,000 transaction could cost the originator anywhere from $0.25 to $5 when made with ACH, or $90 if made with a credit card.

So the partnership with Plaid enabled our Guaranteed ACH offering, which in turn addresses two of the major barriers to broad adoption of ACH payments – speed and trust. It also opens up opportunities for millions of Americans with bank accounts but no payment cards to be able to shop online.


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Icon Solutions Lands Strategic Investment from JP Morgan

Icon Solutions Lands Strategic Investment from JP Morgan

U.K.-based payments technology provider Icon Solutions is getting a boost today from U.S. banking giant JP Morgan in the form of a strategic investment.

The amount of the investment, along with specific terms of the deal, remain undisclosed.

“We’re excited to support Icon with this strategic investment as they look to continually build a simplified, collaborative payments ecosystem, driving emerging payments rails and innovation,” said Sara Castelhano, EMEA Head of Payments, Digital, and Solutions at JP Morgan Wholesale Payments.

As part of today’s deal, Icon has added Castelhano, to its Board of Advisors.

Icon will use the funds to expand development of its Instant Payments Framework technology, a collaborative, open source payments platform that helps clients process instant payments.

To facilitate these instant payments for U.S. clients, Icon has teamed up with The Clearing House to offer an accelerated route to accessing The Clearing House’s (TCH) real-time payments system. The company has also partnered with Featurespace to facilitate integration and block fraud attacks at scale and in real time.

“We will directly benefit from the support, scale and insight of a global banking leader and one of the most visionary technology companies in the world, while retaining our flexibility and independence,” the company said in a blog post. “We can now accelerate our strategic roadmap, invest more in our technology and team, and expand our geographic reach.”

The investment comes at a pivotal time in the U.S. payments scene. The U.S. Federal Reserve is lagging behind the rest of the globe in launching a real-time payments and settlement service, anticipating a delay until 2024. As the current speed of payments fails to meet consumer expectations, which have evolved to demand the delivery of everything from messages to groceries in real time, private players are coming to the market with their own solutions.


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SpyCloud Brings Fight Against Account Takeover to Europe

SpyCloud Brings Fight Against Account Takeover to Europe

One week after being named a Gartner Cool Vendor in Identity Access Management and Fraud Detection, SpyCloud is back in the cybersecurity headlines. The company has forged a partnership with DotForce, a leading value-added distributor for information security solutions in Southern Europe, to help businesses and government agencies in the region fight account takeover (ATO) attacks.

“SpyCloud has the most complete set of breach data assets in the world, making them the best partner to join our fight against account takeovers,” DotForce CEO Zane Ryan said. “These attacks can hit any organization at any time, and they are extremely expensive and time-consuming to resolve. With SpyCloud as our partner, we will be able to help organizations minimize the damage caused by ATO.”

Via the partnership, DotForce will enable its channel partners and managed security service providers (MSSP) to bring SpyCloud’s ATO prevention solutions to their customers. A Finovate Best of Show winner in its FinovateFall debut in 2017, SpyCloud specializes in detection and remediation of compromised accounts, helps identify and monitor supply chain exposure, and accelerates the fraud investigation process. The firm leverages human intelligence, data cleansing, and password cracking techniques to find exposed credentials faster, and has recovered more than 109 billion breach assets since inception.

“Account takeovers happen everywhere – criminals go where the money and data are, regardless of country,” Director of Sales, EMEA at SpyCloud Neill Cooper said. “We’re honored to partner with DotForce to help businesses in Southern Europe get proactive about protecting themselves.” In its statement, SpyCloud added that the cyberattacks and security breaches that are made possible by cybercriminals accessing stolen credentials cost businesses more than $17 billion a year and can continue for years.

SpyCloud’s partnership news comes just months after the company announced a $30 million Series C round that took its total funding to $58.5 million. Headquartered in Austin, Texas, SpyCloud counts Centana Growth Partners, Altos Ventures, March Capital Partners, Silverton Partners, and M12, Microsoft’s venture capital entity, among its investors.


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TikTok and Shopify Partner on Embedded Payments

TikTok and Shopify Partner on Embedded Payments

Short-form video sharing and social network app TikTok and commerce platform Shopify announced a partnership today that will offer Shopify merchants exposure to TikTok’s highly engaged users.

The integration will allow merchants to create and connect their TikTok business account and launch shoppable video ads directly within Shopify. The merchant simply selects the product they’d like to feature in the video and combine their existing imagery or video with a selection of pre-made templates designed for commerce.

“We are delighted to partner with Shopify and provide a channel for their merchants to reach new audiences and drive sales on TikTok,” said Blake Chandlee, Vice President of Global Business Solutions at TikTok. “As social commerce proliferates, retailers are recognizing that TikTok’s creative and highly engaged community sets it apart from other platforms.”

Shopify is using its Shopify Channels to help merchants promote their products using TikTok. Shopify Channels are sales and marketing channels that help merchants to connect with their customers via integrations with social media, entertainment, search platforms, and major marketplaces such as Amazon and Walmart.

“TikTok is one of the world’s fastest growing entertainment platforms with over 100 million highly engaged users in the U.S. alone,” said Satish Kanwar, Vice President of Product at Shopify. “The TikTok channel means Shopify merchants—even those without a strong TikTok following of their own yet—can connect with these new audiences using content that feels authentic and genuine to the TikTok experience.”

As part of the partnership, Shopify and TikTok have teamed up to allow users to spotlight their favorite Black-owned businesses using the hashtag #ShopBlack. The campaign, which runs from November 10 to 15, will highlight products from more than 40 Shopify merchants.

Shopify’s TikTok channel is now available in the U.S. The company plans to launch it in additional markets throughout North America, Europe, and Southeast Asia in early 2021.


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FinovateWest Digital 2020 Debuts Demo Breakout Sessions

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Debuts Demo Breakout Sessions

As Finovate continues to make the case that “The Future of Finance is Digital”, we also strive to find new ways to make it easier for fintech’s most promising entrepreneurs – and the VCs, banks, and fellow fintechs that love them – to network and make meaningful connections at our in-person and all-digital events.

This November at our upcoming all-digital fintech conference, FinovateWest Digital, November 23 through 25, we will feature our latest networking innovation: hosted breakout sessions that give you up close and personal access to the leaders and founders of our demoing companies.

Led by our analysts and staff, FinovateWest Digital’s Demo Breakout Sessions will be held on all three days of the conference, with two sessions on Monday and Tuesday, and one session on Wednesday. These sessions will feature our demoing companies, in conversation with our analysts, who will be on hand to facilitate a lively Q&A with our attendees. The breakout sessions will begin immediately after the demo sessions, and offer unprecedented access to the men and women behind our demoing companies.

Who are the customers whose preferences are driving innovation in customer experience? What are the pain points fintechs are solving for their partners? What is it like to launch a fintech startup in the current environment of COVID-19 and digital transformation?

Go behind the scenes with our demoing companies. Visit our registration page today to save your spot and join us at our all-digital fintech event, FinovateWest, November 23 through 25.


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FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: Glance Networks

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: Glance Networks

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateSpring Digital on May 10 through 13, 2021. Register today and save your spot.

Glance lets you add visual engagement functionality into your banking apps and websites. Bankers can join customers in the digital environment to guide them to complete transactions.

Features

  • Adds human expertise and empathy to digital engagements
  • Complies with financial services data security and privacy requirements
  • Easily add it to your existing website or app

Why it’s great
Glance increases the conversion rate for digital transactions, boosts revenue, increases customer satisfaction and net promoter score, and builds lifetime customer loyalty.

Presenter

Tom Martin, CEO
Martin oversees Glance’s strategy, product development, and go-to-market activities. He is a customer experience and contact center strategist, customer lifecycle expert, and partnership builder.

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: Instnt

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: Instnt

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateSpring Digital on May 10 through 13, 2021. Register today and save your spot.

Instnt is the first fully managed customer onboarding platform with a warranty against fraud losses.

Features

  • Fully managed onboarding platform with a guarantee to sign up more good customers
  • Codeless integration and a compendium of sophisticated features
  • Fraud loss insurance for up to $100 million annually

Why it’s great
Instnt manages the onboarding process as well as the fraud for businesses so they can focus on building their topline revenue and their product.

Presenter

Sunil Madhu, CEO & Founder
Madhu is a serial entrepreneur with IPO and acquisition exits including Socure (Series-C venture-backed), Hopskoch (M&A exit to WPP), Securent (M&A exit to Cisco), and Netegrity (IPO).
LinkedIn

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: UpSwot

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: UpSwot

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateSpring Digital on May 10 through 13, 2021. Register today and save your spot.

UpSwot provides an online banking add-on with cash flow predictions and sales and business insights into QuickBooks, Xero, Amazon, and 120 API-enabled apps to help businesses become more efficient.

Features

  • 120 API-enabled apps
  • Marketing automation powered by continuous access to apps businesses regularly use
  • Banks sell their business products 18% more

Why it’s great
The platform delivers sales, marketing, and risk insights to both the banks and their clients.

Presenter

Dmitry Norenko, CEO
Norenko found a huge gap between the needs of the businesses and the ways the financial institutions serve them. Together with his partners, he created an API-enabled solution used by dozens of banks.
LinkedIn

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: Finzly

FinovateWest Digital 2020 Sneak Peek: Finzly

A look at the companies demoing at FinovateSpring Digital on May 10 through 13, 2021. Register today and save your spot.

Finzly Digital Account Opening is the next generation answer to engaging with customers, creating the right first-impression, and onboarding valuable consumer and business customers.

Features

  • Flexible, escalating security and KYC models
  • Forms-based workflow composer provides institutions with flexibility and control
  • Funded accounts, online and mobile service activation and card issuance

Why it’s great
Finzly Digital Account Opening helps institutions establish profitable customer relationships and is an app easily subscribed to through Finzly BankOS.

Presenters

David Hunkele, Chief Strategy Officer & Advisor
Hunkele is Chief Strategy Officer and advisor with expertise in SaaS software, cloud-banking, go-to-market strategy, and digital transformation within fintech and financial services.
LinkedIn

Terry Howell, CTO
Howell is co-CTO and VP of Technology for Finzly with responsibility for R&D of the BankOS platform, treasury and digital banking products, and quality assurance for test and engineering automation.
LinkedIn

How One Identity Firm Used Partnerships to Grow its Business

How One Identity Firm Used Partnerships to Grow its Business

Identity verification and authentication provider Onfido has provided a guiding light when it comes to digital identity in 2020 and the company’s Q3 sales results can back it up.

Onfido’s global sales increased 82% over the course of the third quarter. The company also doubled the number of sales from its 103 new clients. Overall, Onfido saw a 237% increase in U.S. sales during the third quarter and attributes the growth to new customers switching from other providers.

Aiding Onfido’s success is its decision to partner with Identity Access Management (IAM) companies to spur demand for enterprise-level customers. Some of the company’s marketing plays in this area include hosting an e-voting roundtable with Okta, integrating into Auth0’s Marketplace, and listing on the Salesforce AppExchange.

Additional key partnerships for Onfido this year include:

  • Alior Bank partnered with Onfido to power digital onboarding.
  • ​Hub City Media partnered with Onfido to resell and distribute Onfido’s identity verification and authentication services.
  • Deliveroo expanded its partnership with Onfido to accelerate its onboarding process for drivers.
  • Curve partnered with Onfido to enhance its Digital Identity and Know Your Customer (KYC) processes.
  • SwissBorg partnered with Onfido to provide a compliant customer onboarding experience.
  • Delfin Health partnered with Onfido on its app that predicts, monitors, and tests the health and safety of workforces.
  • MyCash partnered with Onfido to power digital onboarding.
  • Bondora partnered with Onfido to streamline its onboarding and KYC processes.
  • Voima Gold partnered with Onfido to allow customers to securely buy, sell, and store physical gold.
  • EstateGuru partnered with Onfido to automate KYC and AML compliance processes.

Onfido leverages the power of machine learning and AI to help companies cross-verify users’ identity documents with a live biometric of their face. The company can verify more than 4,600 document types from 195 countries.

“Our mission is to create a more open world, where identity is the key to access. This starts with widening access, creating opportunities for everyone to connect with the services they need and making sure that it’s as inclusive as it can be,” said Husayn Kassai, CEO and Co-founder of Onfido. “We made significant strides over the last quarter to make our product offering not only more conducive to enterprise-level organizations, but also fairer when it comes to verifying people from different ethnicities. We believe these changes will only accelerate our growth further.”

Onfido most recently showcased its technology at FinovateFall 2018, where it debuted Facial Check with Video. The tool, available via an SDK, prompts users to film themselves repeating numbers and performing randomized movements to ensure liveness and enhance identity verification.


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Data Security Specialist Bluefin Banks $25 Million in Growth Funding

Data Security Specialist Bluefin Banks $25 Million in Growth Funding

In a round led by Macquarie Capital Principal Finance, payment and data security technology company Bluefin has raised $25 million in new financing. With total capital now standing at more than $30 million, the company said the funding would “fuel” its product line, help drive growth internationally as well as within the U.S., and support “opportunistic acquisitions.”

In its statement, Bluefin put this week’s investment, and the growth opportunities for the company, in the context of changes taking place as a result of the global health crisis. Noting that the pandemic has increased reliance on mobile point of sale devices, Bluefin warns that this means the number of potential attack entry points for hackers and cybercriminals has also increased. With an estimated 27.7 million mobile POS devices in use by 2021, Bluefin argues that additional security to defend private data will be required for all businesses, regardless of their sales hardware preference.

“Bluefin is dedicated to remaining at the forefront of technology and solution development in the fight against breaches and cyberattacks,” Bluefin CEO John M. Perry said. “Our partnership with Macquarie will enable Bluefin to not only introduce more solutions to protect e-commerce, online and point-of-sale transactions, but also to make these solutions available globally through our extensive partner network and Bluefin’s products. We look forward to leveraging Macquarie’s deep financial and global expertise in this next phase of company growth.”

A specialist in securing Personally Identifiable Information (PII), Protected Health Information (PHI), as well as financial card data, Bluefin leverages PCI-validated point-to-point encryption (P2PE) and tokenization to safeguard information upon entry, in transit, and in storage. Bluefin’s technology enables secure payment acceptance for card present, e-commerce, and mobile transactions, and is available via its network of 130+ integrated partners or directly through the company.

“Bluefin has developed industry-leading data and payment protection technologies, which are crucial in the global climate of rising data breaches and cyberattacks against organizations of all sizes,” Macquarie Capital Principal Finance Managing Director Anand Subramanian said. “We are very pleased to partner with this innovative company to expand their cybersecurity product suite and fuel continued growth in the U.S. and internationally.”

An alum of our developers conference, FinDEVr Silicon Valley, Bluefin announced a partnership with CPA Site Solutions in September, enabling the accounting website provider to offer enhanced online billpay. In August, the company teamed up with electronic bill presentment and payment (EBPP) solutions provider Invoice Cloud.


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DriveWealth Brings Home $56.7 Million

DriveWealth Brings Home $56.7 Million

Brokerage infrastructure API provider DriveWealth brought in $56.7 million in Series C funding today. The investment is more than double the Series B round of $21 million the company received in 2018. Today’s investment brings the company’s total to $100.8 million.

The round saw participation from existing investors Point72 Ventures– which led the round– as well as Raptor Group, SBI Holdings, and Route 66 Ventures. New investors Mouro Capital and Fidelity International Strategic Ventures also participated.

DriveWealth will use the funds to strengthen its technology, make strategic acquisitions, and grow the organization to scale its business.

The New York-based company offers a suite of APIs that allows its partners to embed investment experiences of U.S. securities within their own apps. Among DriveWealth’s products are tools for advisors, fractional share investing, and purchase round-up investment capabilities.

“DriveWealth saw its partners open more accounts in 2Q than E*Trade, Schwab and TD Ameritrade combined, and 3Q saw a 33% increase over 2Q,” said DriveWealth Founder and CEO Bob Cortright. “This type of activity speaks to the power of making it simple for consumers to start investing immediately. The new funding from our great investors will only help us improve our technology capabilities to democratize investing.”

Since it was founded in 2012, DriveWealth has already scaled its business to serve a range of geographies and now reaches investors in 153 countries. The company has formed partnerships with firms on six continents, including Asia, where it collaborated with Singapore-based Bambu on the launch of a white-label roboadvisory platform for U.S. wealth managers; and Africa, where the company teamed up with Sigma Securities and Trove Technologies to launch a digital U.S. equities trading product for retail investors in Nigeria.

Among DriveWealth’s clients are Hatch, Revolut, Stake, and Moneylion. The company recently partnered with Access Softek to help community banks and credit unions offer their members access to investing tools.


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