Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Monday, September 07 2020 - 12:01
AsiaNet
FICO Survey: 95% of Vietnamese Banks Believe AI Will Stop More Money Laundering
HANOI, Sept 7, 2020/PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

     - 45 percent currently experience significant struggles modifying their
       existing rules-based anti-money laundering (AML) compliance system 

Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/450763/FICO_Logo.jpg 

Highlights:

    - 95 percent of Vietnamese banks believe AI will stop more money
      laundering. 
    - 64 percent of Vietnamese banks still believe in older rules-based
      technology for AML compliance, despite 45 percent saying that they
      experience significant struggles modifying these systems. 
    - In Vietnam, 96 percent of banks said they will invest in financial crime
      compliance in the year ahead and 27 percent plan to significantly 
      increase this investment in 2021. 

More information: https://content.fico.com/TABaml_vn_pr

A recent survey by global analytics software firm FICO has revealed that while 
95 percent of Vietnamese banks believe AI will strengthen anti-money laundering 
efforts, many remain unsure how to operationalize the advanced technology. 

Conversely, when asked about the efficacy of much older rules-based technology, 
64 percent of Vietnamese banks say they still believe in the ability of these 
AML systems, despite 45 percent saying they experience significant struggles 
modifying them.

"Rules-based compliance systems continue to the be the workhorse for banks in 
Asia Pacific when fighting financial crime," said Timothy Choon, FICO's 
Financial Crimes Leader in Asia Pacific. "However, some early adopters are 
starting to embrace the new world of AI and realize that the decade-old 
rules-based systems can't keep up with sophisticated threats on their own.

"The secret sauce is operationalizing advanced AI technology and making it work 
side-by-side with the rules-based systems. In fact, 20 percent of respondents 
picked this as their principal obstacle in meeting financial crime risk 
mitigation targets."

The survey showed that the key challenges for existing AML compliance solutions 
regionally were: the ability to meet new types of compliance risks in channels 
and products; the capacity to provide an end-to-end integrated compliance 
solution; and the facility to update quickly to changes in regulation. 

Across Asia Pacific, larger multinational banks were more likely to use a 
vendor solution for AML, while the use of an in-house system was more common 
with domestic banks.

Key drivers of financial crime strategy

One of the leading indicators driving change in financial crime strategy is 
customer experience. Over two-in-five respondents ranked this in their top 
considerations with 17 percent of Asia Pacific banks citing it as the primary 
factor behind their current and future approach. 

"We can see that addressing the competing needs of regulatory compliance and 
customer experience remains a balancing act for most institutions," said Choon. 
"Banks are challenged by the need for more information to deal with high rates 
of alerts from ineffective systems, while not vexing customers with incessant 
due diligence questions."

Additional considerations ranked second and third by banks included, reputation 
damage and direct financial losses. When it came to financial crime challenges 
almost half of respondents cited the speed of responding to new threats, while 
a third believe achieving accurate detection remains a significant test.

FICO's comprehensive compliance solution [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2869268-1&h=151877866&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.fico.com%2Fen%2Fsolutions%2Fcompliance&a=FICO%27s+comprehensive+compliance+solution 
] incorporates advanced machine learning techniques designed to address these 
challenges by significantly improving detection accuracy through patented 
advanced analytics models such as Soft Clustering Misalignment and Threat Score 
which can help financial institutions operationalize AI within their existing 
compliance strategies.

Investment in compliance technology

A significant majority of banks (93%) across Asia Pacific are likely to 
continue their technology spend on either upgrading or enhancing their 
compliance systems. However, in the key regional financial centres of Singapore 
and Hong Kong only two-thirds of respondents indicated that their banks are 
likely to start new investments in compliance technology, likely due to their 
more significant spend in this area in recent years.

In Vietnam, 96 percent of banks said they will continue to invest in compliance 
in the year ahead and 27 percent plan to significantly increase this investment 
in 2021.

Overall levels of investment in compliance technology by banks in Asia Pacific 
are expected to rise in 2021. 49 percent of respondents said budgets will 
increase, with an additional 34 percent expecting a significant increase. 
Interestingly, foreign banks are more inclined towards new spend compared with 
domestic counterparts. Indonesia, Australia, Thailand and the Philippines were 
the markets that said they would invest the most in 2021.

"This survey, conducted in May, shows that even in the recent economic downturn 
triggered by the pandemic, banks remain committed to targeted spending that 
boosts their AML compliance defenses," said Choon. "There is an increased 
willingness to perceive compliance and fraud as a common financial crime risk – 
a fraudster is more likely to launder money, and vice versa.

"This convergence is a global trend. Banks in the US and UK are well on their 
way to fully integrating their compliance and fraud functions, bringing 
together teams, leaders and technologies.  We believe banks in Asia Pacific are 
looking to these markets to see what will work, with plans to follow quickly in 
the next 24-36 months."

FICO's Integrated AML Compliance Survey was produced in May 2020 using an 
online, quantitative poll of 256 senior executives from banks across eleven 
countries carried out on behalf of FICO by an independent research company. The 
countries surveyed were Australia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, 
Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam.

About FICO

FICO (NYSE: FICO) powers decisions that help people and businesses around the 
world prosper. Founded in 1956 and based in Silicon Valley, the company is a 
pioneer in the use of predictive analytics and data science to improve 
operational decisions. FICO holds more than 195 US and foreign patents on 
technologies that increase profitability, customer satisfaction and growth for 
businesses in financial services, manufacturing, telecommunications, health 
care, retail and many other industries. Using FICO solutions, businesses in 
more than 100 countries do everything from protecting 2.6 billion payment cards 
from fraud, to helping people get credit, to ensuring that millions of 
airplanes and rental cars are in the right place at the right time.

Learn more at www.fico.com.

Join the conversation on Twitter at @FICOnews_APAC [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2869268-1&h=2652755324&u=https%3A%2F%2Ftwitter.com%2FFICOnews_APAC&a=%40FICOnews_APAC 
].

FICO is a registered trademark of Fair Isaac Corporation in the US and other 
countries

SOURCE:  FICO

CONTACT: Neil Mirano
         RICE for FICO
         +65-3157-5680
         neil.mirano@ricecomms.com; 

         Saxon Shirley
         FICO
         +65-9171-0965
         saxonshirley@fico.com
Translations

Vietnamese