| New card and banking fraud figures published |
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| Wednesday, 10 March 2010 | |
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New figures released today show that total fraud losses on UK cards fell by 28 per cent between 2008 and 2009 to £440.3 million – a decrease of £170 million on the previous year’s total. The combined force of industry initiatives such as: chip and PIN; the increasing use of sophisticated fraud detection tools by banks and retailers; and the work of the DCPCU , the banking-sponsored special police unit, have all helped contribute to this fall. It is the first time that card fraud has decreased since 2006. Phone banking fraud losses were collated for the first time in 2009 and totalled £12.1 million. Most losses involve customers being duped into disclosing security details - through cold calling or fake emails - which the criminal then uses to commit fraud. Cheque fraud losses decreased from £41.9 million in 2008 to £29.8 million in 2009. The overwhelming majority of attempted cheque frauds get stopped before the cheque is paid. The industry’s ongoing work to prevent cheque fraud - particularly through its use of fraud prevention profiling - has played a key part in driving these losses down. The continuing decline in cheque usage has also played a part in the 29 per cent fall in overall cheque fraud losses. Fraud on guaranteed cheques fell to £0.7 million last year. The UK Domestic Cheque Guarantee Card Scheme is closing on 30 June 2011, meaning that it will no longer be possible to guarantee a cheque under the Scheme after this date. Unlike many other countries in the world, in the UK innocent victims of any type of payment fraud on their debit or credit card or account are protected and should not suffer any financial loss. Melanie Johnson, Chair of The UK Cards Association, which represents UK credit and debit card providers said: "The cards industry sees fighting fraud as a key part of keeping its customers' interests centre-stage. We are committed to a wide range of measures to ensure customers feel confident, safe and secure when they use their credit and debit cards - whether in a shop, abroad, online, at a cash machine or anywhere else. David Cooper, Chairman of the Fraud Control Steering Group, the payment industry’s leading fraud prevention group, said of the non-plastic related fraud losses: There is no one single reason for the drop in card fraud, rather it is the result of a number of initiatives including: · The success of chip and PIN – the types of fraud that this system was brought in to tackle have dropped significantly. Fraud on lost and stolen cards is now at its lowest level for two decades and counterfeit card fraud losses have also fallen and are at their lowest level since 1999. Losses at UK retailers have fallen by 67 per cent since 2004; lost and stolen card fraud fell by 58 per cent between 2004 and 2009; and mail non-receipt fraud has fallen by 91 per cent since 2004. Additionally, the cards industry continues to work closely with the retail community to raise awareness of the ways in which retailers can protect their chip and PIN terminals from criminal attack. · Reasons behind the decrease in phone, internet and mail order shopping fraud (card-not-present fraud) include the increasing use of sophisticated fraud screening detection tools by retailers and banks, as well as the continuing growth in the use of MasterCard SecureCode and Verified by Visa (online fraud prevention solutions that make cards more secure when online shopping), by both online retailers and cardholders. These losses fell by 19% and it is the first time that this type of fraud has shown a year-on-year decrease. · The work of the Dedicated Cheque and Plastic Crime Unit (DCPCU) – the industry-sponsored special police unit, has proven highly successful; figures show that it has been responsible for keeping approximately £340 million of customers’ money out of criminal hands since its launch in 2002. · There has also been a significant decrease in fraud abroad which fell by 47% to £122.7m. One of the factors causing this is the fraud detection systems used by the banks and card companies, which monitor for unusual spending - meaning that potential fraud is stopped before it happens. Fraud figures released by the National Fraud Authority (NFA) on 21 January 2010 also serve to put these banking fraud losses into perspective. The NFA estimated that fraud in all its guises costs the UK over £30 billion a year – card and banking fraud accounts for less than 2 per cent of this figure. (Source - UK Cards Association/Financial Fraud Action UK Press Release) |

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