A multinational bank lost $35 million in 2023 to a sophisticated scam involving a cloned AI voice impersonating a company director, a case that underscores the escalating threat of artificial intelligence-fueled financial fraud, according to a report by Forbes.
Financial institutions are facing a surge in identity-based cyberattacks, driven by increasingly realistic impersonation tactics and automation, forcing a reassessment of trust in digital interactions. The shift extends beyond traditional credential theft, with fraudsters leveraging AI to create convincing synthetic identities and exploit vulnerabilities at scale.
The problem is significant. Losses from synthetic identity fraud exceeded $35 billion in 2023, according to the anti-fraud collaboration platform FiVerity. This rise coincides with a broader trend of increasing cybercrime, with the average cost of a data breach reaching an all-time high of $4.45 million in 2023, as reported by Thomson Reuters.
Industry data reveals significant weaknesses in current identity verification technologies. Approximately 66% of financial services firms report inconsistent results from their verification tools, according to a recent PYMNTS Intelligence report, a collaboration with Trulioo. These performance gaps contribute to revenue losses averaging 3%, equating to an estimated $34 billion annually across the industry.
The tactics employed by fraudsters are evolving rapidly. In 81% of successful scams, criminals impersonated trusted authorities, friendly strangers, or personal contacts, according to a PYMNTS Intelligence report commissioned by Block. Authority impersonation alone accounted for 55% of reported incidents, highlighting the continued dominance of social engineering as an attack vector.
The speed at which these scams unfold further complicates detection, and mitigation. Nearly two-thirds of scam victims authorized payments within 24 hours, with many transactions approved in even shorter timeframes, as instant and near-instant payment rails gain traction.
In response, financial institutions are repositioning identity technologies within payment flows. Visa has partnered with Proof to strengthen digital ID verification for high-value and high-risk payments. Visa executives have stated that “the only way to fight bad AI is with even better AI,” framing the situation as a technological contest, according to PYMNTS.
Bolt’s integration of Socure’s Identity Graph and predictive risk signals is another example of this trend, aiming to distinguish legitimate consumers from manipulated or synthetic identities at checkout. Cloud and infrastructure providers are also becoming involved, with Google partnering with Entrust to align identity verification with large-scale technology platforms.
Although challenges remain, some measurable improvements are occurring. Nearly 94% of global identity platform users reported that know your customer (KYC) and know your business (KYB) processes have turn into easier over time, according to PYMNTS Intelligence. 90% of consumers who recovered most or all of their losses expressed confidence in their institutions’ ability to prevent future scams.
The UK saw a 12% rise in fraud in 2024, with over £1 billion in losses, largely attributed to AI technologies like deepfakes and voice impersonation tools, according to The Times.