The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine bank hit with super glitch second time

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A MAJOR Philippine bank shut down online access and its cash machines for a second day yesterday because of a glitch that drained some accounts but added money into others, creating at least one instant “billionair­e”.

Bank of the Philippine Islands, the country’s third biggest bank by assets and with 8 million customers, was forced to deactivate electronic transactio­ns just hours after saying the problem had been fixed and online services restored.

“I had to borrow from a friend just to eat,” university student John Daniel Villanueva, 21, said after heading to cash machine yesterday morning and finding it offline.

Bank customers were shocked on Wednesday morning to find unauthoris­ed withdrawal­s and deposits from their accounts, triggering fears the bank had been hacked and social media erupting with complaints against the 166-year-old lender.

BPI blamed an “internal data processing error” for the glitch that led to unauthoris­ed credits and debits on customers’ accounts, without explaining the nature of the problem or how it occurred.

The central bank said it accepted BPI’s explanatio­n that no hacking was involved but would still carry out its own investigat­ion.

As BPI scrambled to fix the error on Wednesday, it closed its ATMs and suspended online transactio­ns.

The bank early yesterday said it had fixed the problem and that access to all its electronic channels had been restored, only to deactivate it again as complaints about wrong balances continued to pour in.

While many clients reported money missing from their accounts, one customer was reported to have become an instant peso billionair­e.

The Philippine Daily Inquirer reported yesterday that Jocelyn Reyes was surprised to find her account surge to more than 12.4 billion pesos ($250.08 million) overnight but she and her husband merely laughed off their newfound “fortune”.

Reyes, who did not use her real name, told the Inquirer she would not touch the money. BPI has said that people who received extra money could not keep it.

 ?? ELOISA LOPEZ/AFP ?? People walk into a branch of the Bank of the Philippine Islands in Manila yesterday.
ELOISA LOPEZ/AFP People walk into a branch of the Bank of the Philippine Islands in Manila yesterday.

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