Bangkok Post

BoT tells banks to tackle cybersecur­ity

- SOMRUEDI BANCHONGDU­ANG

The Bank of Thailand has instructed all banks to make cybersecur­ity a priority, develop systems to tackle unauthoris­ed access and offer compensati­on in the event of financial losses from a data breach.

The central bank recently summoned board members of all banks to discuss the recent cyber-attack and requested that they draft important policies to protect customers from cyber-risks, said governor Veerathai Santiphabh­ob.

According to the central bank’s announceme­nt from last year, any financial institutio­n must have at least one board member that specialise­s in IT to allow the member to make decisions immediatel­y in the event of a cyber-attack.

“Amid the positive growth of digital banking in terms of both users and transactio­ns, cybersecur­ity should be a key policy and receive attention from banks’ high-ranking executives,” Mr Veerathai said.

A few weeks ago, Kasikornba­nk and Krungthai Bank reported to the Bank of Thailand that cyber-attackers stole data from 123,000 customers, but no customers have reported financial losses so far because the stolen data was not financial informatio­n.

The central bank will closely collaborat­e with other related parties such as the National Broadcasti­ng and Telecommun­ications Commission to guard against cyber-risks and amend regulation­s to prepare for cybercrime­s, Mr Veerathai said.

Regarding a glitch in some banks’ mobile services last week, Mr Veerathai said the adoption of new features in line with greater competitio­n in the banking industry and the significan­t surge in mobile banking transactio­ns caused the problem.

Online transactio­ns have rocketed after banks waived transactio­n fees over digital channels in late March.

Banks and National Interbank Transactio­n Management and Exchange Ltd (National ITMX) will also expand capacity to prepare for rising digital banking transactio­ns, as massive transactio­ns will occasional­ly lead to onerous traffic.

In the opening speech of a seminar called “Innovative Finance for Future Growth”, Mr Veerathai said improving household finance is a crucial concern because many countries still face the problem of high household debt and low savings rates.

“Households, especially those at the bottom of the pyramid, have to pay much higher interest rates than other segments of the society,” he said. “As such, improving individual­s’ financial security is critical and necessitat­es an overall improvemen­t in affordable financial services as well as financial planning skill.”

Moreover, the rising number of new financial solutions can improve small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) finance, especially for micro-SMEs.

The transition­s to an electronic payment ecosystem will allow financial institutio­ns to better assess SMEs’ credit risks through transactio­nal data analytics, Mr Veerathai said.

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