Houston Chronicle Sunday

World banking security in doubt after $81M hack

- By Michael Corkery

Tens of millions of dollars siphoned from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. A shadowy set of casinos in the Philippine­s. A large bank in Bangladesh with creaky technology. An unknown — and perhaps uncatchabl­e — group of anonymous thieves with sophistica­ted hacking skills.

What unites this curious cast of characters and enabled one of the most brazen digital bank heists ever is a ubiquitous and highly trusted internatio­nal bank messaging system called SWIFT.

SWIFT — the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication — is billed as a supersecur­e system that banks use to authorize payments from one account to another. “The Rolls-Royce of payments networks,” one financial analyst said.

But last week, for the first time since hackers captured $81 million from Bangladesh’s central bank in February, SWIFT acknowledg­ed that the thieves have tried to carry out similar heists at other banks on its network by sneaking into the beating heart of the global banking system.

“There are many banks out there right now saying, ‘There but for the grace of God go us,’ ” said Gareth Lodge, a payments analyst at Celent, a financial consulting firm.

‘Hollywood-scale’ heist

The admission that the attack was not a one-time event in a developing country but perhaps part of a broader threat has thrust SWIFT into a spotlight, raising questions about how securely money is being moved around the world. Some financial security experts point out the SWIFT system is only as safe as its weakest link.

The attack also reflects a growing sophistica­tion among digital criminals, who for years have been breaching personal bank accounts and stealing credit card credential­s. The thieves in Bangladesh may have spent months lurking inside the central bank’s computers, studying how to steal the necessary credential­s to gain access to SWIFT.

It is the digital version of the heist depicted in the movie “Ocean’s Eleven,” said Adrian Nish, head of the cyberthrea­t intelligen­ce team at BAE Systems, a defense and security company.

“The trend is moving from opportunis­tic crime to Hollywood-scale attacks,” said Nish, whose firm has analyzed the malware believed to have been used in the Bangladesh breach.

In the United States, most banks take special precaution­s with their SWIFT computers, building multiple firewalls to isolate the system from the bank’s other networks and keeping the machines physically isolated in a separate locked room.

But elsewhere, some banks take far fewer precaution­s. And security experts who have analyzed the SWIFT breach said they had concluded that the Bangladesh bank may have been particular­ly vulnerable to an attack.

Perfectly timed attack

Each bank on the SWIFT network is identified by a set of codes. And it was the codes assigned to the Bank of Bangladesh that were recognized — correctly — by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York when it transferre­d $81 million of the Bangladesh bank’s money to the Philippine­s, not knowing that someone, somewhere, had stolen the credential­s of the Bangladesh bank and installed malware to cover his or her tracks.

The hackers seemed to time the attack perfectly: When officials from the Fed tried to reach out to Bangladesh, it was a weekend there and no one was working. By the time central bankers in Bangladesh discovered the fraud, it was the weekend in New York and the Fed offices were closed.

The New York Fed has been criticized for letting the $81 million slip out. Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, D-N.Y. and member of the Financial Services Committee, has called for an investigat­ion, warning that the breach “threatens to undermine the confidence that foreign central banks have in the Federal Reserve, and in the safety and soundness of internatio­nal monetary transactio­ns.”

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