The Palm Beach Post

Mexican banks reportedly targeted in cyber attack

- By Michelle F. Davis and Nacha Cattan

Cyber attackers attempted to penetrate Mexico’s electronic payment systems Friday, forcing three banks to enact contingenc­y plans, according to people familiar with the matter.

Three banks experience­d “incidents” in recent days when operating the SPEI, Mexico’s interbank electronic transfer system, and will be connecting to the central bank’s network under “contingenc­y schemes,” Banco de Mexico said in a statement Friday evening. That could cause delays in money transfers, according to the statement, which noted that the central bank’s SPEI infrastruc­ture and client money haven’t been affected.

Grupo Financiero Banorte had an “incident” with an intermedia­ry process of the system it uses to connect to the central bank’s money-transfer network, but service has been reestablis­hed, the bank said in a tweet Friday afternoon. A spokesman declined to comment on whether Banorte was targeted by cyber attacks.

Cyber attacks targeting banks appear to be happening with more frequency, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified without authorizat­ion to speak publicly. A spokeswoma­n for Mexico’s banking associatio­n, known as the ABM, declined to comment. The central bank asked Banco del Bajio SA to connect to the SPEI using an alternate network Friday, but the lender’s payment transfer system never failed and no client money was affected, a spokesman said. No government banks registered any problems, the Finance Ministry said in an emailed response to questions from Bloomberg.

The assault came less than four months after hackers attempted to steal money from Bancomext, Mexico’s government-run export bank, causing the lender to suspend operations in its internatio­nal payment platform. Bancomext said that it was able to contain the situation thanks to its protocol and help from the authoritie­s, including Banxico.

The SPEI system, establishe­d in 2004, lets users electronic­ally transfer money between deposit accounts through a private, encrypted network operated by Mexico’s central bank, according to Banxico’s website.

Banco de Mexico alerted the public to the dangers of cyber attacks in a report in October 2017, saying that regulators have acknowledg­ed the possibilit­y that these could include systemic attacks on financial systems. In the report, the central bank played up the importance of the authoritie­s in preserving the stability of financial systems when faced with such attacks.

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