Sowetan

Online banking fraud still biggest problem

More complaints being settled in favour of banks

- By Angelique Ardé

Internet banking fraud was the biggest source of complaints about banks for the third year in a row, but in 80% of these cases the Ombudsman for Banking Services found in favour of the banks. This is according to the ombud’s latest annual report released yesterday. ATM-related complaints were the second-biggest category of complaints the ombud dealt with, followed by complaints concerning credit cards.

These were also the top three types of complaints against banks in the previous year under review. Internet banking, ATM and credit card fraud account for 48% of complaints to the banking ombud’s office, the ombud’s 2018 report says. “We have continued to receive a steady, daily stream of complaints from people who have been victims of fraud and it seems the end of this trend is nowhere in sight,” ombud Reana Steyn says in the report.

As banks are increasing­ly offering easy-to-use accounts you can operate from your phone or computer, fraudsters too have upped their attempts to fleece you, often by tricking you into revealing crucial bank details.

When banks can prove you fell for a scam and gave away your account PIN, password or one-time pin (OTP), your complaint is unlikely to succeed. However, if you realise you have been a victim of fraud, your bank should help you mitigate your loss (see Bank pays for not acting to stop loss of stolen funds).

The report shows that the ombud finalised 1,349 complaints concerning internet banking, 265 (or 20%) of which went in favour of the consumer.

In only 14% of the 1,053 ATM-related complaints finalised last year, the ombud found in favour of consumers. And in 26% of cases relating to credit card complaints, the ombud found in favour of consumers.

In all of these categories, complaints are increasing­ly being settled in favour of the banks, or against consumers, as compared with the previous year.

In the previous year, the ombud finalised more internet banking complaints (a total of 1,377) and found in favour of consumers in more instances (23%). Likewise, in 2017 the ombud finalised 1,115 ATM-related complaints and in 18% of cases found in favour of the consumer.

In 2017, there were fewer credit card complaints (764), but a higher number of those were found in favour of the consumer (33%). In a press release issued by the ombud yesterday, Steyn says fraudsters and hackers seem to be working around the clock to create fake copies of bank websites and impersonat­e bank staff. They send bank customers emails and contact them via telephone. The e-mails and calls are so convincing that many customers get taken in, she says. “This happens despite all the warnings issued by banks and our office. Thousands of customers are fooled by the scammers and in the process they lose millions of rands. In many cases victims disclose their personal banking details, passwords and PINs which are the direct cause of the loss, and in those instances the banks are not in a position to issue a refund,” she says. The ombud’s annual report does not report on the losses suffered by consumers in any category of crime.

Treating customers fairly

There is a new approach to regulation that requires financial institutio­ns, including banks, to treat you fairly by meeting six Treating Customers Fairly (TCF) outcomes. The ombud’s latest annual report shows that in most cases (97.7% of complaints), customers were not satisfied that they had been provided with clear informatio­n or kept appropriat­ely informed before, during and after signing up for a bank service.

This was particular­ly pronounced in complaints relating to internet banking, ATMs, credit cards, as well as those relating to personal loans, mortgage finance and current accounts.

Banks also scored badly when it came to complaints about failing to meet expectatio­ns and providing service of an accepta ble standard.

Thousands of customers are fooled by the scammers... losing millions

 ??  ?? Bank customers are urged to keep credit card and other details locked away from fraudsters.
Bank customers are urged to keep credit card and other details locked away from fraudsters.

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