More people are reporting losses in 2024 from
real-time payments made to scammers, with 7% losing €5,000 or
more
Highlights:
- Even though they were warned of the scam by their banks, 7% of
Spanish consumers still sent real-time payments to scammers (versus
the 14% global average).
- 7% of victims were scammed for more than €5,000, up from 4% in
2023.
Global analytics software leader FICO has just released the
results of its survey on real-time payments (RTP) that shows that
80% of consumers in Spain have received a text, email, or phone
call they thought was part of a scam, 4% more than just a year
ago.
More information:
https://www.fico.com/es/latest-thinking/ebook/2024-scams-impact-survey-spain-spanish
According to FICO’s research, scams related to RTP are on the
rise in Spain, as are both the amount and frequency of losses. More
Spanish consumers reported losses in 2024 than in 2023, and the
number of high-value losses (exceeding €5,000) also increased.
Though most losses were relatively small (67% of victims lost €500
or less), 7% of victims were scammed for more than €5,000, up from
4% in 2023.
However, Spanish consumers’ above-average willingness to heed
scam warnings and not send payments after being warned is good news
for both consumers and banks. Actually, 23% of consumers reported a
loss to their bank, 4% more than in 2023 and 74% of Spaniards are
very (46%) or somewhat (28%) satisfied with their bank’s scam
resolution process.
Furthermore, just 7% of consumers sent payments after their bank
warned of scam, half of the global average.
“Real-time payments have become much more commonplace in Spain,”
said Miguel Carrilho, senior consultant at FICO in EMEA.
“Our research shows that 93% of consumers have sent RTP and 90%
have received RTP. In fact, 40% of Spanish consumers consider RTP
more secure than a credit card, yet an increasing number of
individuals are reporting scam losses to their banks.”
Consumers and Banks Share Responsibility When Scams
Occur
Though 44% of consumers in Spain say they are responsible
should they fall for a scam, this is less than the 53% global
average. Spaniards also feel that some blame is to be shared with
banks; 19% feel the receiving bank is responsible, while 20% feel
the same about the originating bank.
In 2024, 73% of consumers in Spain said banks should refund
scam victims always (43%) or most of the time (30%), equal to
what our survey found in 2023.
“The best way to avoid the risk, liability, and loss of
reputation that scams can create is to prevent them from happening
in the first place,” said Carrilho. “Banks play a crucial role in
identifying and intervening in scam transactions. By providing scam
detection and immediate communication through each customer’s
preferred channel, banks can deliver the scam defences that
customers want and expect to see.”
Spanish consumers have a variety of channel preferences for scam
notifications. 41% now prefer to use their bank’s app, an 11%
increase over 2023 and 8% more than the global average. At the same
time, 28% continue to prefer phone calls while 18% prefer text
messaging.
“The bottom line for banks in Spain is that there is not a
single channel that will accommodate all consumers,” Carrilho said.
“Banks must be prepared to reach out through any communication
channel, in real-time, and with two-way capabilities. Proactive,
two-way communications capabilities integrated with scam prevention
workflows can immediately notify customers when banks detect a scam
in progress. This real-time engagement is proven to reduce the
likelihood of a customer following through with payment to a
scammer.”
Not protecting clients from scam may result in high churn
rates
When consumers are unhappy with their bank’s response to a scam
incident, most will take actions that cost the bank time, money,
and potentially the customer relationship itself. The big risk to
banks is that 16% of consumers in Spain said they will change
banks if they’re unhappy with how a scam incident is
managed.
Above all, Spanish consumers want their banks to deploy better
fraud detection systems: 63% of consumers ranked this as the top or
second most impactful action their bank could take. Another 38% of
consumers ranked providing more warnings about known or emerging
scams as the top or second-most impactful action their banks could
take to protect them.
“By incorporating scam-specific analysis, scoring, and customer
outreach for individual transactions, banks can provide proactive
warnings along with automated actions to alert and inform
customers,” Carrilho said. “Notifying a consumer in the heat of the
moment that their transaction may be associated with a scam can
help to break the scammers’ spell.”
For more information, see the full report on the scam survey in
Spain.
Methodology
The data referenced here derives from two surveys FICO conducted
in 2023 and 2024. Each survey asked more than 12,000 consumers
across 14 countries their opinions and experiences regarding RTP
usage, scams, and their banks’ scam management capabilities. When
year-over-year comparisons are made, they are referring to a
comparison of these two surveys that asked the same question in
each year the survey was conducted.
About FICO
FICO (NYSE: FICO) powers decisions that help people and
businesses around the world prosper. Founded in 1956, the company
is a pioneer in the use of predictive analytics and data science to
improve operational decisions. FICO holds more than 200 US and
foreign patents on technologies that increase profitability,
customer satisfaction and growth for businesses in financial
services, insurance, telecommunications, health care, retail and
many other industries. Using FICO solutions, businesses in more
than 80 countries do everything from protecting 4 billion payment
cards from fraud, to improving financial inclusion, to increasing
supply chain resiliency. The FICO® Score, used by 90% of top US
lenders, is the standard measure of consumer credit risk in the US
and has been made available in over 40 other countries, improving
risk management, credit access and transparency.
Learn more at http://www.fico.com.
Join the conversation at https://x.com/FICO_corp &
http://www.fico.com/en/blogs/.
For FICO news and media resources, visit www.fico.com/news.
FICO is a registered trademark of Fair Isaac Corporation in the
U.S. and other countries.
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