-

Swift AI Innovation Creates Blueprint for Banks to Stop Fraud Faster Through Cross-Border Collaboration

  • Swift and 13 international banks doubled real time fraud detection in trials involving ten million test transactions
  • Privacy-enhancing technologies enabled institutions to share transaction data while maintaining end-to-end privacy and security
  • Used at scale, this technology could enable a joined-up fraud defence across global finance, lead to faster action being taken against criminals and significantly reduce the industry’s fraud-related costs

BRUSSELS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Groundbreaking experiments led by Swift have demonstrated the potential impact AI and secure cross-border data collaboration could have on reducing fraud levels in international payments.

Working with 13 global financial institutions, the experiments used privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs) to enable institutions to securely share fraud insights across borders. In one use case, the PETs enabled participants to verify intelligence on suspicious accounts in real-time, a development which could speed up the time taken to identify complex international financial crime networks and avoid fraudulent transactions being executed.

In a separate use case, participants used a combination of PETs and federated learning – an AI model that ‘visits’ each institution to train on its data locally, so that institutions can collaborate without sharing customer information – to identify anomalous transactions. Trained on synthetic data from ten million artificial transactions between participants, the model was twice as effective in identifying instances of known frauds as a model trained on a single institution’s dataset.

Rachel Levi, Head of AI at Swift, said: “These experiments demonstrate the convening power of Swift as a trusted cooperative at the heart of global finance. A united, industry-wide fraud defence will always be stronger than one put up by a single institution acting alone.

“The industry loses billions to fraud each year, but by enabling the secure sharing of intelligence across borders we’re paving the way for this figure to be significantly reduced, and allowing fraud to be stopped in a matter of minutes, not hours or days.”

Following these successful experiments, Swift intends to expand participation before launching a second phase of tests, which will use real transaction data and seek to demonstrate the technologies’ impact on real-world fraud.

Swift has a long track record of collaborating with the industry, using the latest technology to solve common challenges and enhance the speed, efficiency and security of cross-border transactions. The cooperative has been actively exploring the role AI can play, and currently has more than 50 use cases across proof of concept, pilots and live usage. Financial crime is estimated to have cost the industry USD 485bn in 2023 alone, and earlier this year Swift launched an AI-enhanced Payments Controls Service, which helps small and medium-sized financial institutions more accurately flag suspicious transactions so that action can be taken in real time.

Participants included ANZ, BNY and Intesa Sanpaolo, as well as technology partners including Google Cloud.

David Buckthought, Head of Technology – Payment Services and Digital Assets at ANZ, said: “The rise in fraud and scams is a global issue impacting all financial institutions. ANZ is excited to be involved in an industry-wide response, proving the use of federated learning to enhance detection capabilities. This will provide banks with a stronger defence against fraudulent activity.”

Isabel Schmidt, Executive Platform Owner at BNY, said: “Security is paramount in cross-border payments. Using the latest technologies, this group has achieved results that show how these tools can be used to uplift the entire ecosystem and demonstrate the value of the Swift co-operative in bringing competitive organizations together behind a greater good, while driving standards in security and enhancing the experience of all stakeholders.”

Enrico Canna, Head of Anti-Fraud & Customer Protection Centre at Intesa Sanpaolo, said: “Fraud in cross-border payments increases friction in the ecosystem and causes significant costs at an industry level. Intesa Sanpaolo is collaborating in these preliminary experiments led by Swift to demonstrate the positive impact of a synergistic approach supported by the latest technologies for making the ecosystem more secure and reliable.”

About Swift
Swift is a global member owned cooperative and the world’s leading provider of secure financial messaging services. We provide our community with a platform for messaging and standards for communicating, and we offer products and services to facilitate access and integration, identification, analysis and regulatory compliance.

Our messaging platform, products and services connect more than 11,500 banking and securities organisations, market infrastructures and corporate customers in more than 200 countries and territories. While Swift does not hold funds or manage accounts on behalf of customers, we enable our global community of users to communicate securely, exchanging standardised financial messages in a reliable way, thereby supporting global and local financial flows, as well as trade and commerce all around the world.

As their trusted provider, we relentlessly pursue operational excellence; we support our community in addressing cyber threats; and we continually seek ways to lower costs, reduce risks and eliminate operational inefficiencies. Our products and services support our community’s access and integration, business intelligence, reference data and financial crime compliance needs. Swift also brings the financial community together – at global, regional and local levels – to shape market practice, define standards and debate issues of mutual interest or concern.

Headquartered in Belgium, Swift’s international governance and oversight reinforces the globally inclusive character of its cooperative structure. Swift’s global office network ensures an active presence in all the major financial centres.

Contacts

Press Contacts:
FGS Global
+32 (0)2655 3377
Swift@fgsglobal.com

Swift


Release Versions

Contacts

Press Contacts:
FGS Global
+32 (0)2655 3377
Swift@fgsglobal.com

More News From Swift

Global financial community completes switch to ISO 20022, paving the way for new levels of cross-border payment speed and innovation around the world

BRUSSELS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The global financial community has unleashed a new era for global payments innovation with universal adoption of ISO 20022 as the standard language for cross-border payments worldwide. The final switch happened on 22 November, with the end of coexistence with the traditional MT message format. The move elevates customer experience in today’s fiat currency system in support of the G20 goals for international payments, enabling faster, more efficient and data-driven pay...

Swift to Set New Rules for Retail Cross-Border Payments on Its Network in Bold Move to Further Ramp up Speed and Predictability

BRUSSELS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Swift and its participant banks today take another bold next step toward making cross-border payments as seamless as domestic ones. Swift will introduce new network rules to ensure a consistently fast and predictable experience for consumers and small businesses sending money anywhere in the world. Swift is developing the new scheme framework with a voluntary coalition of over 30 early adopter banks to provide retail customers with the peace of mind and predictability...

Swift Cross-Border Payment Processing Speed Stretches Further Ahead of G20 Target

BRUSSELS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Swift today published new data which reveals continued progress towards meeting the G20’s goal for the speed of cross-border payments, reporting that 90% of cross-border payments made over the Swift network reach the destination bank within an hour. Swift’s data shows that the speed of processing transactions to all but two of the top 40 countries on its network - by volume of payments received - continues to be above the G20’s target of one-hour end-to-end processing...
Back to Newsroom