
Americans are more vigilant than ever. According to Bankrate's fraud survey, 89% of people took concrete steps last year to protect themselves – updating passwords, enabling two-factor authentication, monitoring accounts, shredding documents, and avoiding suspicious links.
And yet, despite this unprecedented level of personal vigilance, 1 in 3 Americans was still scammed in that same 12 month period. Worse, 37% of those victims lost money.
This is the paradox at the heart of today's financial ecosystem. Consumers are doing more. Fraudsters are doing more. But the infrastructure in between – the systems that govern account access, data sharing, and third-party connectivity – hasn't kept pace.
When 68% of Americans have experienced a financial scam at some point in their lives, it's not a story about individual responsibility. It's a story about structural risk. Every new fintech app, data aggregator, payment initiator, and financial service provider introduces a new connection point – and with it, a new vulnerability. Most fraud risk now sits in the seams between institutions, intermediaries, and third-party providers.
Open banking promised secure, permissioned data sharing. Open finance expands that promise – but also expands the attack surface. Fraudsters are exploiting the weakest link in the chain – and it's rarely the consumer.
1. Standardised accreditation of third-party providers – only trusted, verified organisations should be able to gain access to customer accounts and financial data.
2. Dynamic monitoring of risk indicators – near real-time detection of anomalies, behavioural risk signals, and suspicious patterns across third-party connections.
3. Insurance-backed warranty model – a tangible safeguard that reduces risk between banks and fintechs, turning assurance into something measurable, not theoretical.
Consumers can't solve this alone. Banks can't solve it alone. Intermediaries can't solve it alone. Fintechs can't solve it alone. But the ecosystem can – with Open Finance Risk Management. Fraud is no longer a personal problem. It's an ecosystem problem. And ecosystem problems require ecosystem solutions.
Open finance, covered.