▾ G11 Media Network: | ChannelCity | ImpresaCity | SecurityOpenLab | Italian Channel Awards | Italian Project Awards | Italian Security Awards | ...
InnovationOpenLab

FICO Survey: Alarming Acceptance of 'Liar Loans' Among Indonesian Consumers

FICO (NYSE: FICO): Highlights A third of Indonesians (34%) think it’s OK or normal for people to exaggerate their income on loan applications One in ten Indonesians (10%) believe it’s normal ...

Business Wire

1 in 4 Indonesians think it’s OK to deliberately mislead on personal loans, mortgages, auto and other applications.

JAKARTA: FICO (NYSE: FICO):

Highlights

  • A third of Indonesians (34%) think it’s OK or normal for people to exaggerate their income on loan applications
  • One in ten Indonesians (10%) believe it’s normal for people to deliberately misrepresent their income on mortgage applications
  • Falsifying insurance claims is viewed as the most taboo form of fraud, with more than three in four Indonesians (77%) believing it is not acceptable

Global analytics software leader FICO today shared its latest global consumer fraud research, revealing alarming attitudes toward first-party financial fraud both globally and in the Indonesian market.

The survey finds that while most Indonesian respondents view the misrepresentation of information when applying for financial products and making insurance claims unacceptable, a sizeable portion of the population feels otherwise.

Two in five Indonesians think it is normal or acceptable in some cases to misrepresent their income on an application for a bank account (42%), mortgage (35%) or automotive finance (49%). Additionally, more than a third of Indonesians (34%) believe that exaggerating income on a personal loan application to be normal or acceptable.

These sentiments closely align with global attitudes. The survey reveals that the majority of consumers (56%) firmly reject exaggerating income on loan applications, viewing it as never acceptable. One in four (24%) consider it permissible in certain circumstances, while one in seven (15%) view it as a normal practice.

“Consumers must understand that misrepresentation of information when applying for financial products can lead to serious consequences, even if done unintentionally,” said Aashish Sharma, APAC segment leader for risk lifecycle and decision management at FICO. “Banks can tackle the real problem of ‘liar loans’ by improving their ability to detect inaccuracies, enabling safeguards from bad debt while effectively preventing customers from committing fraud.”

More information: https://www.fico.com/en/latest-thinking/ebook/consumer-survey-2023-digital-banking-customer-preferences-and-fraud-controls

Growing Mortgage Sector at Risk of Application Fraud

The Indonesian mortgage market, estimated at IDR72 trillion (US$ 4.56 billion) in 2024, is expected to reach IDR117 (US$7.39 billion) by 2029 (Mordor Intelligence). However, with a quarter of Indonesian consumers (25%) believing it's acceptable under certain circumstances to lie on mortgage applications and one in ten (10%) viewing it as normal, financial institutions face significant risk assessment challenges and potential bad loan rates.

Even when a mortgage application from an existing customer appears legitimate on paper, the established banking relationship can be exploited to commit fraud. By exaggerating income, such as inflating self-employment earnings or overstating bonuses, and omitting debts or misrepresenting personal circumstances, applicants can manipulate the loan process. This makes it difficult for lenders to detect these discrepancies without thorough and proactive verification measures.

“While application fraud presents unique challenges, financial institutions can bolster their fraud defenses through industry-leading data analytic solutions,” said Sharma. “Risk assessments can be enhanced by applying anomaly detection analytics, conducting comprehensive data analysis, and continuously monitoring accounts for signs of sleeper fraud or impending bust-outs.”

Falsifying Insurance Claims Is Most Taboo

According to FICO’s research, falsifying insurance claims is viewed as the most taboo form of fraud, according to FICO’s research, with around two-thirds of consumers globally believing it is never acceptable to exaggerate the value of stolen property or add false items to a claim. This sentiment is echoed by more than three in four Indonesians (77%).

Matching global trends, attitudes shift regarding other financial products. Half of consumers globally, including half of Indonesians, feel it is unacceptable to exaggerate income on a mobile phone contract (51%) or an application for automotive financing (49%).

“The FICO survey reveals concerning public perceptions about application fraud,” noted Sharma. “While many are adopting their views based on circumstances, fraud cannot be justified. Financial institutions that detect fraud before granting credit can protect themselves and prevent customers from inadvertently engaging in questionable or criminal behaviour.”

The survey was conducted in November 2023 by an independent research company adhering to research industry standards. 1,001 Indonesian adults were surveyed, along with approximately 12,000 other consumers in Canada, U.S., Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, The Philippines, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, U.K. and Spain.

Fonte: Business Wire

If you liked this article and want to stay up to date with news from InnovationOpenLab.com subscribe to ours Free newsletter.

Related news

Last News

RSA at Cybertech Europe 2024

Alaa Abdul Nabi, Vice President, Sales International at RSA presents the innovations the vendor brings to Cybertech as part of a passwordless vision for…

Italian Security Awards 2024: G11 Media honours the best of Italian cybersecurity

G11 Media's SecurityOpenLab magazine rewards excellence in cybersecurity: the best vendors based on user votes

How Austria is making its AI ecosystem grow

Always keeping an European perspective, Austria has developed a thriving AI ecosystem that now can attract talents and companies from other countries

Sparkle and Telsy test Quantum Key Distribution in practice

Successfully completing a Proof of Concept implementation in Athens, the two Italian companies prove that QKD can be easily implemented also in pre-existing…

Most read

UEFI Forum Releases the UEFI 2.11 Specification and the PI 1.9 Specification…

#Firmware--The UEFI Forum today announced the release of the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) 2.11 specification and the Platform Initialization…

Iterable Debuts Winter Product Release with AI Tools to Optimize Frequency,…

#Iterable--Iterable, the AI-powered customer communication platform, today unveiled its Winter Product Release—featuring innovative AI capabilities that…

Abnormal Security Named as Leader in Inaugural 2024 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™…

Abnormal Security, the leader in AI-native human behavior security, today announced it has been recognized as a Leader in the first ever Gartner® Magic…

Swoop Celebrates Triple Recognition in PM360’s 13th Annual Innovations…

PM360's 13th Annual Innovations Issue recognizes Swoop for its cutting-edge contributions to data-driven healthcare marketing. Honored with three prestigious…

Newsletter signup

Join our mailing list to get weekly updates delivered to your inbox.

Sign me up!