Title: Financial Services Fraud
1Financial Services Fraud
- Jonathan B. Wolfe, CPA Director, Accume Partners
2Agenda
- Overview
- Definition of Operational Fraud
- Fraud Statistics
- Fraud within Financial Services
- Banking, Insurance, Investment Advisors/Broker
Dealers - Risk Factors
- What can an internal auditor do?
- Fraud Risk Assessment
- Employ Best Practices
- Fraud Resources
3Financial Services Fraud
4Definition of Occupational Fraud
- The term Occupational Fraud may be defined as
- The use of ones occupation for personal
enrichment through the deliberate misuse or
misapplication of the employing organizations
resources or assets.
5Definition of Occupational Fraud
- All occupational fraud schemes have four key
elements in common. The activity - is clandestine
- violates the perpetrators fiduciary duties to
the victim organization - is committed for the purpose of direct or
indirect financial benefit to the perpetrator
and - costs the employing organization assets, revenue,
or reserves.
6Occupational Fraud
- All occupational frauds fall into one of three
major categories - Asset Misappropriations, which involve the theft
or misuse of an organizations assets. - Corruption, in which fraudsters wrongfully use
their influence in a business transaction in
order to procure some benefit for themselves or
another person, contrary to their duty to their
employer or the rights of another. - Fraudulent Statements, which generally involve
falsification of an organizations financial
statements.
7Fraud Statistics Source 2006 Association of
Certified Fraud Examiners (ACFE) Report to
the Nation
10- The Sum of Percentage in this chart exceeds
100 because in some cases respondents identified
more than one detection method.
8Fraud Statistics Source 2006 ACFE Report to the
Nation
9Fraud Statistics Source 2006 ACFE Report to
the Nation
- Banking and Financial Services Industry has the
highest number of cases - Insurance was ranked 5th.
10Fraud Statistics Source 2006 ACFE Report to the
Nation
Where is it happening?
- Accounting, Finance and Executives represents 55
of the cases. - While frauds committed by those in the highest
age groups were the most costly on average, over
two-thirds of the frauds reported were committed
by employees in the 31-50 age group. The median
age among perpetrators was 42. - Most of the perpetrators were either employees
(41.2) or managers (39.5). Owner/executives
(19.3).
11Fraud Statistics Median Loss Source 2006
ACFE Report to the Nation
12Financial Services Fraud
- Fraud Within Financial Services
13Fraud Within Financial ServicesSource 2006
ACFE Report to the Nation
Banking and Financial Services Fraud
- Not surprisingly, two of the three most common
schemes in the banking and financial services
industry were cash larceny and skimming. These
schemes generally involve the physical theft of
incoming cash and cash on hand (for example, in a
vault). - Among the 23 non-cash cases in this industry, the
most common type of scheme involved the theft of
proprietary information about bank customers. - Of the 148 cases, 80 were prosecuted.
14Fraud Within Financial ServicesSource 2006
ACFE Report to the Nation
Insurance Fraud
- Fraudulent billings represented nearly 30 of the
insurance industry cases. These cases were nearly
twice as common as the next-most-frequently
reported scheme, which was check tampering. - Conversely, nearly 70 of the organizations in
the insurance industry conducted fraud training
for their employees and managers a higher rate
than for any other industry - Of the 78 cases, 74 were prosecuted.
15Risk Factors
- Incentives or pressures
- Opportunities
- Attitudes or rationalizations
16Industry Fraud Banking Mortgage Banking
- Notary
- Volume pressures Loans, Deposits
- Appraisers
- Artificially inflating home values
- Check Fraud
- Participating financial institutions can report
all checking accounts "closed for cause" to a
central database, called ChexSystems. This
program prevents people, who have outstanding
checks due to retailers, from opening new
accounts. - Black Market Peso
- Peso brokers laundering monies through the
purchase of foreign goods.
17Industry Fraud - Insurance
- Premium Fraud
- Premium fraud occurs when employers fraudulently
misstate the number of employees or the nature of
their work, such as reporting a roofer as an
office worker. - Billing Fraud
- Ohio pain management specialist threatened to
deny desperate patients painkillers unless they
let him use their names to bill insurance
companies more than 60 million in narcotic drugs
and expensive diagnostic tests he never gave.
Some patients grew addicted, and two died of
overdoses. He also fraudulently billed insurers
for more than 100 patients a day for years. He
received life in federal prison. - Employer or Insurance Carrier Fraud
- In this type of fraud, employers or employees of
an insurance carrier will make a false statement
regarding a workers entitlement to benefits. The
statement is designed to discourage the worker
from pursuing a legitimate claim
18Industry Fraud Investment Advisors and Broker
Dealers
- Churning Excessive Commission Scams
- Discretionary Accounts
- 3 or more commissions
- Breakpoint Sales Fee Scales
- Over Concentration - brokers are obligated to
advise their clients to diversify in order to
decrease risk. - House Stocks - A "house stock" is essentially a
stock that the firm wants people to buy in order
to artificially increase its value. - Failure to Place an Order - broker is trying to
inflate the value of a stock as part of an
unethical investment scheme, it may be against
his interests to sell the stock. - Unauthorized Trades - brokers who have had
discretionary trading contracts with their
clients may take advantage of their freedom and
purchase "house stocks", or engage in other
illicit trading practices designed to increase
their earnings at the expense of their client.
19Financial Services Fraud
- What can an Internal Auditor do?
20What can an Internal Auditor do?
Fraud Risk Assessment
- Systematic Rather Than Haphazard or Informal
- Address
- Financial reporting
- Misappropriation of assets
- Expenditures and liabilities for improper
purposes - Fraudulently obtained revenues and assets, and
costs and expenses avoided by fraud - Fraud by senior management
- Extend to Business Unit and Significant Account
Levels - Likelihood Identify Fraud Risks That Are More
Than Remote - Significance Identify Fraud Risks That Are More
Than Inconsequential in Amount - Consider Risks of Management Override
21What can an Internal Auditor do?
Employ Best Practices
- Develop a Fraud Policy
- Enhance Audit Programs
- Leverage your Sarbanes Oxley work
- Educate Audit Committee and Boards
- Evaluate Code of Ethics
- Provide annual training programs
- Integrate fraud monitoring into your enterprise
risk management program - Implement a whistle blower policy
- Discuss SAS 99 with your external auditors
- Outside resources CFEs, consultants
- Technology ACL, data mining
22Does Internal Audit Make a Difference? YES!
Source 2006 ACFE Report to the Nation
- Internal audits had a positive correlation with
both time to detection and median loss.
Fifty-nine percent of victim organizations had an
internal audit or fraud examination department at
the time of the fraud. - Similarly, organizations with internal audit
departments detected their frauds in 18 months,
as opposed to 24 months for those without
internal audit departments.
23Fraud Resources
- The Institute of Internal Auditors
- www.theiia.com
- Association of Certified Fraud Examiners
- www.cfenet.com
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- www.sec.gov
- The Treasury Department
- www.treas.gov
- National White Collar Crime Center
- www.nw3c.org
24Financial Services Fraud