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						bankers need to take cyber threat seriously: BoE 
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		[December 22, 2014] 
		By Matt Scuffham and William Schomberg
 LONDON (Reuters) - Top British bankers and 
		other senior executives in the financial services industry are not 
		taking the risk of cyber attacks seriously enough, financial 
		policymakers at the Bank of England say.
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			 Cyber crime costs the global economy $445 billion a year and the 
			bill is rising, according to the Center for Strategic and 
			International Studies. 
 Banks are particularly vulnerable, despite spending hundreds of 
			millions of dollars a year on cyber defenses. Increasingly 
			sophisticated criminals are trying to steal money or client data, 
			cause havoc in financial markets or score political points.
 
 Minutes of the most recent meetings of the Bank's Financial Policy 
			Committee noted "a tendency among (banking) firms to view cyber 
			threats as a technical problem rather than an issue which merits 
			board-level attention given the evolving nature of cyber threats and 
			the key importance of cyber resilience to continuity of financial 
			services".
 
			
			 
			Cyber criminals obtained details of 83 million clients from JPMorgan 
			Chase <JPM.N> this year while Sony Pictures was hacked in an attack 
			the United States has blamed on North Korea.
 The minutes published on Monday showed the Bank of England and some 
			financial service firms were in advanced discussions over taking a 
			voluntary test known as CBEST, in which they would hire hackers to 
			attack them at will in order to test their resilience.
 
 Other major banks and key financial institutions should also take 
			the test as soon as possible, the FPC minutes said.
 
 The FPC also said banks in Britain need to do more than pass health 
			checks on their ability to withstand financial shocks, urging boards 
			to improve the way their companies are run.
 
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			Last week, the BoE said Britain's biggest lenders, with the 
			exception of the Co-operative Bank, had passed stress tests of how 
			well prepared they were.
 British banks have been embroiled in scandals ranging from attempts 
			to fix benchmark interest and foreign exchange rates to the 
			mis-selling of loan insurance and complex hedging products to small 
			businesses.
 
 "In this environment, the Committee judged that strong, effective 
			and well-informed management and governance arrangements would be 
			essential to rebuild confidence in the banking system," the minutes 
			said.
 
 (Reporting by Matt Scuffham and William Schomberg; Editing by Ruth 
			Pitchford)
 
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