Bank of Montreal, Canada's fourth biggest lender, said on Monday
it was contacted by fraudsters on Sunday who claimed they were
in possession of the personal and financial information of a
limited number of the bank's customers.
A spokesman for the bank said it believed that less than 50,000
of the bank's 8 million customers across Canada were hacked. He
declined to say if any customers lost money as a result of the
attack.
The fraudsters had threatened to make the data public, the
spokesman said, adding that the bank was working with the
authorities and conducting a thorough investigation.
Bank of Montreal said it believed the attack originated from
outside the country and was confident the exposures that led to
the theft of customer data had been closed off.
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce <CM.TO>, Canada's fifth
biggest lender, said fraudsters contacted the lender on Sunday
claiming they had electronically stolen personal and account
information of 40,000 customers of its Simplii direct banking
brand.
CIBC said it has not yet confirmed the cyber breach but is
taking the claim seriously. CIBC said customers at its main
banking division were not affected.
Both banks said they were contacting customers and advising them
to monitor their accounts and report any suspicious activity.
Other Canadian banks said they had not been affected.
Shares in BMO were down 0.3 percent and CIBC was off 0.3
percent.
Canada's six biggest banks have been collaborating along with
the Bank of Canada to enhance their defenses against cyber
attacks. The Bank of Canada said earlier this month that some
attacks would inevitably succeed but it has recovery mechanisms
in place to limit the damage.
Cyber attacks are increasingly common. Last year, credit
monitoring firm Equifax said information on about 146.6 million
names, 146.6 million dates of birth, 145.5 million U.S. social
security numbers, 99 million addresses and 209,000 payment card
numbers and expiration dates, were stolen in a cyber attack.
(Reporting by Matt Scuffham; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|