Basel Committee On Banking Supervision: Risk Management Principles For Electronic Banking
Basel Committee On Banking Supervision: Risk Management Principles For Electronic Banking
Basel Committee On Banking Supervision: Risk Management Principles For Electronic Banking
on Banking Supervision
Risk Management
Principles for Electronic
Banking
July 2003
Table of Contents
I. Introduction ................................................................................................................... 4
A. Risk Management Challenges ............................................................................. 5
B. Risk Management Principles................................................................................ 6
Chairman:
Mr John Hawke, Jr - Comptroller of the Currency, Washington DC
Members:
Australian Prudential Regulation Authority, Australia Mr Graham Johnson
Commission Bancaire et Financière, Belgium Mr Jos Meuleman
Mr Koen Algoet
Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions, Canada Ms Judy Cameron
Mr Abilash Bhachech
Commission Bancaire, France Mr Alain Duchâteau
Deutsche Bundesbank, Germany Mr Sven Jongebloed
Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht, Germany Mr Stefan Czekay
Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Hong Kong SAR Mr Shu-Pui Li
Mr Brian Lee
Banca d'Italia, Italy Mr Filippo Siracusano
Mr Tullio Pra
Bank of Japan, Japan Mr Toshihiko Mori
Mr Hiroaki Kuwahara
Ms Tomoko Suzuki
Financial Services Agency, Japan Mr Koji Hamada
Ms Yoko Ota
Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier, Luxembourg Mr David Hagen
Mr Claude Bernard
De Nederlandsche Bank N.V., The Netherlands Mr Erik Smid
Monetary Authority of Singapore, Singapore Mr Leon Chang
Mr Enoch Ch'ng
Mr Tony Chew
Banco de España, Spain Ms Maria Jesús Nieto
Finansinspektionen, Sweden Ms Christina Westerling
Federal Banking Commission, Switzerland Mr Daniel Schmid
Financial Services Authority, United Kingdom Mr Peter MacCormack
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, United States Mr George Juncker
Ms Barbara Yelcich
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Mr Hugh Kelly
United States Mr Clifford Wilke
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Ms Angela Desmond
United States Mr Jeff Marquardt
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, United States Ms Sandra Thomson
European Central Bank Mr Christian Fehlker
Secretariat, Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Mr Laurent Le Mouël
Bank for International Settlements
Risk Management Principles for Electronic Banking
Executive Summary
Continuing technological innovation and competition among existing banking organisations
and new entrants have allowed for a much wider array of banking products and services to
become accessible and delivered to retail and wholesale customers through an electronic
distribution channel collectively referred to as e-banking. However, the rapid development of
e-banking capabilities carries risks as well as benefits.
Based on these conclusions, the Committee considers that while existing risk management
principles remain applicable to e-banking activities, such principles must be tailored, adapted
and, in some cases, expanded to address the specific risk management challenges created
by the characteristics of e-banking activities. To this end, the Committee believes that it is
incumbent upon the Boards of Directors and banks’ senior management to take steps to
ensure that their institutions have reviewed and modified where necessary their existing risk
management policies and processes to cover their current or planned e-banking activities.
The Committee also believes that the integration of e-banking applications with legacy
systems implies an integrated risk management approach for all banking activities of a
banking institution.
To facilitate these developments, the Committee has identified fourteen Risk Management
Principles for Electronic Banking to help banking institutions expand their existing risk
oversight policies and processes to cover their e-banking activities.
These Risk Management Principles are not put forth as absolute requirements or even "best
practice." The Committee believes that setting detailed risk management requirements in the
area of e-banking might be counter-productive, if only because these would be likely to
become rapidly outdated because of the speed of change related to technological and
customer service innovation. The Committee has therefore preferred to express supervisory
expectations and guidance in the form of Risk Management Principles in order to promote
safety and soundness for e-banking activities, while preserving the necessary flexibility in
implementation that derives in part from the speed of change in this area. Further, the
Committee recognises that each bank's risk profile is different and requires a tailored risk
mitigation approach appropriate for the scale of the e-banking operations, the materiality of
the risks present, and the willingness and ability of the institution to manage these risks. This
implies that a “one size fits all” approach to e-banking risk management issues may not be
appropriate.
For a similar reason, the Risk Management Principles issued by the Committee do not
attempt to set specific technical solutions or standards relating to e-banking. Technical
1
solutions are to be addressed by institutions and standard setting bodies as technology
evolves. However, this Report contains appendices that list some examples current and
widespread risk mitigation practices in the e-banking area that are supportive of the Risk
Management Principles.
Consequently, the Risk Management Principles and sound practices identified in this Report
are expected to be used as tools by national supervisors and implemented with adaptations
to reflect specific national requirements and individual risk profiles where necessary. In some
areas, the Principles have been expressed by the Committee or by national supervisors in
previous bank supervisory guidance. However, some issues, such as the management of
outsourcing relationships, security controls and legal and reputational risk management,
warrant more detailed principles than those expressed to date due to the unique
characteristics and implications of the Internet distribution channel.
The Risk Management Principles fall into three broad, and often overlapping, categories of
issues that are grouped to provide clarity: Board and Management Oversight; Security
Controls; and Legal and Reputational Risk Management.
Security Controls
While the Board of Directors has the responsibility for ensuring that appropriate security
control processes are in place for e-banking, the substance of these processes needs
special management attention because of the enhanced security challenges posed by e-
banking. This should include establishing appropriate authorisation privileges and
authentication measures, logical and physical access controls, adequate infrastructure
security to maintain appropriate boundaries and restrictions on both internal and external
user activities and data integrity of transactions, records and information. In addition, the
existence of clear audit trails for all e-banking transactions should be ensured and measures
to preserve confidentiality of key e-banking information should be appropriate with the
sensitivity of such information.
Although customer protection and privacy regulations vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction,
banks generally have a clear responsibility to provide their customers with a level of comfort
regarding information disclosures, protection of customer data and business availability that
approaches the level they can expect when using traditional banking distribution channels.
2
To minimise legal and reputational risk associated with e-banking activities conducted both
domestically and cross-border, banks should make adequate disclosure of information on
their web sites and take appropriate measures to ensure adherence to customer privacy
requirements applicable in the jurisdictions to which the bank is providing e-banking services.
3
Risk Management Principles for Electronic Banking
I. Introduction
Banking organisations have been delivering electronic services to consumers and
businesses remotely for years. Electronic funds transfer, including small payments and
corporate cash management systems, as well as publicly accessible automated machines for
currency withdrawal and retail account management, are global fixtures. However, the
increased world-wide acceptance of the Internet1 as a delivery channel for banking products
and services provides new business opportunities for banks as well as service benefits for
their customers.
1
For the purposes of this Report, the Internet is defined to include all related web enabling technologies and
open telecommunications networks ranging from direct dial-up connections, the public World Wide Web, and
virtual private networks.
2
For the purpose of this Report, electronic banking, or e-banking, includes the provision of retail and small
value banking products and services through electronic channels as well as large value electronic payments
and other wholesale banking services delivered electronically.
3
Account aggregation services allow customers to obtain consolidated information about their financial and
non-financial accounts in one place. An aggregator essentially acts as agent for customers to provide
consolidated information on customers’ accounts across several financial institutions. Customers provide the
aggregator with the necessary security password or personal identification number to access and consolidate
account information primarily through screen scraping, a process that involves culling data from the other
institutions' websites, often without their knowledge, or through contractually arranged direct data feeds
between financial institutions.
4
Because of rapid changes in information technology, no description of such of risks can be exhaustive.
However, the risks facing banks engaged in e-banking are generally not new and they are encompassed by
risk categories identified in the Basel Committee's Core Principles for Effective Banking Supervision,
September 1997. That guidance identified eight risk categories including credit risk, country and transfer risk,
market risk, interest rate risk, liquidity risk, operational risk, legal risk and reputational risk. The Core Principles
are available on the BIS website at http://www.bis.org.
5
"Risk Management for Electronic Banking and Electronic Money Activities", March 1998, available on the
Bank for International Settlements’ website at http://www.bis.org.
4
The Basel Committee released the EBG’s Report on risk management and supervisory
issues arising from e-banking developments in October 2000.6 This Report inventoried and
assessed the major risks associated with e-banking, namely strategic risk, reputational risk,
operational risk (including security and legal risks),7 and credit, market, and liquidity risks.
The EBG concluded that e-banking activities did not raise risks that were not already
identified by the previous work of the Basel Committee. However, it noted that e-banking
increase and modifies some of these traditional risks, thereby influencing the overall risk
profile of banking. In particular, strategic risk, operational risk, and reputational risk are
certainly heightened by the rapid introduction and underlying technological complexity of e-
banking activities.
• Transactional e-banking web sites and associated retail and wholesale business
applications are typically integrated as much as possible with legacy computer
systems to allow more straight-through processing of electronic transactions. Such
straight-through automated processing reduces opportunities for human error and
fraud inherent in manual processes, but it also increases dependence on sound
systems design and architecture as well as system interoperability and operational
scalability.
6
“Electronic Banking Group Initiatives and White Papers”, October 2000, available on the BIS website at
http://www.bis.org.
7
This Report uses the Basel Committee's definition of operational risk, which includes security risk and legal
risk (see Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, The New Basel Capital Accord, April 2003, paragraph
607: “risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems or from external
events”).
5
magnifies the importance of security controls, customer authentication techniques,
data protection, audit trail procedures, and customer privacy standards.
To facilitate these developments, the Committee asked the EBG to identify the key risk
management principles that would help banking institutions expand their existing risk
oversight policies and processes to cover their e-banking activities and, in turn, promote the
safe and sound electronic delivery of banking products and services.
These Risk Management Principles for Electronic Banking, which are identified in this
Report, are not put forth as absolute requirements or even "best practice" but rather as
guidance to promote safe and sound e-banking activities. The Committee believes that
setting detailed risk management requirements in the area of e-banking might be counter-
productive, if only because these would be likely to become rapidly outdated by the speed of
change related to technological and product innovation. Therefore the principles included in
the present Report express supervisory expectations related to the overall objective of
banking supervision to ensure safety and soundness in the financial system rather than
stringent regulations.
The Committee is of the view that such supervisory expectations should be tailored and
adapted to the e-banking distribution channel but not be fundamentally different to those
applied to banking activities delivered through other distribution channels. Consequently, the
principles presented below are largely derived and adapted from supervisory principles that
have already been expressed by the Committee or national supervisors over a number of
years. In some areas, such as the management of outsourcing relationships, security
controls and legal and reputational risk management, the characteristics and implications of
the Internet distribution channel introduce a need for more detailed principles than those
expressed to date.
The Committee recognises that banks will need to develop risk management processes
appropriate for their individual risk profile, operational structure and corporate governance
culture, as well as in conformance with the specific risk management requirements and
policies set forth by the bank supervisors in their particular jurisdiction(s). Further, the
numerous e-banking risk management practices identified in this Report, while
representative of current industry sound practice, should not be considered to be all-inclusive
or definitive, since many security controls and other risk management techniques continue to
evolve rapidly to keep pace with new technologies and business applications.
This Report does not attempt to dictate specific technical solutions to address particular risks
or set technical standards relating to e-banking. Technical issues will need to be addressed
on an on-going basis by both banking institutions and various standards-setting bodies as
6
technology evolves. Further, as the industry continues to address e-banking technical issues,
including security challenges, a variety of innovative and cost efficient risk management
solutions are likely to emerge. These solutions are also likely to address issues related to the
fact that banks differ in size, complexity and risk management culture and that jurisdictions
differ in their legal and regulatory frameworks.
For these reasons, the Committee does not believe that a "one size fits all" approach to e-
banking risk management is appropriate, and it encourages the exchange of good practices
and standards to address the additional risk dimensions posed by the e-banking delivery
channel. In keeping with this supervisory philosophy, the risk management principles and
sound practices identified in this Report are expected to be used as tools by national
supervisors and implemented with adaptations to reflect specific national requirements where
necessary, to help promote safe and secure e-banking activities and operations.
The Committee recognises that each bank's risk profile is different and requires a risk
mitigation approach appropriate for the scale of the e-banking operations, the materiality of
the risks present, and the willingness and ability of the institution to manage these risks.
These differences imply that the risk management principles presented in this Report are
intended to be flexible enough to be implemented by all relevant institutions across
jurisdictions. National supervisors will assess the materiality of the risks related to e-banking
activities present at a given bank and whether, and to what extent, the risk management
principles for e-banking have been adequately met by the bank’s risk management
framework.
8
This Report refers to a management structure composed of a board of directors and senior management. The
Committee is aware that there are significant differences in legislative and regulatory frameworks across
countries as regards the functions of the board of directors and senior management. In some countries, the
board has the main, if not exclusive, function of supervising the executive body (senior management, general
management) so as to ensure that the latter fulfils its duties. For this reason it is sometimes known as the
supervisory board. In such cases, the board has no executive powers. By contrast, in other countries, the
board has a broader competence including the definition of the bank’s general management framework.
Because of these differences, the terms “board of directors” and “senior management” are used in the report
to identify two decision-making functions within a bank but not to identify legal constructs.
7
B. Security Controls (Principles 4 to 10):
4. Authentication of e-banking customers.
Each of the above issues is discussed more specifically in the following sections, as they
relate to e-banking and the underlying risk management principles that should be considered
by banks to address these issues. Where appropriate, sound practices that may be
considered as effective ways to address these risks are also offered in a referenced
appendix.
In addition, the Board and senior management should ensure that the operational and
security risk dimensions of the institution's e-banking business strategies are appropriately
considered and addressed. The provision of financial services over the Internet may
significantly modify and/or even increase traditional banking risks (e.g. strategic, reputational,
operational, credit and liquidity risk). Steps should therefore be taken to ensure that the
bank's existing risk management processes, security control processes, due diligence and
oversight processes for outsourcing relationships are appropriately evaluated and modified to
accommodate e-banking services.
8
Principle 1: The Board of Directors and senior management should establish effective
management oversight over the risks associated with e-banking activities, including
the establishment of specific accountability, policies and controls to manage these
risks.
Vigilant management oversight is essential for the provision of effective internal controls over
e-banking activities. In addition to the specific characteristics of the Internet distribution
channel discussed in the Introduction, the following aspects of e-banking may pose
considerable challenge to traditional risk management processes:
• Major elements of the delivery channel (the Internet and related technologies) are
outside of the bank’s direct control.
• The complexity of issues that are associated with e-banking and that involve highly
technical language and concepts are in many cases outside the traditional
experience of the Board and senior management.
In light of the unique characteristics of e-banking, new e-banking projects that may have a
significant impact on the bank’s risk profile and strategy should be reviewed by the Board of
Directors and senior management and undergo appropriate strategic and cost/reward
analysis. Without adequate up-front strategic review and ongoing performance to plan
assessments, banks are at risk of underestimating the cost and/or overestimating the
payback of their e-banking initiatives.
In addition, the Board and senior management should ensure that the bank does not enter
into new e-banking businesses or adopt new technologies unless it has the necessary
expertise to provide competent risk management oversight. Management and staff expertise
should be commensurate with the technical nature and complexity of the bank's e-banking
applications and underlying technologies. Adequate expertise is essential regardless of
whether the bank's e-banking systems and services are managed in-house or outsourced to
third parties. Senior management oversight processes should operate on a dynamic basis in
order to effectively intervene and correct any material e-banking systems problems or
security breaches that may occur. The increased reputational risk associated with e-banking
necessitates vigilant monitoring of systems operability and customer satisfaction as well as
appropriate incident reporting to the Board and senior management.
Finally, the Board and senior management should ensure that its risk management
processes for its e-banking activities are integrated into the bank's overall risk management
approach. The bank's existing risk management policies and processes should be evaluated
to ensure that they are robust enough to cover the new risks posed by current or planned e-
banking activities. Additional risk management oversight steps that the Board and senior
management should consider taking include:
9
reputation (e.g. networks penetration, employee security infractions and any serious
misuse of computer facilities).9
• Addressing any unique risk factors associated with ensuring the security, integrity
and availability of e-banking products and services, and requiring that third parties to
whom the banks has outsourced key systems or applications take similar measures.
• Ensuring that appropriate due diligence and risk analysis are performed before the
bank conducts cross-border e-banking activities.
The Internet greatly facilitates a bank's ability to distribute products and services over
virtually unlimited geographic territory, including across national borders. Such cross-border
e-banking activity, particularly if conducted without any existing licensed physical presence in
the "host country," potentially subjects banks to increased legal, regulatory and country risk
due to the substantial differences that may exist between jurisdictions with respect to bank
licensing, supervision and customer protection requirements. Because of the need to avoid
inadvertent non-compliance with a foreign country's laws or regulations, as well as to
manage relevant country risk factors, banks contemplating cross-border e-banking
operations need to fully explore these risks before undertaking such operations and
effectively manage them.10
Depending on the scope and complexity of e-banking activities, the scope and structure of
risk management programs will vary across banking organisations. Resources required to
oversee e-banking services should be commensurate with the transactional functionality and
criticality of systems, the vulnerability of networks and the sensitivity of information being
transmitted.
Principle 2: The Board of Directors and senior management should review and
approve the key aspects of the bank's security control process.
The Board of Directors and senior management should oversee the development and
continued maintenance of a security control infrastructure that properly safeguards e-banking
systems and data from both internal and external threats. This should include establishing
appropriate authorisation privileges, logical and physical access controls, and adequate
infrastructure security to maintain appropriate boundaries and restrictions on both internal
and external user activities.
Safeguarding of bank assets is one of the Board’s fiduciary duties and one of senior
management’s fundamental responsibilities. However, it is a challenging task in a rapidly
evolving e-banking environment because of the complex security risks associated with
operating over the public Internet network and using innovative technology.
To ensure proper security controls for e-banking activities, the Board and senior
management need to ascertain whether the bank has a comprehensive security process,
including policies and procedures, that addresses potential internal and external security
9
In addition to internal reporting requirements, incident reporting escalation procedures should also set forth the
necessary reporting to appropriate supervisory authorities.
10
For further developments, see Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Management and Supervision of
Cross-border Electronic Banking Activities, July 2003.
10
threats both in terms of incident prevention and response. Key elements of an effective e-
banking security process include:
• Regular review and testing of security measures and controls, including the
continuous tracking of current industry security developments and installation of
appropriate software upgrades, service packs and other required measures.14
Increased reliance upon partners and third party service providers to perform critical e-
banking functions lessens bank management’s direct control. Accordingly, a comprehensive
process for managing the risks associated with outsourcing and other third-party
dependencies is necessary. This process should encompass the third-party activities of
partners and service providers, including the sub-contracting of outsourced activities that
may have a material impact on the bank.
Historically, outsourcing was often limited to a single service provider for a given
functionality. However, in recent years, banks’ outsourcing relationships have increased in
scale and complexity as a direct result of advances in information technology and the
emergence of e-banking. Adding to the complexity is the fact that outsourced e-banking
services can be sub-contracted to additional service providers and/or conducted in a foreign
country. Further, as e-banking applications and services have become more technologically
advanced and have grown in strategic importance, certain e-banking functional areas are
dependent upon a small number of specialised third-party vendors and service providers.
These developments may lead to increased risk concentrations that warrant attention both
from an individual bank as well as a systemic industry standpoint.
11
This responsibility should normally not be part of the audit function, which has responsibility for seeing that the
security oversight function is carried out effectively.
12
Including controlled access rights and privileges as well as ongoing monitoring of network intrusion attempts.
13
Including employees, contractors and those with access rights through outsourced relationships.
14
Including measures to monitor network activity, log intrusion attempts and report of serious security breaches.
11
Together, these factors underscore the need for a comprehensive and ongoing evaluation of
outsourcing relationships and other external dependencies, including the associated
implications for the bank’s risk profile and risk management oversight abilities.15 Board and
senior management oversight of outsourcing relationships and third-party dependencies
should specifically focus on ensuring that:
• The bank fully understands the risks associated with entering into an outsourcing or
partnership arrangement for its e-banking systems or applications.
• An appropriate due diligence review of the competency and financial viability of any
third-party service provider or partner is conducted prior to entering into any contract
for e-banking services.
• All outsourced e-banking systems and operations are subject to risk management,
security and privacy policies that meet the bank’s own standards.
Appendix II lists a number of additional sound practices for managing outsourced e-banking
systems and other third-party dependencies.
• Authentication
• Non-repudiation
15
Such an evaluation should also take into account the degree of control exercised on the third-party. A major
shareholder in a joint venture may, in many cases, exercise more control than in the case of a contractual
relationship with a service provider. However, it should not be inferred through such distinctions that
shareholder control over a joint venture or a partnership will necessarily be sufficient, especially if the
technologies and services necessary to operate the association are provided by the minority shareholder.
Such distinctions are mainly useful to assert that evaluations should be made on a case-by-case basis.
16
This would also include sub-contractors.
17
For instance, where a Board relies on third-party vendors for e-banking services, it needs to ensure that the
vendor has adequately addressed these issues and, at minimum, meets the bank’s own standards.
12
• Segregation of duties
• Authorisation controls
Principle 4: Banks should take appropriate measures to authenticate18 the identity and
authorisation of customers with whom it conducts business over the Internet.
Customer verification during account origination is important in reducing the risk of identity
theft, fraudulent account applications and money laundering. Failure on the part of the bank
to adequately authenticate customers could result in unauthorised individuals gaining access
to e-banking accounts and ultimately financial loss and reputational damage to the bank
through fraud, disclosure of confidential information or inadvertent involvement in criminal
activity.
Accordingly, it is critical that banks have formal policy and procedures identifying appropriate
methodology(ies) to ensure that the bank properly authenticates the identity and
authorisation of an individual, agent or system21 by means that are unique and, as far as
practical, exclude unauthorised individuals or systems.22 Banks can us a variety of methods
to establish authentication, including PINs, passwords, smart cards, biometrics, and digital
18
Authentication as used in this Report refers to the techniques, procedures and processes used to verify the
identity and authorisation of prospective and established customers. Identification refers to the procedures,
techniques and processes used to establish the identity of a customer when opening an account.
Authorisation refers to the procedures, techniques and processes used to determine that a customer or an
employee has legitimate access to the bank account or the authority to conduct associated transactions on
that account.
19
Spoofing is impersonating a legitimate customer through use of his/her account number, password, personal
identification number (PIN) and/or email address.
20
A sniffer is a device that is capable of eavesdropping on telecommunications traffic, capturing passwords and
data in transit.
21
Systems include the institution’s own web sites.
22
Systems must ensure that they are dealing with an authenticated individual, agent or system and with a valid
authentication database.
13
certificates.23 These methods can be either single factor or multi-factor (e.g. using both a
password and biometric technology24 to authenticate). Multi-factor authentication generally
provides stronger assurance.
The bank must determine which authentication methods to use based on management's
assessment of the risk posed by the e-banking system as a whole or by the various sub-
components. This risk analysis should evaluate the transactional capabilities25 of the e-
banking system (e.g. funds transfer, bill payment, loan origination, account aggregation etc.),
the sensitivity and value of the stored e-banking data, and the customer's ease of using the
authentication method.
Robust customer identification and authentication processes are particularly important in the
cross-border e-banking context given the additional difficulties that may arise from doing
business electronically with customers across national borders, including the greater risk of
identity impersonation and the greater difficulty in conducting effective credit checks on
potential customers.
As authentication methods continue to evolve, banks are encouraged to monitor and adopt
industry sound practice in this area such as ensuring that:
• Appropriate measures are in place to control the e-banking system connection such
that unknown third parties cannot displace known customers.
• Authenticated e-banking sessions remain secure throughout the full duration of the
session or in the event of a security lapse the session should require re-
authentication.
Principle 5: Banks should use transaction authentication methods that promote non-
repudiation and establish accountability for e-banking transactions.
23
A bank may issue digital certificates using public key infrastructure (PKI) to a customer in order to secure
communications with the bank. Digital certificates and PKI are discussed more fully in Principle 5.
24
Biometric technology is an automated view of physiological or behavioural characteristics used to identify
and/or authenticate a person. Common forms of biometric technology include facial scans, finger scans, iris
scans, retina scans, hand scans, signature scans, voice scans and keystroke dynamics. Biometric
identification systems provide very strong authentication, but may pose greater implementation complexities
than other identification/authentication methods.
25
Effective authentication measures can also reduce the risk of repudiation, in which an authorised user
subsequently denies that he or she authorised a particular transaction (see also Principle 5).
26
In some cases, the authenticated source may be an electronic source.
14
protect the recipient against false denial by the sender that the data has been sent. Risk of
transaction repudiation is already an issue with conventional transactions such as credit
cards or securities transactions. However, e-banking heightens this risk because of the
difficulties of positively authenticating the identities and authority of parties initiating
transactions, the potential for altering or hijacking electronic transactions, and the potential
for e-banking users to claim that transactions were fraudulently altered.
• E-banking systems are designed to reduce the likelihood that authorised users will
initiate unintended transactions and that customers fully understand the risks
associated with any transactions they initiate.
• All parties to the transaction are positively authenticated and control is maintained
over the authenticated channel.
• Financial transaction data are protected from alteration and any alteration is
detectable.
Banking organisations have begun to employ various techniques that help establish non-
repudiation and ensure confidentiality and integrity of e-banking transactions, such as digital
certificates using public key infrastructure (PKI).27 A bank may issue a digital certificate to a
customer or counterparty to allow for their unique identification/authentication and reduce the
risk of transaction repudiation. Although in some countries customers’ rights to disclaim
transactions is provided in specific legal provisions, legislation has been passed in certain
national jurisdictions making digital signatures legally enforceable. Wider global legal
acceptance of such techniques is likely as technology continues to evolve.
Principle 6: Banks should ensure that appropriate measures are in place to promote
adequate segregation of duties within e-banking systems, databases and applications.
Segregation of duties is a basic internal control measure designed to reduce the risk of fraud
in operational processes and systems and ensure that transactions and company assets are
properly authorised, recorded and safeguarded. Segregation of duties is critical to ensuring
the accuracy and integrity of data and is used to prevent the perpetration of fraud by an
individual. If duties are adequately separated, fraud can only be committed through collusion.
E-banking services may necessitate modifying the ways in which segregation of duties are
established and maintained because transactions take place over electronic systems where
identities can be more readily masked or faked. In addition, operational and transaction-
based functions have in many cases become more compressed and integrated in e-banking
27
In a public key infrastructure (PKI), each party has a private/public key pair. The private key is secret so that
only one person should use it. All parties use the public key. The private key generates an electronic signature
on the document and the key pairs are designed so that a message encrypted with the private key can only be
read by using the other key. A bank may act as its own certification authority (CA) or rely on another trusted
third-party to associate a person or entity with the digital certificate. However, if a bank is to rely upon a third-
party digital certificate to establish authenticity, it should confirm that the CA, when issuing the certificate, used
the same level of authentication that the bank would have used to authenticate the person. The primary
drawback of a PKI authentication system is that it is more complicated to implement.
15
applications. Therefore, the controls traditionally required to maintain segregation of duties
need to be reviewed and adapted to ensure an appropriate level of control is maintained.
Because access to poorly secured databases can be more easily gained through internal or
external networks, strict authorisation and identification procedures, safe and sound
architecture of the straight-through processes, and adequate audit trails should be
emphasised.
Common practices used to establish and maintain segregation of duties within an e-banking
environment include the following:
Principle 7: Banks should ensure that proper authorisation controls and access
privileges are in place for e-banking systems, databases and applications.
In order to maintain segregation of duties, banks need to strictly control authorisation and
access privileges. Failure to provide adequate authorisation control could allow individuals to
alter their authority, circumvent segregation and gain access to e-banking systems,
databases or applications to which they are not privileged.
In e-banking systems, the authorisations and access rights can be established in either a
centralised or distributed manner within a bank and are generally stored in databases. The
protection of those databases from tampering or corruption is therefore essential for effective
authorisation control.
Appendix III identifies a number of sound practices to help establish proper control over
authorisation and access rights to e-banking systems, databases and applications.
Principle 8: Banks should ensure that appropriate measures are in place to protect the
data integrity of e-banking transactions, records and information.
Data integrity refers to the assurance that information that is in-transit or in storage is not
altered without authorisation. Failure to maintain the data integrity of transactions, records
and information can expose banks to financial losses as well as to substantial legal and
reputational risk.
28
Or alternate mitigating controls should be in place.
16
The inherent nature of straight-through processes for e-banking may make programming
errors or fraudulent activities more difficult to detect at an early stage. Therefore, it is
important that banks implement straight-through processing in a manner that ensures safety
and soundness and data integrity.
As e-banking is transacted over public networks, transactions are exposed to the added
threat of data corruption, fraud and the tampering of records. Accordingly, banks should
ensure that appropriate measures are in place to ascertain the accuracy, completeness and
reliability of e-banking transactions, records and information that is either transmitted over
the Internet, resident on internal bank databases, or transmitted/stored by third-party service
providers on behalf of the bank.29 Common practices used to maintain data integrity within an
e-banking environment include the following:
• E-banking records should be stored, accessed and modified in a manner that makes
them highly resistant to tampering.
Principle 9: Banks should ensure that clear audit trails exist for all e-banking
transactions.
Delivery of financial services over the Internet can make it more difficult for banks to apply
and enforce internal controls and maintain clear audit trails if these measures are not
adapted to an e-banking environment. Banks are not only challenged to ensure that effective
internal control can be provided in highly automated environments, but also that the controls
can be independently audited, particularly for all critical e-banking events and applications.
A bank's internal control environment may be weakened if it is unable to maintain clear audit
trails for its e-banking activities. This is because much, if not all, of its records and evidence
supporting e-banking transactions are in an electronic format. In making a determination as
to where clear audit trails should be maintained, the following types of e-banking transactions
should be considered:
29
Banks should ensure that record keeping systems are designed and installed in a manner that allows for
recovery of records that may have been tampered with or degraded.
17
• Any transaction with financial consequences.
Appendix IV identifies several sound practices to help ensure that a clear audit trail exists for
e-banking transactions.
Principle 10: Banks should take appropriate measures to preserve the confidentiality
of key e-banking information. Measures taken to preserve confidentiality should be
commensurate with the sensitivity of the information being transmitted and/or stored
in databases.
Confidentiality is the assurance that key information remains private to the bank and is not
viewed or used by those unauthorised to do so. Misuse or unauthorised disclosure of data
exposes a bank to both reputation and legal risk. The advent of e-banking presents
additional security challenges for banks because it increases the exposure that information
transmitted over the public network or stored in databases may be accessible by
unauthorised or inappropriate parties or used in ways the customer providing the information
did not intend. Additionally, increased use of service providers may expose key bank data to
other parties.
• All confidential bank data and records are only accessible by duly authorised and
authenticated individuals, agents or systems.
• All confidential bank data are maintained in a secure manner and protected from
unauthorised viewing or modification during transmission over public, private or
internal networks.
• The bank’s standards and controls for data use and protection must be met when
third parties have access to the data through outsourcing relationships.
• All access to restricted data is logged and appropriate efforts are made to ensure
that access logs are resistant to tampering.
Principle 11: Banks should ensure that adequate information is provided on their
websites to allow potential customers to make an informed conclusion about the
bank's identity and regulatory status of the bank prior to entering into e-banking
transactions.
18
To minimise legal and reputational risk associated with e-banking activities conducted both
domestically and cross-border, banks should ensure that adequate information is provided
on their websites to allow customers to make informed conclusions about the identity and
regulatory status of the bank before they enter into e-banking transactions.
Examples of such information that a bank could provide on its own website include:
• The name of the bank and the location of its head office (and local offices if
applicable).
• The identity of the primary bank supervisory authority(ies) responsible for the
supervision of the bank's head office.
• How customers can contact the bank's customer service centre regarding service
problems, complaints, suspected misuse of accounts, etc.
• How customers can access and use applicable Ombudsman or consumer complaint
schemes.
• The bank's customer privacy policies and standards take account of and comply
with all privacy regulations and laws applicable to the jurisdictions to which it is
providing e-banking products and services.
• Customers are made aware of the bank's privacy policies and relevant privacy
issues concerning use of e-banking products and services.
• Customers may decline (“opt out”) from permitting the bank to share with a third
party for cross-marketing purposes any information about the customer’s personal
needs, interests, financial position or banking activity.
• Customer data are not used for purposes beyond which they are specifically allowed
or for purposes beyond which customers have authorised.31
30
For instance, the bank may wish to specify those countries in which the bank intends to provide e-banking
services or, conversely, those countries in which it does not intend to provide such services.
19
• The bank’s standards for customer data use must be met when third parties have
access to customer data through outsourcing relationships.
Appendix V identifies several sound practices to help maintain the privacy of customer e-
banking information.
Principle 13: Banks should have effective capacity, business continuity and
contingency planning processes to help ensure the availability of e-banking systems
and services.
To protect banks against business, legal and reputation risk, e-banking services must be
delivered on a consistent and timely basis in accordance with customer expectations. To
achieve this, the bank must have the ability to deliver e-banking services to end-users from
either primary (e.g. internal bank systems and applications) or secondary sources (e.g.
systems and applications of service providers). The maintenance of adequate availability is
also dependent upon the ability of contingency back-up systems to mitigate denial of service
attacks or other events that may potentially cause business disruption.
The challenge to maintain continued availability of e-banking systems and applications can
be considerable given the potential for high transaction demand, especially during peak time
periods. In addition, high customer expectations regarding short transaction processing cycle
times and constant availability (24 X 7) has also increased the importance of sound capacity,
business continuity and contingency planning. To provide customers with the continuity of e-
banking services that they expect, banks need to ensure that:
• Current e-banking system capacity and future scalability are analysed in light of the
overall market dynamics for e-commerce and the projected rate of customer
acceptance of e-banking products and services.32
Appendix VI identifies several sound capacity, business continuity and contingency planning
practices.
Principle 14: Banks should develop appropriate incident response plans to manage,
contain and minimise problems arising from unexpected events, including internal
31
In some jurisdictions, laws and regulations may not oblige banks to seek the customer’s permission to use
customer data for internal purposes. However, they may oblige banks to give the customer the option to
decline from permitting the bank to share such information with a third party or an affiliate. In other
jurisdictions, customers may have the right to prevent the bank from using their data for either internal or
external purposes.
32
The current and future capacity of critical e-banking delivery systems should be assessed on an ongoing
basis.
20
and external attacks, that may hamper the provision of e-banking systems and
services.
Effective incident response mechanisms are critical to minimise operational, legal and
reputational risks arising from unexpected events such as internal and external attacks that
may affect the provision of e-banking systems and services. Banks should develop
appropriate incident response plans, including communication strategies, that ensure
business continuity, control reputation risk and limit liability associated with disruptions in
their e-banking services, including those originating from outsourced systems and
operations.
• A clear process for alerting the appropriate regulatory authorities in the event of
material security breaches or disruptive incidents occur.
• Incident response teams with the authority to act in an emergency and sufficiently
trained in analysing incident detection/response systems and interpreting the
significance of related output.
33
Monitoring of help desk and customer support activities and regular review of customer complaints may help
to identify gaps in information being detected and reported through established security controls versus actual
intrusion activities.
21
Appendix I
2. E-banking data and systems should be classified according to their sensitivity and
importance and protected accordingly. Appropriate mechanisms, such as
encryption, access control and data recovery plans should be used to protect all
sensitive and high-risk e-banking systems, servers, databases and applications.
6. A rigorous security review process should be applied to all employees and service
providers holding sensitive positions.
34
Definitions of security and quality standards and reliance on certification schemes can be institution specific or
standardised (i.e. within a national banking industry in order to enhance and foster the security level of e-
banking activities). Banks can also choose to establish access rights in either a centralised or distributed
manner. For example, there may be a single authorisation authority responsible for assigning access rights to
specific identities, groups or roles within a bank, or there may be a number of authorisation authorities
established to address the varying needs within the different business lines.
35
This should include controls guarding against unauthorised access by external parties such as visitors,
contractors or technicians who may have access to the premises although they may not be directly involved in
the e-banking service.
22
Appendix II
• All affected areas of the bank need to understand how the service
provider(s) will support the bank’s e-banking strategy and fit into its
operating structure.
2. Banks should conduct appropriate risk analysis and due diligence prior to selecting
an e-banking service provider and at appropriate intervals thereafter.
• Once a potential service provider has been identified, the bank should
conduct an appropriate due diligence review, including a risk analysis of the
service provider’s financial strength, reputation, risk management policies
and controls, and ability to fulfil its obligations.
36
The extent of ongoing due diligence reviews should be based on the materiality of the outsourced operations
and the extent of systems or risk management changes over time, including any subsequent sub-contracting
the service provider may engage in.
23
• An appropriate exit strategy for the bank to manage risks should it need to
terminate the outsourcing relationship.
3. Banks should adopt appropriate procedures for ensuring the adequacy of contracts
governing e-banking. Contracts governing outsourced e-banking activities should
address, for example, the following:37
• Adequate means and guarantees, for instance through audit clauses, are
defined to insure that the service provider complies with the bank’s policies.
• Provisions are in place for timely and orderly intervention and rectification in
the event of substandard performance by the service provider.
4. Banks should ensure that periodic independent internal and/or external audits are
conducted of outsourced operations to at least the same scope required if such
operations were conducted in-house.38
37
As with other legal contracts that a bank may enter to, its legal counsel or legal division should review all
terms and conditions in contracts governing e-banking outsourcing arrangements.
38
Banks that do not have a specific audit function in-house should, at minimum, have staff not involved in
management of outsourced relationships reviewing the effectiveness of the oversight of the outsourcing
arrangement.
24
• For outsourced relationships involving critical or technologically complex e-
banking services/applications, banks may need to arrange for other
periodic reviews to be performed by independent third parties with sufficient
technical expertise.
• Banks need to develop and periodically test their contingency plans for all
critical e-banking systems and services that have been outsourced to third
parties.
6. Banks that provide e-banking services to third parties should ensure that their
operations, responsibilities, and liabilities are sufficiently clear so that serviced
institutions can adequately carry out their own effective due diligence reviews and
ongoing oversight of the relationship.
25
Appendix III
2. All e-banking systems should be constructed to ensure that they interact with a valid
authorisation database.
3. No individual agent or system should have the authority to change his or her own
authority or access privileges in an e-banking authorisation database.39
6. Any e-banking authorisation database that has been tampered with should not be
used until replaced with a validated database.
39
As this might not be feasible for system administrator users, other stringent internal controls and segregation
of duties should be put in place to monitor the activities of those user accounts.
26
Appendix IV
1. Sufficient logs should be maintained for all e-banking transactions to help establish
a clear audit trail and assist in dispute resolution.
3. In instances where processing systems and related audit trails are the responsibility
of a third-party service provider:
• The bank should ensure that it has access to relevant audit trails
maintained by the service provider.
• Audit trails maintained by the service provider meet the bank's standards.
27
Appendix V
2. Banks should develop appropriate procedures and controls to periodically assess its
customer security infrastructure and protocols for e-banking.
3. Banks should ensure that its third-party service providers have confidentiality and
privacy policies that are consistent with their own.
4. Banks should take appropriate steps to inform e-banking customers about the
confidentiality and privacy of their information. These steps may include:
28
Appendix VI
2. A risk assessment for each critical e-banking service and application, including the
potential implications of any business disruption on the bank's credit, market,
liquidity, legal, operational and reputation risk should be conducted.
3. Performance criteria for each critical e-banking service and application should be
established, and service levels should be monitored against such criteria.
Appropriate measures should be taken to ensure that e-banking systems can handle
high and low transaction volume and that systems performance and capacity is
consistent with the bank's expectations for future growth in e-banking.
6. E-banking contingency plans should set out a process for restoring or replacing e-
banking processing capabilities, reconstructing supporting transaction information,
and include measures to be taken to resume availability of critical e-banking
systems and applications in the event of a business disruption.
29