AI Adoption Lag Leaves Asian Financial Institutions Vulnerable Amid Rising Financial Crime

AI-based transaction monitoring, sanctions screening, and fraud prevention deliver proven benefits as adoption gains traction

  • New research from SymphonyAI and Regulation Asia reveals legacy systems, data quality, model explainability, data privacy, and regulatory uncertainty hinder AI adoption in financial crime compliance.

  • Only 15% of Asian FIs report "advanced" AI integration in their compliance functions, leaving significant untapped potential.

  • Financial crime, particularly money laundering, represents an escalating threat, accounting for up to 6.7% of global GDP.

PALO ALTO, Calif., Oct. 29, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- SymphonyAI, a leader in predictive and generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) SaaS products for the enterprise, today launched a new report with Regulation Asia, revealing a concerning gap in artificial intelligence (AI) adoption among Asian financial institutions, leaving them vulnerable to escalating financial crime. The report also details the lack of AI adoption by Asian financial institutions (FIs) despite clear benefits and cost advantages in effective financial crime prevention and detection.

(PRNewsfoto/SymphonyAI)
(PRNewsfoto/SymphonyAI)

The report, titled "Untapped Potential: AI-enabled Financial Crime Compliance Transformation in Asia – Maturity, Applications, and Trends," is based on surveys and interviews with 126 financial crime compliance, operational, and technology practitioners from FIs across the Asia Pacific (APAC) region. The results reveal a stark reality: despite recognising the early proof of effectiveness of AI in financial crime compliance, over 50% of APAC FIs are not currently using AI for anti-money laundering (AML).

This hesitancy to embrace new technology comes at a time when financial crime is surging in the region. In Southeast Asia, money laundering risk events climbed 64% in 2023 from 2018, with Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines forming the top five countries, according to Moody's.

Key findings from the report that highlight this trend include:

  • Lower level of AI sophistication: While interest in AI is high, only 15% of FIs in Asia say they are actively applying the technology for AML processes.

  • Many firms are limited by AI integration and data quality: Integrating AI with existing systems (58.6%), data quality and availability (58.6%), model explainability (46.6%), and data privacy and protection (43.1%) were among the top challenges cited by respondents.

  • Regulatory standards differ across different markets: From Singapore's balanced approach to Australia's mandatory guardrails, Asian countries are forging diverse regulatory paths for AI. 37.9% of respondents mentioned ensuring regulatory compliance as a key challenge.

  • Leaders are bullish but proof of value is critical: Boards and senior managers are playing a critical role in driving AI adoption with 40% of respondents saying their top leaders are primary advocates. However, demonstrable value of AI through reducing false positives, improving accuracy and efficiency, and controlling costs is crucial for board-level AI investment buy-in.