SAN JOSE, Calif., Nov. 25, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Heading into the busiest shopping season of the year, a large majority of consumers are concerned enough about fraudulent use of their credit cards and debit cards that they want to take a more proactive role in their own security. A survey conducted in the US, Canada and the UK by FICO (NYSE:FICO), a leading predictive analytics and decision management software company, shows that fraud is top-of-mind for consumers in the wake of high-profile data breaches.
Respondents' primary concern about payment fraud wasn't financial loss, it was the time required to fix the problems created by fraud. This was the top concern for 68 percent of respondents in the US, 60 percent in Canada and 51 percent in the UK.
In the survey, 70 percent of respondents in the US said they were concerned about fraudulent use of their payment cards. In Canada, 75 percent of respondents were concerned about fraud and in the UK, 66 percent of those polled expressed concern about fraud.
Survey respondents said they were interested in tools they could use to dynamically manage their own payment security. In all three countries, more than 50 percent of consumers said they wanted to use a mobile app to control the types of transactions for which their cards could be used (e.g., in-store, online, mail order), and the maximum dollar amount for allowable transactions.
"The steady drumbeat of news about massive security breakdowns has eroded public confidence in institutional data security," said Anant Nambiar, FICO's general manager for fraud and protection, who presented on consumer fraud controls today at FICO World 2014, with FICO's vice president for Consumer Product Management, Colin McKee. "Consumers around the world clearly have an appetite for stronger payment card security, and they are eager to work with their card issuers to protect themselves."
American Consumers More Interested in Real-Time Alerts
US consumers were more interested in real-time notifications than consumers in the other two countries. Among US respondents, 63 percent said they would use a service that sends email or text messages when suspicious activity is observed on their payment cards. In Canada, 51 percent of respondents said they would use such a service, while 46 percent of respondents in the UK were interested in that type of service.
The online survey was conducted by FICO in Canada, the UK and the US during October 2014, with 1265 consumers participating.
About FICO
FICO (NYSE: FICO) is a leading analytics software company, helping businesses in 90+ countries make better decisions that drive higher levels of growth, profitability and customer satisfaction. The company's groundbreaking use of Big Data and mathematical algorithms to predict consumer behavior has transformed entire industries. FICO provides analytics software and tools used across multiple industries to manage risk, fight fraud, build more profitable customer relationships, optimize operations and meet strict government regulations. Many of our products reach industry-wide adoption. These include the FICO® Score, the standard measure of consumer credit risk in the United States. FICO solutions leverage open-source standards and cloud computing to maximize flexibility, speed deployment and reduce costs. The company also helps millions of people manage their personal credit health.
FICO: Make every decision count™. Learn more at www.fico.com.
FICO and "Make every decision count" are trademarks or registered trademarks of Fair Isaac Corporation in the United States and in other countries.
For FICO news and media resources, visit www.fico.com/news.
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SOURCE FICO
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