Fraud Up 22% with Companies Losing an Average US$8.2 Million Over Past Three Years

Kroll report shows growing volume and value of fraud during tougher economic times.

Panama City, Panama, November 19, 2008 --(PR.com)-- The average company loss to fraud has increased by 22% largely driven by the credit crunch and tough economic climate, according to the latest Kroll Global Fraud Report. Companies lost an average of US$8.2 million to fraud in the past three years, compared to last year’s figure which stood at US $7.6 million. The figures are a result of a survey Kroll commissioned from The Economist Intelligence Unit of 890 senior executives worldwide.

The fastest growing types of fraud were information theft (27%: up from 22%) and regulatory and compliance breaches (25%: up from 19%), both up by more than five percentage points from last year’s survey.

The construction and natural resources sectors suffered the most incidents of fraud, due in part to the continuing rise in oil prices and an industry shift to higher-risk areas. Healthcare, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology saw an increase in problems with corruption and theft of stocks or assets, while travel, leisure and transportation reported increases in regulatory and compliance breaches and information theft or loss.

More than four out of five companies surveyed (85%) have suffered from corporate fraud in the past three years, up from 80% in last year’s survey. For larger companies the proportion suffering from fraud rose to 90%.

Commenting on the findings, Blake Coppotelli, senior managing director in Kroll’s Business Intelligence & Investigations division said: “The findings show that fraud is not only widespread, but also growing and we expect to see this increase further as conditions become tougher for business and the full impact of the credit crunch unfolds.”

“When you look into the causes of fraud, companies that cited high staff turnover or weak internal controls suffered much higher levels of fraud - in almost every case increasing their exposure by one-and-a-half times. Companies need to look carefully at how they can address these issues to reduce their risk to fraud and improve their business operations.”

Only two of the ten categories of fraud tracked in the survey – money laundering and procurement fraud – declined annually, albeit by a mere one percent each.

The Kroll Global Fraud Report includes detailed industry analysis across a range of different fraud categories and regions.

Other key findings include:

More developed economies (North America and Western Europe) saw less widespread fraud activity, while economically less developed regions (Middle East and Africa) experienced higher levels of fraud.

In eight out of ten fraud categories, companies in the Middle East and Africa had the highest or second highest incidence of activity and North America the lowest. The only marked exception was intellectual property theft, with less developed regions seeing the fewest incidents and North America the most.

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