AI systems are not only transforming finance. Increasingly, they are also accelerating fraud attacks faster than many banks can upgrade their defenses.

That growing pressure now sits behind a new launch from Feedzai, which introduced Feedzai IQ Score, an AI-native fraud risk scoring platform designed to give banks real-time access to anonymized fraud intelligence derived from Feedzai’s global transaction network, which processes more than $9 trillion in payment activity.

The launch arrives as financial institutions globally face increasing pressure from:

  • AI-generated phishing attacks
  • synthetic identities
  • deepfake-enabled scams
  • real-time payment fraud
  • cross-channel account takeovers
  • automated social engineering campaigns

The broader market backdrop also matters.

Investors increasingly view fraud prevention and cybersecurity as some of the clearest monetization paths for AI infrastructure as financial institutions race to protect increasingly digital and real-time financial ecosystems.

That dynamic helped push cybersecurity and fraud prevention companies higher across public markets over the past year as banks increased spending on AI-enabled defense systems amid rising fraud losses and regulatory scrutiny.

Feedzai Wants To Replace Isolated Fraud Defenses With Network Intelligence

Feedzai said the launch addresses what it described as the “Silo and Legacy Paradox,” where banks primarily rely on internal transaction data while operating fraud systems that are expensive and operationally difficult to replace.

That model increasingly creates problems as fraud attacks move across multiple financial institutions, payment channels and digital platforms simultaneously.

Instead of relying only on a single bank’s historical transaction data, Feedzai IQ Score allows institutions to access aggregated intelligence signals generated across Feedzai’s broader transaction ecosystem while maintaining customer privacy protections.

The company said the platform uses federated intelligence architecture, meaning intelligence travels across the network without sharing raw customer data between institutions.

Pedro Barata, Chief Product Officer at Feedzai, said, “Fraud has outpaced what any single institution can stop alone. Feedzai IQ Score puts an end to isolated defense by giving banks access to collective insights from across our entire network. Today, we open up this product to institutions of all sizes who now have a ready-made way to make smarter fraud decisions and modernize their defenses without the disruption of fully overhauling infrastructure.”

The company said institutions can move from integration to deployment within days and may require as few as 15 data fields to begin using the solution for certain payment use cases.

Feedzai also claimed the platform produced:

  • 4x more fraud detection
  • 50% fewer alerts compared with traditional rules-based systems
  • faster operational deployment timelines

The growing importance of shared intelligence increasingly mirrors broader shifts already taking place across financial infrastructure, including network-based infrastructure models, real-time payments and tokenized financial systems.

AI Fraud Is Becoming A Major Banking Risk

The launch may prove especially important for regional and mid-sized financial institutions that often lack the transaction scale, AI resources and engineering budgets needed to independently develop sophisticated fraud models.

Large global banks increasingly spend billions annually on technology modernization and cybersecurity infrastructure, while smaller institutions frequently operate with more limited fraud analytics capabilities.

That imbalance is becoming more dangerous as AI tools lower the cost and complexity required for fraudsters to launch sophisticated attacks at scale.

Industry estimates increasingly place annual global fraud losses in the hundreds of billions of dollars, while financial institutions continue facing growing regulatory scrutiny over reimbursement obligations and fraud prevention controls.

The challenge intensified further as:

  • instant payments expanded
  • settlement times accelerated
  • digital wallets scaled globally
  • cross-border payment activity increased
  • financial services moved toward 24/7 availability

The rise of 24/7 financial infrastructure is creating additional operational pressure on fraud systems originally designed around slower banking cycles and more centralized transaction flows.

At the same time, generative AI increasingly allows attackers to produce:

  • realistic voice cloning
  • deepfake video impersonations
  • automated phishing content
  • synthetic onboarding documents
  • large-scale social engineering campaigns

That trend is forcing financial institutions to rethink whether isolated fraud systems built around internal historical data remain viable against increasingly networked attacks.

Fraud Prevention Is Becoming One Of AI’s Biggest Commercial Markets

The broader significance of Feedzai’s launch may extend beyond fraud prevention itself.

Investors increasingly view fraud detection as one of the clearest large-scale commercial use cases for AI deployment across financial services because the return on investment is measurable in:

  • fraud reduction
  • alert reduction
  • operational efficiency
  • customer loss prevention
  • compliance performance

The launch also arrives as banks face growing pressure to modernize infrastructure without triggering multi-year core system migrations that can cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

That dynamic increasingly favors lightweight API-based infrastructure models capable of delivering incremental AI functionality without forcing institutions to fully rebuild existing systems.

The broader trend increasingly connects multiple themes already reshaping financial markets, including:

  • AI automation
  • operational resilience
  • infrastructure dependency risks
  • financial infrastructure competition

Philip Mackenzie, Senior Research Principal at Chartis, said, “Network fraud intelligence sharing is becoming increasingly important in the monitoring of fragmented fraud signals within the financial ecosystem. We considered this capability to be a key differentiator of Feedzai’s IQ Score solution, which combines real-time cross-institutional fraud insights and collective intelligence across a range of financial institutions.”

The larger strategic shift increasingly points toward a future where fraud prevention becomes less dependent on individual institutions and more reliant on network-scale intelligence systems capable of detecting coordinated threats across broader financial ecosystems.

That transition could significantly reshape how banks compete on trust, security and operational resilience over the next decade.

Takeaway

Feedzai’s launch highlights how fraud prevention is increasingly becoming a network-scale AI problem rather than a bank-by-bank technology issue. As financial crime grows more automated, fragmented and AI-driven, institutions relying only on internal data and legacy systems may struggle to keep pace with attackers operating across larger digital ecosystems.

The larger battle increasingly centers on who can aggregate the most intelligence across financial networks while maintaining privacy, compliance and real-time operational performance.