A survey by Aite Group polled 1100 consumers to show that false declines force many customers to migrate from their banks altogether.
Iovation, a provider of device-based consumer authentication and fraud prevention solutions, has released findings from its study of the effects of false declines on the consumer.
The survey, conducted in partnership with research and advisory firm Aite Group, polled nearly 1,100 consumers across four generations, according to a press release.
Findings from the report, Combating False Declines Through Customer Engagement, show that a large contingent of connected consumers are unforgiving of the inconvenience of a false decline.
More than 42 percent of respondents said that a false decline would motivate them to leave their banking institution altogether.
In 2016, approximately $264 billion in card transactions in the U.S. were lost as a result of false declines due to suspicion of fraud, a number that is projected to grow to $331 billion by 2018.
Findings from the study include:
SimCorp, a leading provider of investment management solutions and services to the global financial services industry, has…
The UK's major banks are to pump £6.5 million into a project to reform the…
A well-known market intelligence company, Infiniti Research, has announced the completion of their recent article…
German digital bank N26 has launched in the US, beginning a phased roll out of…
Toronto-based fintech, Sensibill, announced that it has secured $31.5 million USD in Series B funding. The…
India’s L&T Infrastructure Finance Co Ltd will get USD 100 million (EUR 88.9m) in debt…