Money laundering is a serious financial crime that poses a significant threat to the integrity of the global financial system. It is estimated that billions of dollars are laundered every year through a variety of methods, including the use of shell companies, money mules, and digital currency. Financial institutions have a vital role to play in combating money laundering, and one of the most effective tools they have at their disposal is the use of financial crime typologies. In this blog, we will explore what financial crime typologies are and how they can help in the fight against money laundering.
What Are Financial Crime Typologies?
Typologies are specific methods or schemes that are used for money laundering and other financial crimes. They are identified and catalogued by financial institutions and regulatory authorities to help combat financial crime. By understanding and sharing information about these typologies, financial institutions can stay ahead of emerging threats and adapt their compliance operations accordingly.
The Typology Repository, a database of known typologies maintained by Tookitaki's Anti-Financial Crime Ecosystem, is a prime example of how financial institutions can collaborate and share information to combat money laundering.
A typology from the repository is pictured below:

How Can Financial Crime Typologies Help in Compliance Operations?
Financial institutions can use financial crime typologies to improve their compliance operations in several ways. By understanding the typologies used by criminals, institutions can identify suspicious activity more effectively and develop more robust risk assessment and due diligence procedures. This can help institutions to detect and prevent money laundering before it occurs.
Additionally, sharing information about typologies with other institutions and regulatory authorities can help to identify patterns and trends in financial crime, allowing for more effective responses and the development of best practices. By working together, financial institutions can stay ahead of emerging threats and make it more difficult for criminals to evade detection.
How to Implement Financial Crime Typologies in Compliance Operations
Implementing financial crime typologies in a compliance program is a critical step towards improving AML effectiveness. One example of a platform that offers a comprehensive typology repository is the AFC Ecosystem by Tookitaki. The repository includes a wide range of typologies, from traditional methods such as shell companies and money mules, to more recent developments such as digital currency and social media-based schemes.
The AFC ecosystem also includes a 'no code' user interface, which allows financial institutions to easily create and share typologies. This means that even non-technical staff can contribute to the repository, making it a more collaborative and effective tool for the community. By sharing typologies in the repository, financial institutions can learn about new and emerging threats, and adapt their AML programs accordingly.
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How Does Tookitaki Make Use of Typologies
Tookitaki’s proprietary AML compliance solution, FinCense, is designed to make the best of use typologies through its Transaction Monitoring module. The Transaction Monitoring module is designed to detect suspicious patterns of financial transactions that may indicate money laundering or other financial crimes.
The module easily ingests typologies and utilizes powerful simulation modes for automated threshold tuning, allowing for quick adaptation to new money laundering techniques. Additionally, the module includes a built-in sandbox environment, which allows financial institutions to test and deploy new typologies in a matter of minutes.
Best practices for implementing financial crime typologies:
- Understand your institution's risk profile: Before implementing any typologies, it's essential to understand the risk profile of your institution. This includes identifying the types of products and services offered, the customer base, geographic location, and regulatory requirements.
- Tailor typologies to your institution's needs: Once you have identified the institution's risk profile, it's crucial to tailor the typologies to meet the institution's specific needs. This involves selecting typologies that are relevant to the institution's risk profile and customizing them based on the institution's data and transaction patterns.
By using Tookitaki's Typology Repository and Transaction Monitoring module, AML teams can quickly adapt to new money laundering techniques and stay ahead of the criminals. Financial institutions may tailor typologies to meet their specific needs and risk profile.
The Future of Financial Crime Typologies
As financial crime evolves, so too must our approach to combating it. One emerging trend in financial crime is the use of advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence and machine learning. These technologies can enable criminals to create more sophisticated money laundering schemes that are harder to detect using traditional methods. One way for financial institutions across the globe to proactively address this problem and stay ahead of emerging threats is to collaborate and share information and best practices.
Looking to the future, we can expect financial crime typologies to become even more important in the fight against money laundering. The Typology Repository can act as a powerful tool that can help financial institutions stay ahead of emerging threats. As more financial institutions contribute to the typology repository and share their knowledge and experiences, the repository will become an even more comprehensive resource for detecting and preventing financial crime.
Stay Ahead of Financial Crime with Community-sourced Typologies and Tookitaki's FinCense
Financial crime typologies are an essential tool for combating money laundering and other financial crimes. We encourage financial institutions to explore Tookitaki's FinCense, which is powered by a vast library of community-sourced typologies. With the help of this tool, financial institutions can better detect and prevent financial crime, making it more difficult for criminals to evade detection and continue their illicit activities.
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Automated Transaction Monitoring: The Future of Compliance for Philippine Banks
In a world of real-time payments, financial crime moves fast — automation helps banks move faster.
The Philippines is witnessing a rapid digital transformation in its financial sector. Mobile wallets, online banking, and cross-border remittances have brought financial inclusion to millions. But they have also opened new doors for fraudsters and money launderers. As regulators tighten their expectations following the country’s removal from the FATF grey list, institutions are turning to automated transaction monitoring to keep up with the speed, volume, and complexity of financial crime.

What Is Automated Transaction Monitoring?
Automated transaction monitoring refers to the use of technology systems that continuously review, analyse, and flag suspicious financial activity without manual intervention. These systems apply predefined rules, risk models, and artificial intelligence to detect anomalies in customer behaviour or transaction patterns.
Key functions include:
- Monitoring deposits, withdrawals, and transfers in real time.
- Identifying unusual transactions or activities inconsistent with customer profiles.
- Generating alerts for compliance review and investigation.
- Supporting regulatory reporting such as Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs).
Automation reduces human error, accelerates detection, and allows banks to focus on genuine threats rather than drowning in false alerts.
Why It Matters in the Philippines
The Philippines’ financial ecosystem faces a unique mix of challenges that make automation essential:
- High Transaction Volume
Over USD 36 billion in annual remittance inflows and growing digital payments create massive monitoring workloads. - Rise of Instant Payments
With PESONet and InstaPay enabling near-instant fund transfers, manual monitoring simply cannot keep up. - Expanding Fintech Landscape
E-wallets and payment providers multiply transaction data, increasing the complexity of detection. - Regulatory Demands
The BSP and AMLC expect banks to adopt risk-based, technology-enabled monitoring as part of their AML compliance. - Customer Trust
In a digital-first environment, customers expect their money to be secure. Automated systems build confidence by detecting fraud before it reaches the customer.
How Automated Transaction Monitoring Works
Automation doesn’t just replace human oversight — it amplifies it.
1. Data Collection and Integration
Systems collect data from multiple channels such as deposits, fund transfers, remittances, and mobile payments, consolidating it into a single monitoring platform.
2. Risk Profiling and Segmentation
Each customer is profiled based on transaction behaviour, source of funds, occupation, and geography.
3. Rule-Based and AI Detection
Algorithms compare real-time transactions against expected behaviour and known risk scenarios. For example, frequent small deposits below the reporting threshold may signal structuring.
4. Alert Generation
When anomalies are detected, alerts are automatically generated and prioritised by severity.
5. Investigation and Reporting
Investigators review alerts through built-in case management tools, escalating genuine cases for STR filing.
Benefits of Automated Transaction Monitoring
1. Real-Time Detection
Automated systems identify suspicious transactions the moment they occur, preventing potential losses.
2. Consistency and Accuracy
Automation eliminates inconsistencies and fatigue errors common in manual reviews.
3. Reduced False Positives
Machine learning refines models over time, helping banks focus on real threats.
4. Cost Efficiency
Automation lowers compliance costs by reducing manual workload and investigation time.
5. Auditability and Transparency
Every decision is logged and traceable, simplifying regulatory audits and internal reviews.
6. Scalability
Systems can handle millions of transactions daily, making them ideal for high-volume environments like digital banking and remittances.
Key Money Laundering Typologies Detected by Automation
Automated systems can identify typologies common in Philippine banking, including:
- Remittance Structuring: Splitting large overseas funds into smaller deposits.
- Rapid Inflows and Outflows: Accounts used for layering and quick fund transfers.
- Shell Company Laundering: Transactions through entities with no legitimate operations.
- Trade-Based Laundering: Over- or under-invoicing disguised as trade payments.
- Terror Financing: Repeated low-value transactions directed toward high-risk areas.

Challenges in Implementing Automated Systems
Despite the benefits, deploying automated monitoring in Philippine banks presents challenges:
- Data Quality Issues: Poorly structured or incomplete data leads to false alerts.
- Legacy Core Systems: Many institutions struggle to integrate modern monitoring software with existing infrastructure.
- High Implementation Costs: Smaller rural banks and fintech startups face budget constraints.
- Skills Shortage: Trained AML analysts who can interpret automated outputs are in short supply.
- Evolving Criminal Techniques: Criminals continuously test new methods, requiring constant system updates.
Best Practices for Effective Automation
- Adopt a Risk-Based Approach
Tailor monitoring to the risk profiles of customers, products, and geographies. - Combine Rules and AI
Use hybrid models that blend human-defined logic with adaptive machine learning. - Ensure Explainability
Select systems that provide clear explanations for flagged alerts to meet BSP and AMLC standards. - Integrate Data Sources
Unify customer and transaction data across departments for a 360-degree view. - Continuous Model Training
Retrain models regularly with new typologies and real-world feedback. - Collaborate Across the Industry
Engage in federated learning and typology-sharing initiatives to stay ahead of regional threats.
Regulatory Expectations for Automated Monitoring in the Philippines
The BSP and AMLC encourage financial institutions to:
- Implement technology-driven monitoring aligned with AMLA and FATF standards.
- File STRs promptly, ideally through automated reporting workflows.
- Maintain detailed audit logs of all monitoring and investigation activities.
- Demonstrate system effectiveness during compliance reviews.
Institutions that fail to upgrade to automated systems risk regulatory sanctions, reputational damage, and operational inefficiency.
Real-World Example: Detecting Fraud in Real Time
A leading Philippine bank implemented an automated transaction monitoring system integrated with behavioural analytics. Within the first quarter, the bank identified multiple accounts receiving frequent small-value remittances from overseas. Further investigation revealed a money mule network moving funds linked to online fraud.
Automation not only accelerated detection but also improved STR filing timelines by over 40 percent, setting a new benchmark for compliance efficiency.
The Tookitaki Advantage: Next-Generation Automated Monitoring
Tookitaki’s FinCense platform provides Philippine banks with an advanced, automated transaction monitoring framework built for speed, accuracy, and compliance.
Key features include:
- Agentic AI-Powered Detection that evolves with new typologies and regulatory changes.
- Federated Intelligence from the AFC Ecosystem, enabling real-world learning from global experts.
- Smart Disposition Engine that automates investigation summaries and reporting.
- Explainable AI Models ensuring transparency for regulators and auditors.
- False Positive Reduction through dynamic thresholding and behavioural analysis.
By integrating automation with collective intelligence, FinCense transforms compliance from a reactive process into a proactive defence system — one that builds trust, efficiency, and resilience across the financial ecosystem.
Conclusion: Automation as the New Standard for Compliance
The fight against financial crime in the Philippines demands speed, precision, and adaptability. Manual transaction monitoring can no longer keep up with the velocity of modern banking. Automated systems empower institutions to detect suspicious activity instantly, reduce investigation fatigue, and ensure seamless regulatory compliance.
The path forward is clear: automation is not just an upgrade, it is the new standard. Philippine banks that embrace automated transaction monitoring today will set themselves apart tomorrow — not only as compliant institutions but as trusted stewards of financial integrity.

Real-Time Fraud Prevention Frameworks for Australian Banks: Building Defence for the Instant Economy
With instant payments now the norm, Australian banks must shift from detecting fraud after it happens to preventing it in real time.
Introduction
The rise of real-time payments has redefined both convenience and risk. Australians now move money within seconds through the New Payments Platform (NPP) and PayTo, but this speed has also created an attractive opportunity for fraudsters.
According to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), Australians lost over AUD 3 billion to scams in 2024. As fraudsters automate their tactics, the window for banks to identify and stop fraudulent activity has narrowed to just milliseconds.
To combat this, financial institutions need more than just advanced technology — they need real-time fraud prevention frameworks that bring together analytics, automation, and collaboration across systems and stakeholders.

Why Real-Time Fraud Prevention Matters
1. Instant Payments, Instant Risks
With NPP and PayTo, once funds leave an account, recovery becomes extremely difficult. Delayed detection means losses are often irreversible.
2. Fraudsters Are Faster Than Ever
Criminals now deploy bots, deepfakes, and social engineering to initiate high-speed scams. Without real-time systems, even the best-trained teams cannot respond quickly enough.
3. Customer Expectations Have Changed
Today’s customers expect frictionless, always-on protection. Delays in identifying or resolving fraudulent activity damage trust and loyalty.
4. Regulatory Scrutiny Is Increasing
AUSTRAC and the Australian Banking Association (ABA) are pressing institutions to enhance their real-time monitoring and reporting capabilities as part of broader scam-prevention efforts.
Understanding Real-Time Fraud Prevention Frameworks
A real-time fraud prevention framework is an integrated system of technologies, policies, and processes designed to detect, block, and report fraudulent activity as it happens.
Core Components:
- Data Ingestion Layer: Collects data from core banking, payments, onboarding, and digital channels.
- Real-Time Analytics Engine: Analyses transactions and behavioural data instantly to detect anomalies.
- Decisioning Layer: Applies AI models and rules to determine whether a transaction should proceed, pause, or be reviewed.
- Alert and Case Management: Routes flagged activity to investigators with all context attached.
- Regulatory Reporting and Audit Trails: Generates AUSTRAC-ready reports and maintains full transparency.
The goal is simple: prevent fraud without slowing down legitimate transactions.
Fraud Trends Driving the Shift to Real-Time Prevention
1. Authorised Push Payment (APP) Scams
Victims are deceived into transferring money to fraudsters. Once sent, the funds move across multiple mule accounts in seconds.
2. Account Takeover (ATO) Fraud
Attackers gain access to legitimate customer accounts through phishing or credential theft, initiating unauthorised transfers.
3. Synthetic Identity Fraud
Fraudsters create fake identities by blending real and fabricated data, opening accounts that appear legitimate until exploited.
4. Money Mule Networks
Criminals use layers of recruited individuals or compromised accounts to launder stolen funds.
5. Insider Fraud
Employees or third parties misuse internal access for unauthorised activities.
Each of these threats requires immediate detection, not batch-based monitoring.
AUSTRAC’s Perspective on Real-Time Monitoring
AUSTRAC’s guidance under the AML/CTF Act 2006 emphasises:
- Continuous monitoring of transactions.
- Early detection of suspicious behaviour.
- Prompt filing of Suspicious Matter Reports (SMRs).
- Risk-based allocation of resources.
- Ongoing staff training and technology upgrades.
The regulator expects institutions to demonstrate that their systems are capable of identifying and responding to threats dynamically — a hallmark of a strong real-time framework.
Key Elements of an Effective Real-Time Fraud Prevention Framework
1. Unified Data Architecture
Bring together data from transaction monitoring, KYC, onboarding, and fraud systems. This creates a holistic risk view and eliminates blind spots.
2. AI and Machine Learning
AI models identify emerging typologies by analysing patterns across large data volumes, enabling detection of unknown threats.
3. Behavioural Biometrics
Analysing keystrokes, mouse movements, or mobile usage patterns helps differentiate genuine users from fraudsters.
4. Network Analytics
Map relationships between accounts, devices, and transactions to expose mule clusters or coordinated fraud rings.
5. Cross-Channel Monitoring
Link activity across payments, cards, remittances, and digital platforms to prevent fraud migration between systems.
6. Automated Case Management
Real-time frameworks rely on automation to triage and prioritise alerts, ensuring investigators focus on genuine threats.
7. Continuous Model Calibration
Regular validation ensures AI models remain accurate, fair, and compliant with AUSTRAC and global regulatory standards.

Operationalising the Framework
Step 1: Assess Existing Infrastructure
Evaluate current systems for latency, coverage gaps, and data silos.
Step 2: Integrate Data Sources
Unify KYC, transaction, and fraud data through APIs and cloud infrastructure for faster decisioning.
Step 3: Implement Real-Time Detection Models
Deploy AI-driven engines that monitor all transactions at sub-second speed.
Step 4: Automate Reporting and Audit
Ensure every flagged transaction generates an audit trail and is ready for AUSTRAC reporting.
Step 5: Collaborate Externally
Join industry initiatives such as the Fintel Alliance or AFC Ecosystem for shared intelligence on emerging threats.
Step 6: Educate Customers
Run campaigns explaining scam tactics and prevention steps to reduce victim vulnerability.
Common Implementation Challenges
- Data Fragmentation: Disparate systems delay decision-making.
- Alert Overload: Poorly tuned models create excessive false positives.
- Legacy Systems: Older platforms cannot support real-time throughput.
- Model Explainability: Regulators demand transparency into AI decisions.
- Integration Costs: Connecting fraud, AML, and onboarding tools can be complex.
Modern compliance platforms address these gaps through automation, modular deployment, and explainable AI.
Case Example: Regional Australia Bank
Regional Australia Bank, a community-owned institution, has demonstrated how even mid-sized banks can adopt real-time frameworks effectively. By leveraging advanced analytics and customer behavioural insights, the bank has improved fraud detection speed and accuracy while maintaining seamless customer experiences.
This example underscores that real-time fraud prevention is not about size — it is about adopting the right technology and culture of vigilance.
Spotlight: Tookitaki’s FinCense
FinCense, Tookitaki’s next-generation compliance platform, empowers Australian banks to build true real-time fraud prevention frameworks.
- Real-Time Monitoring: Detects fraudulent transactions instantly across NPP, PayTo, cards, and remittances.
- Agentic AI: Continuously learns from evolving fraud typologies, adapting in real time.
- Federated Intelligence: Shares anonymised insights through the AFC Ecosystem to detect coordinated fraud patterns.
- FinMate AI Copilot: Assists investigators by summarising cases and highlighting root causes instantly.
- Unified AML-Fraud Architecture: Provides a single platform covering transaction monitoring, screening, and case management.
- AUSTRAC-Ready Reporting: Automates compliance submissions with full transparency and traceability.
FinCense bridges the gap between compliance and fraud operations, giving banks real-time intelligence with explainability and control.
Best Practices for Australian Banks
- Adopt a Holistic Approach: Unify AML, fraud, and cybersecurity functions for full-spectrum protection.
- Leverage Explainable AI: Regulators expect transparency in automated decisions.
- Participate in Industry Collaboration: Share intelligence securely to uncover cross-institutional threats.
- Maintain Continuous Testing: Regularly validate detection models to prevent drift.
- Invest in Staff Upskilling: Equip compliance teams with data and AI literacy.
- Balance Security with Experience: Ensure controls do not compromise customer convenience.
The Future of Real-Time Fraud Prevention
- Predictive Fraud Detection: AI will forecast risk before transactions occur.
- Federated Learning Networks: Banks will collaborate to train AI models without sharing raw data.
- Digital Identity Integration: Linking biometric identity to payment authorisation will reduce impersonation fraud.
- Agentic AI Investigators: AI copilots like FinMate will automate case triage and narrative generation.
- Real-Time Collaboration with Regulators: AUSTRAC will increasingly use live data feeds for proactive oversight.
Conclusion
Real-time fraud prevention is no longer optional — it is the foundation of customer trust and regulatory resilience in Australia’s instant payments landscape.
Banks that modernise their frameworks can protect both their customers and reputation while ensuring compliance with AUSTRAC’s evolving standards. Regional Australia Bank stands as an example of how innovation and community trust can coexist through proactive fraud prevention.
With solutions like Tookitaki’s FinCense, institutions can build intelligent, adaptable frameworks that detect and block fraud before it happens — safeguarding Australia’s financial ecosystem for the digital era.
Pro tip: The faster the payments, the smarter the prevention needs to be. Real-time fraud prevention is not just a technology upgrade; it is a strategic imperative.

The New Frontline: Choosing the Right Fraud Protection Solution in Singapore
Fraud is no longer an isolated threat. It’s a fast-moving, shape-shifting force — and your protection strategy needs to evolve.
Singapore’s financial institutions are under increasing pressure to stop fraud in its tracks. Whether it’s phishing scams, mule networks, deepfake impersonation, or account takeovers, fraud is growing smarter and faster. With rising consumer expectations and tighter regulations from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), choosing the right fraud protection solution is no longer optional. It’s essential.
In this blog, we break down what a modern fraud protection solution should look like, the challenges financial institutions face, and how the right tools can make a measurable difference.

Why Fraud Protection Matters More Than Ever in Singapore
Singapore has become a target for regional and global fraud syndicates. In 2024 alone, scam-related cases surged across digital banking platforms, real-time payment systems, and investment apps.
Common fraud tactics in Singapore include:
- Deepfake impersonation of executives to authorise fraudulent payments
- Mule networks laundering scam proceeds through retail accounts
- Social engineering schemes via SMS, messaging apps, and phishing sites
- Abuse of fintech payment rails for layering illicit funds
- QR-enabled payment fraud using fake invoices and utility bills
For banks, fintechs, and e-wallet providers, protecting customer trust while meeting compliance requirements means upgrading outdated defences and adopting smarter solutions.
What Is a Fraud Protection Solution?
A fraud protection solution is a set of technologies and processes designed to detect, prevent, and respond to unauthorised or suspicious financial activity. Unlike basic fraud filters or static rules engines, modern solutions offer real-time intelligence, behavioural analytics, and automated response mechanisms.
These systems work across:
- Online and mobile banking platforms
- Real-time payment gateways (FAST, PayNow)
- ATM and POS systems
- Digital wallets and peer-to-peer transfers
- Corporate payment platforms
Core Features of a Modern Fraud Protection Solution
To be effective in Singapore’s environment, a fraud protection platform must offer the following capabilities:
1. Real-Time Transaction Monitoring
The system should detect anomalies instantly. With real-time payment rails, fraud can occur and complete within seconds.
Must-have abilities:
- Flagging unusual transfer patterns
- Monitoring high-risk transaction destinations
- Identifying suspicious frequency or amount spikes
2. Behavioural Analytics
Every user has a pattern. The system should create a behavioural profile for each customer and flag deviations that could signal fraud.
Examples:
- Logging in from a new location or device
- Transferring funds to previously unseen beneficiaries
- Unusual time-of-day activity
3. AI-Powered Detection Models
Static rules are easy to bypass. AI models continuously learn from past transactions to detect unknown fraud types.
Advantages include:
- Lower false positive rates
- Adaptability to new scam techniques
- Dynamic scoring based on multiple factors
4. Cross-Channel Visibility
Fraudsters exploit the gaps between systems. A strong solution connects the dots across:
- Digital banking
- Payment cards
- Contact centres
- Third-party apps
This provides a 360-degree view of activity and risk.
5. Smart Case Management
Alerts should flow into a central case management system where investigators can access customer data, transaction history, and risk scores in one place.
Additional features:
- Task assignment
- Audit trails
- Escalation workflows
6. Integration with AML Tools
Many fraudulent transactions are part of larger money laundering operations. Look for platforms that connect to AML systems or offer built-in anti-money laundering detection.
7. Rules and Machine Learning Hybrid
The best systems combine rules for known risks and machine learning for unknown threats. This provides flexibility and scalability without overburdening compliance teams.
8. Explainable Risk Scoring
Especially in Singapore, where MAS expects auditability and transparency, the system must show why a transaction was flagged.
Key benefits:
- Clear decision logic for investigators
- Better documentation for regulators
- Trust in AI-driven decisions

Key Challenges Faced by Financial Institutions in Singapore
Even with fraud systems in place, many organisations struggle with:
❌ High False Positives
Excessive alert volumes make it harder to detect real threats and slow down response times.
❌ Siloed Systems
Fraud signals are often trapped in departmental or channel-specific platforms, limiting visibility.
❌ Lack of Local Typology Awareness
Many systems are built for global markets and miss region-specific scam patterns.
❌ Manual Investigations
Slow, manual case handling leads to backlogs and delayed STR filing.
❌ One-Size-Fits-All Solutions
Generic fraud platforms fail to meet the operational needs and compliance expectations in Singapore’s regulated environment.
How Tookitaki’s FinCense Offers an End-to-End Fraud Protection Solution
Tookitaki’s FinCense platform is more than an AML tool. It’s a complete compliance and fraud protection solution built for the Asia-Pacific region, including Singapore.
Here’s how it delivers:
1. Scenario-Based Fraud Detection
Instead of relying on outdated rules, FinCense detects based on real-world fraud scenarios. These include:
- Cross-border mule account layering
- QR code-enabled laundering via fintechs
- Deepfake impersonation of CFOs for corporate fund diversion
These scenarios are sourced and validated through the AFC Ecosystem, a collective intelligence network of compliance professionals.
2. Modular AI Agents
FinCense uses a modular Agentic AI framework. Each agent specialises in a core function:
- Real-time detection
- Alert prioritisation
- Case investigation
- Report generation
This structure allows for faster processing and more targeted improvements.
3. AI Copilot for Investigators
Tools like FinMate assist fraud teams by:
- Highlighting high-risk transactions
- Summarising red flags
- Suggesting likely fraud types
- Auto-generating investigation notes
This reduces investigation time and improves consistency.
4. Integration with AML and STR Filing
Fraud alerts that indicate laundering can be escalated directly to AML teams. FinCense also supports MAS-aligned STR reporting through GoAML-compatible outputs.
5. Simulation and Model Tuning
Before deploying new fraud rules or AI models, compliance teams can simulate impact, adjust thresholds, and optimise performance — without risking alert fatigue.
Real Results from Institutions Using FinCense
Banks and payment platforms using FinCense have reported:
- Over 50 percent reduction in false positives
- 3x faster investigation workflows
- Higher STR acceptance rates
- Stronger audit performance during MAS reviews
- Improved team efficiency and satisfaction
By investing in smarter tools, these institutions are building real-time resilience against fraud.
How to Evaluate Fraud Protection Solutions for Singapore
Here’s a quick checklist to guide your vendor selection:
- Can it detect fraud in real time?
- Does it include AI models trained on local risk patterns?
- Is there cross-channel monitoring and investigation?
- Can investigators access case data in one dashboard?
- Does it support both rules and machine learning?
- Are decisions explainable and audit-ready?
- Does it integrate with AML and STR filing tools?
- Can it simulate new detection logic before going live?
If your current system cannot check most of these boxes, it may be time to rethink your fraud defence strategy.
Conclusion: Protecting Trust in a High-Risk World
In Singapore’s fast-evolving financial landscape, the cost of fraud goes beyond financial loss. It erodes customer trust, damages reputation, and exposes institutions to regulatory scrutiny.
A modern fraud protection solution should not only detect known risks but adapt to new threats as they emerge. With AI, behavioural analytics, and collective intelligence, solutions like FinCense empower compliance teams to stay ahead — not just stay compliant.
As fraud continues to evolve, so must your defence. The future belongs to institutions that can think faster, act smarter, and protect better.

Automated Transaction Monitoring: The Future of Compliance for Philippine Banks
In a world of real-time payments, financial crime moves fast — automation helps banks move faster.
The Philippines is witnessing a rapid digital transformation in its financial sector. Mobile wallets, online banking, and cross-border remittances have brought financial inclusion to millions. But they have also opened new doors for fraudsters and money launderers. As regulators tighten their expectations following the country’s removal from the FATF grey list, institutions are turning to automated transaction monitoring to keep up with the speed, volume, and complexity of financial crime.

What Is Automated Transaction Monitoring?
Automated transaction monitoring refers to the use of technology systems that continuously review, analyse, and flag suspicious financial activity without manual intervention. These systems apply predefined rules, risk models, and artificial intelligence to detect anomalies in customer behaviour or transaction patterns.
Key functions include:
- Monitoring deposits, withdrawals, and transfers in real time.
- Identifying unusual transactions or activities inconsistent with customer profiles.
- Generating alerts for compliance review and investigation.
- Supporting regulatory reporting such as Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs).
Automation reduces human error, accelerates detection, and allows banks to focus on genuine threats rather than drowning in false alerts.
Why It Matters in the Philippines
The Philippines’ financial ecosystem faces a unique mix of challenges that make automation essential:
- High Transaction Volume
Over USD 36 billion in annual remittance inflows and growing digital payments create massive monitoring workloads. - Rise of Instant Payments
With PESONet and InstaPay enabling near-instant fund transfers, manual monitoring simply cannot keep up. - Expanding Fintech Landscape
E-wallets and payment providers multiply transaction data, increasing the complexity of detection. - Regulatory Demands
The BSP and AMLC expect banks to adopt risk-based, technology-enabled monitoring as part of their AML compliance. - Customer Trust
In a digital-first environment, customers expect their money to be secure. Automated systems build confidence by detecting fraud before it reaches the customer.
How Automated Transaction Monitoring Works
Automation doesn’t just replace human oversight — it amplifies it.
1. Data Collection and Integration
Systems collect data from multiple channels such as deposits, fund transfers, remittances, and mobile payments, consolidating it into a single monitoring platform.
2. Risk Profiling and Segmentation
Each customer is profiled based on transaction behaviour, source of funds, occupation, and geography.
3. Rule-Based and AI Detection
Algorithms compare real-time transactions against expected behaviour and known risk scenarios. For example, frequent small deposits below the reporting threshold may signal structuring.
4. Alert Generation
When anomalies are detected, alerts are automatically generated and prioritised by severity.
5. Investigation and Reporting
Investigators review alerts through built-in case management tools, escalating genuine cases for STR filing.
Benefits of Automated Transaction Monitoring
1. Real-Time Detection
Automated systems identify suspicious transactions the moment they occur, preventing potential losses.
2. Consistency and Accuracy
Automation eliminates inconsistencies and fatigue errors common in manual reviews.
3. Reduced False Positives
Machine learning refines models over time, helping banks focus on real threats.
4. Cost Efficiency
Automation lowers compliance costs by reducing manual workload and investigation time.
5. Auditability and Transparency
Every decision is logged and traceable, simplifying regulatory audits and internal reviews.
6. Scalability
Systems can handle millions of transactions daily, making them ideal for high-volume environments like digital banking and remittances.
Key Money Laundering Typologies Detected by Automation
Automated systems can identify typologies common in Philippine banking, including:
- Remittance Structuring: Splitting large overseas funds into smaller deposits.
- Rapid Inflows and Outflows: Accounts used for layering and quick fund transfers.
- Shell Company Laundering: Transactions through entities with no legitimate operations.
- Trade-Based Laundering: Over- or under-invoicing disguised as trade payments.
- Terror Financing: Repeated low-value transactions directed toward high-risk areas.

Challenges in Implementing Automated Systems
Despite the benefits, deploying automated monitoring in Philippine banks presents challenges:
- Data Quality Issues: Poorly structured or incomplete data leads to false alerts.
- Legacy Core Systems: Many institutions struggle to integrate modern monitoring software with existing infrastructure.
- High Implementation Costs: Smaller rural banks and fintech startups face budget constraints.
- Skills Shortage: Trained AML analysts who can interpret automated outputs are in short supply.
- Evolving Criminal Techniques: Criminals continuously test new methods, requiring constant system updates.
Best Practices for Effective Automation
- Adopt a Risk-Based Approach
Tailor monitoring to the risk profiles of customers, products, and geographies. - Combine Rules and AI
Use hybrid models that blend human-defined logic with adaptive machine learning. - Ensure Explainability
Select systems that provide clear explanations for flagged alerts to meet BSP and AMLC standards. - Integrate Data Sources
Unify customer and transaction data across departments for a 360-degree view. - Continuous Model Training
Retrain models regularly with new typologies and real-world feedback. - Collaborate Across the Industry
Engage in federated learning and typology-sharing initiatives to stay ahead of regional threats.
Regulatory Expectations for Automated Monitoring in the Philippines
The BSP and AMLC encourage financial institutions to:
- Implement technology-driven monitoring aligned with AMLA and FATF standards.
- File STRs promptly, ideally through automated reporting workflows.
- Maintain detailed audit logs of all monitoring and investigation activities.
- Demonstrate system effectiveness during compliance reviews.
Institutions that fail to upgrade to automated systems risk regulatory sanctions, reputational damage, and operational inefficiency.
Real-World Example: Detecting Fraud in Real Time
A leading Philippine bank implemented an automated transaction monitoring system integrated with behavioural analytics. Within the first quarter, the bank identified multiple accounts receiving frequent small-value remittances from overseas. Further investigation revealed a money mule network moving funds linked to online fraud.
Automation not only accelerated detection but also improved STR filing timelines by over 40 percent, setting a new benchmark for compliance efficiency.
The Tookitaki Advantage: Next-Generation Automated Monitoring
Tookitaki’s FinCense platform provides Philippine banks with an advanced, automated transaction monitoring framework built for speed, accuracy, and compliance.
Key features include:
- Agentic AI-Powered Detection that evolves with new typologies and regulatory changes.
- Federated Intelligence from the AFC Ecosystem, enabling real-world learning from global experts.
- Smart Disposition Engine that automates investigation summaries and reporting.
- Explainable AI Models ensuring transparency for regulators and auditors.
- False Positive Reduction through dynamic thresholding and behavioural analysis.
By integrating automation with collective intelligence, FinCense transforms compliance from a reactive process into a proactive defence system — one that builds trust, efficiency, and resilience across the financial ecosystem.
Conclusion: Automation as the New Standard for Compliance
The fight against financial crime in the Philippines demands speed, precision, and adaptability. Manual transaction monitoring can no longer keep up with the velocity of modern banking. Automated systems empower institutions to detect suspicious activity instantly, reduce investigation fatigue, and ensure seamless regulatory compliance.
The path forward is clear: automation is not just an upgrade, it is the new standard. Philippine banks that embrace automated transaction monitoring today will set themselves apart tomorrow — not only as compliant institutions but as trusted stewards of financial integrity.

Real-Time Fraud Prevention Frameworks for Australian Banks: Building Defence for the Instant Economy
With instant payments now the norm, Australian banks must shift from detecting fraud after it happens to preventing it in real time.
Introduction
The rise of real-time payments has redefined both convenience and risk. Australians now move money within seconds through the New Payments Platform (NPP) and PayTo, but this speed has also created an attractive opportunity for fraudsters.
According to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), Australians lost over AUD 3 billion to scams in 2024. As fraudsters automate their tactics, the window for banks to identify and stop fraudulent activity has narrowed to just milliseconds.
To combat this, financial institutions need more than just advanced technology — they need real-time fraud prevention frameworks that bring together analytics, automation, and collaboration across systems and stakeholders.

Why Real-Time Fraud Prevention Matters
1. Instant Payments, Instant Risks
With NPP and PayTo, once funds leave an account, recovery becomes extremely difficult. Delayed detection means losses are often irreversible.
2. Fraudsters Are Faster Than Ever
Criminals now deploy bots, deepfakes, and social engineering to initiate high-speed scams. Without real-time systems, even the best-trained teams cannot respond quickly enough.
3. Customer Expectations Have Changed
Today’s customers expect frictionless, always-on protection. Delays in identifying or resolving fraudulent activity damage trust and loyalty.
4. Regulatory Scrutiny Is Increasing
AUSTRAC and the Australian Banking Association (ABA) are pressing institutions to enhance their real-time monitoring and reporting capabilities as part of broader scam-prevention efforts.
Understanding Real-Time Fraud Prevention Frameworks
A real-time fraud prevention framework is an integrated system of technologies, policies, and processes designed to detect, block, and report fraudulent activity as it happens.
Core Components:
- Data Ingestion Layer: Collects data from core banking, payments, onboarding, and digital channels.
- Real-Time Analytics Engine: Analyses transactions and behavioural data instantly to detect anomalies.
- Decisioning Layer: Applies AI models and rules to determine whether a transaction should proceed, pause, or be reviewed.
- Alert and Case Management: Routes flagged activity to investigators with all context attached.
- Regulatory Reporting and Audit Trails: Generates AUSTRAC-ready reports and maintains full transparency.
The goal is simple: prevent fraud without slowing down legitimate transactions.
Fraud Trends Driving the Shift to Real-Time Prevention
1. Authorised Push Payment (APP) Scams
Victims are deceived into transferring money to fraudsters. Once sent, the funds move across multiple mule accounts in seconds.
2. Account Takeover (ATO) Fraud
Attackers gain access to legitimate customer accounts through phishing or credential theft, initiating unauthorised transfers.
3. Synthetic Identity Fraud
Fraudsters create fake identities by blending real and fabricated data, opening accounts that appear legitimate until exploited.
4. Money Mule Networks
Criminals use layers of recruited individuals or compromised accounts to launder stolen funds.
5. Insider Fraud
Employees or third parties misuse internal access for unauthorised activities.
Each of these threats requires immediate detection, not batch-based monitoring.
AUSTRAC’s Perspective on Real-Time Monitoring
AUSTRAC’s guidance under the AML/CTF Act 2006 emphasises:
- Continuous monitoring of transactions.
- Early detection of suspicious behaviour.
- Prompt filing of Suspicious Matter Reports (SMRs).
- Risk-based allocation of resources.
- Ongoing staff training and technology upgrades.
The regulator expects institutions to demonstrate that their systems are capable of identifying and responding to threats dynamically — a hallmark of a strong real-time framework.
Key Elements of an Effective Real-Time Fraud Prevention Framework
1. Unified Data Architecture
Bring together data from transaction monitoring, KYC, onboarding, and fraud systems. This creates a holistic risk view and eliminates blind spots.
2. AI and Machine Learning
AI models identify emerging typologies by analysing patterns across large data volumes, enabling detection of unknown threats.
3. Behavioural Biometrics
Analysing keystrokes, mouse movements, or mobile usage patterns helps differentiate genuine users from fraudsters.
4. Network Analytics
Map relationships between accounts, devices, and transactions to expose mule clusters or coordinated fraud rings.
5. Cross-Channel Monitoring
Link activity across payments, cards, remittances, and digital platforms to prevent fraud migration between systems.
6. Automated Case Management
Real-time frameworks rely on automation to triage and prioritise alerts, ensuring investigators focus on genuine threats.
7. Continuous Model Calibration
Regular validation ensures AI models remain accurate, fair, and compliant with AUSTRAC and global regulatory standards.

Operationalising the Framework
Step 1: Assess Existing Infrastructure
Evaluate current systems for latency, coverage gaps, and data silos.
Step 2: Integrate Data Sources
Unify KYC, transaction, and fraud data through APIs and cloud infrastructure for faster decisioning.
Step 3: Implement Real-Time Detection Models
Deploy AI-driven engines that monitor all transactions at sub-second speed.
Step 4: Automate Reporting and Audit
Ensure every flagged transaction generates an audit trail and is ready for AUSTRAC reporting.
Step 5: Collaborate Externally
Join industry initiatives such as the Fintel Alliance or AFC Ecosystem for shared intelligence on emerging threats.
Step 6: Educate Customers
Run campaigns explaining scam tactics and prevention steps to reduce victim vulnerability.
Common Implementation Challenges
- Data Fragmentation: Disparate systems delay decision-making.
- Alert Overload: Poorly tuned models create excessive false positives.
- Legacy Systems: Older platforms cannot support real-time throughput.
- Model Explainability: Regulators demand transparency into AI decisions.
- Integration Costs: Connecting fraud, AML, and onboarding tools can be complex.
Modern compliance platforms address these gaps through automation, modular deployment, and explainable AI.
Case Example: Regional Australia Bank
Regional Australia Bank, a community-owned institution, has demonstrated how even mid-sized banks can adopt real-time frameworks effectively. By leveraging advanced analytics and customer behavioural insights, the bank has improved fraud detection speed and accuracy while maintaining seamless customer experiences.
This example underscores that real-time fraud prevention is not about size — it is about adopting the right technology and culture of vigilance.
Spotlight: Tookitaki’s FinCense
FinCense, Tookitaki’s next-generation compliance platform, empowers Australian banks to build true real-time fraud prevention frameworks.
- Real-Time Monitoring: Detects fraudulent transactions instantly across NPP, PayTo, cards, and remittances.
- Agentic AI: Continuously learns from evolving fraud typologies, adapting in real time.
- Federated Intelligence: Shares anonymised insights through the AFC Ecosystem to detect coordinated fraud patterns.
- FinMate AI Copilot: Assists investigators by summarising cases and highlighting root causes instantly.
- Unified AML-Fraud Architecture: Provides a single platform covering transaction monitoring, screening, and case management.
- AUSTRAC-Ready Reporting: Automates compliance submissions with full transparency and traceability.
FinCense bridges the gap between compliance and fraud operations, giving banks real-time intelligence with explainability and control.
Best Practices for Australian Banks
- Adopt a Holistic Approach: Unify AML, fraud, and cybersecurity functions for full-spectrum protection.
- Leverage Explainable AI: Regulators expect transparency in automated decisions.
- Participate in Industry Collaboration: Share intelligence securely to uncover cross-institutional threats.
- Maintain Continuous Testing: Regularly validate detection models to prevent drift.
- Invest in Staff Upskilling: Equip compliance teams with data and AI literacy.
- Balance Security with Experience: Ensure controls do not compromise customer convenience.
The Future of Real-Time Fraud Prevention
- Predictive Fraud Detection: AI will forecast risk before transactions occur.
- Federated Learning Networks: Banks will collaborate to train AI models without sharing raw data.
- Digital Identity Integration: Linking biometric identity to payment authorisation will reduce impersonation fraud.
- Agentic AI Investigators: AI copilots like FinMate will automate case triage and narrative generation.
- Real-Time Collaboration with Regulators: AUSTRAC will increasingly use live data feeds for proactive oversight.
Conclusion
Real-time fraud prevention is no longer optional — it is the foundation of customer trust and regulatory resilience in Australia’s instant payments landscape.
Banks that modernise their frameworks can protect both their customers and reputation while ensuring compliance with AUSTRAC’s evolving standards. Regional Australia Bank stands as an example of how innovation and community trust can coexist through proactive fraud prevention.
With solutions like Tookitaki’s FinCense, institutions can build intelligent, adaptable frameworks that detect and block fraud before it happens — safeguarding Australia’s financial ecosystem for the digital era.
Pro tip: The faster the payments, the smarter the prevention needs to be. Real-time fraud prevention is not just a technology upgrade; it is a strategic imperative.

The New Frontline: Choosing the Right Fraud Protection Solution in Singapore
Fraud is no longer an isolated threat. It’s a fast-moving, shape-shifting force — and your protection strategy needs to evolve.
Singapore’s financial institutions are under increasing pressure to stop fraud in its tracks. Whether it’s phishing scams, mule networks, deepfake impersonation, or account takeovers, fraud is growing smarter and faster. With rising consumer expectations and tighter regulations from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), choosing the right fraud protection solution is no longer optional. It’s essential.
In this blog, we break down what a modern fraud protection solution should look like, the challenges financial institutions face, and how the right tools can make a measurable difference.

Why Fraud Protection Matters More Than Ever in Singapore
Singapore has become a target for regional and global fraud syndicates. In 2024 alone, scam-related cases surged across digital banking platforms, real-time payment systems, and investment apps.
Common fraud tactics in Singapore include:
- Deepfake impersonation of executives to authorise fraudulent payments
- Mule networks laundering scam proceeds through retail accounts
- Social engineering schemes via SMS, messaging apps, and phishing sites
- Abuse of fintech payment rails for layering illicit funds
- QR-enabled payment fraud using fake invoices and utility bills
For banks, fintechs, and e-wallet providers, protecting customer trust while meeting compliance requirements means upgrading outdated defences and adopting smarter solutions.
What Is a Fraud Protection Solution?
A fraud protection solution is a set of technologies and processes designed to detect, prevent, and respond to unauthorised or suspicious financial activity. Unlike basic fraud filters or static rules engines, modern solutions offer real-time intelligence, behavioural analytics, and automated response mechanisms.
These systems work across:
- Online and mobile banking platforms
- Real-time payment gateways (FAST, PayNow)
- ATM and POS systems
- Digital wallets and peer-to-peer transfers
- Corporate payment platforms
Core Features of a Modern Fraud Protection Solution
To be effective in Singapore’s environment, a fraud protection platform must offer the following capabilities:
1. Real-Time Transaction Monitoring
The system should detect anomalies instantly. With real-time payment rails, fraud can occur and complete within seconds.
Must-have abilities:
- Flagging unusual transfer patterns
- Monitoring high-risk transaction destinations
- Identifying suspicious frequency or amount spikes
2. Behavioural Analytics
Every user has a pattern. The system should create a behavioural profile for each customer and flag deviations that could signal fraud.
Examples:
- Logging in from a new location or device
- Transferring funds to previously unseen beneficiaries
- Unusual time-of-day activity
3. AI-Powered Detection Models
Static rules are easy to bypass. AI models continuously learn from past transactions to detect unknown fraud types.
Advantages include:
- Lower false positive rates
- Adaptability to new scam techniques
- Dynamic scoring based on multiple factors
4. Cross-Channel Visibility
Fraudsters exploit the gaps between systems. A strong solution connects the dots across:
- Digital banking
- Payment cards
- Contact centres
- Third-party apps
This provides a 360-degree view of activity and risk.
5. Smart Case Management
Alerts should flow into a central case management system where investigators can access customer data, transaction history, and risk scores in one place.
Additional features:
- Task assignment
- Audit trails
- Escalation workflows
6. Integration with AML Tools
Many fraudulent transactions are part of larger money laundering operations. Look for platforms that connect to AML systems or offer built-in anti-money laundering detection.
7. Rules and Machine Learning Hybrid
The best systems combine rules for known risks and machine learning for unknown threats. This provides flexibility and scalability without overburdening compliance teams.
8. Explainable Risk Scoring
Especially in Singapore, where MAS expects auditability and transparency, the system must show why a transaction was flagged.
Key benefits:
- Clear decision logic for investigators
- Better documentation for regulators
- Trust in AI-driven decisions

Key Challenges Faced by Financial Institutions in Singapore
Even with fraud systems in place, many organisations struggle with:
❌ High False Positives
Excessive alert volumes make it harder to detect real threats and slow down response times.
❌ Siloed Systems
Fraud signals are often trapped in departmental or channel-specific platforms, limiting visibility.
❌ Lack of Local Typology Awareness
Many systems are built for global markets and miss region-specific scam patterns.
❌ Manual Investigations
Slow, manual case handling leads to backlogs and delayed STR filing.
❌ One-Size-Fits-All Solutions
Generic fraud platforms fail to meet the operational needs and compliance expectations in Singapore’s regulated environment.
How Tookitaki’s FinCense Offers an End-to-End Fraud Protection Solution
Tookitaki’s FinCense platform is more than an AML tool. It’s a complete compliance and fraud protection solution built for the Asia-Pacific region, including Singapore.
Here’s how it delivers:
1. Scenario-Based Fraud Detection
Instead of relying on outdated rules, FinCense detects based on real-world fraud scenarios. These include:
- Cross-border mule account layering
- QR code-enabled laundering via fintechs
- Deepfake impersonation of CFOs for corporate fund diversion
These scenarios are sourced and validated through the AFC Ecosystem, a collective intelligence network of compliance professionals.
2. Modular AI Agents
FinCense uses a modular Agentic AI framework. Each agent specialises in a core function:
- Real-time detection
- Alert prioritisation
- Case investigation
- Report generation
This structure allows for faster processing and more targeted improvements.
3. AI Copilot for Investigators
Tools like FinMate assist fraud teams by:
- Highlighting high-risk transactions
- Summarising red flags
- Suggesting likely fraud types
- Auto-generating investigation notes
This reduces investigation time and improves consistency.
4. Integration with AML and STR Filing
Fraud alerts that indicate laundering can be escalated directly to AML teams. FinCense also supports MAS-aligned STR reporting through GoAML-compatible outputs.
5. Simulation and Model Tuning
Before deploying new fraud rules or AI models, compliance teams can simulate impact, adjust thresholds, and optimise performance — without risking alert fatigue.
Real Results from Institutions Using FinCense
Banks and payment platforms using FinCense have reported:
- Over 50 percent reduction in false positives
- 3x faster investigation workflows
- Higher STR acceptance rates
- Stronger audit performance during MAS reviews
- Improved team efficiency and satisfaction
By investing in smarter tools, these institutions are building real-time resilience against fraud.
How to Evaluate Fraud Protection Solutions for Singapore
Here’s a quick checklist to guide your vendor selection:
- Can it detect fraud in real time?
- Does it include AI models trained on local risk patterns?
- Is there cross-channel monitoring and investigation?
- Can investigators access case data in one dashboard?
- Does it support both rules and machine learning?
- Are decisions explainable and audit-ready?
- Does it integrate with AML and STR filing tools?
- Can it simulate new detection logic before going live?
If your current system cannot check most of these boxes, it may be time to rethink your fraud defence strategy.
Conclusion: Protecting Trust in a High-Risk World
In Singapore’s fast-evolving financial landscape, the cost of fraud goes beyond financial loss. It erodes customer trust, damages reputation, and exposes institutions to regulatory scrutiny.
A modern fraud protection solution should not only detect known risks but adapt to new threats as they emerge. With AI, behavioural analytics, and collective intelligence, solutions like FinCense empower compliance teams to stay ahead — not just stay compliant.
As fraud continues to evolve, so must your defence. The future belongs to institutions that can think faster, act smarter, and protect better.
