Lloyd’s Highlights Retailers Need for Cyber Fraud Coverage

By | December 29, 2011

An article on the Lloyd’s of London web site notes that while millions of people have been out an about shopping this holiday season, “an increasing number are choosing to shop from the comfort of their homes – and offices – using the internet.” However, the “growth in internet shopping brings new risks for retailers.” Fortunately, as Lloyd’s points out “cyber and payment fraud insurance can protect companies during critical trading periods like Christmas.”

David Gray, UK Retail Analyst at Planet Retail, noted: “We anticipate the general trend towards online will continue as more and more consumers will turn to the internet to research products and make purchases. In the current environment we have seen internet sales grow by double digits as consumers go in search of better promotions.”

According to the British Retail Consortium (BRC), 2011 “has not been a good year for UK retailers. With austerity measures beginning to bite, consumers are making fewer purchases, a spokeswoman for BRC says. She explained that “Christmas is the most critical spending period and retailers are hoping that a good December will help make up for the rest of the year.” As stores depend on Christmas sales, any problems with internet purchases can have even greater implications for retailers.

As sales volumes rise, potential problems increase. The spokeswoman also noted that “last Christmas the delivery of internet orders was affected by the severe snow and freezing conditions. But retailers have learned the lessons of last year’s bad weather and have developed ‘click and collect’ which allows customers to pick up their goods from a nearby store.”

The move to online shopping presents retailers with a host of new risks, according to Ben Beeson of Lockton. The most obvious risk is of network outage or downtime during a busy trading period, with potentially disastrous consequences for a company’s finances and reputation.

He explained that “traditional property insurance will not cover internet downtime. However, specialist cyber insurance can protect against some non-physical damage losses triggered by a virus or a hacking.” An emerging and increasingly important risk for retailers is protecting their customers’ data, he added.

Lloyd’s also highlighted the recent number of instances when retailers have suffered “costly data breaches, often involving consumers’ sensitive credit card information. Earlier this year, electronics firm Sony suffered a major breach that is expected to cost the company $1 billion.”

Paul Bantick of Lloyd’s insurer Beazley stressed that “cyber privacy and security is a big issue for retailers as they increasingly move online and as they hold more sensitive information on customers such as credit card details.”

Cyber insurance provides retailers and other companies that hold sensitive personal data with cover in three main areas, Beeson explained. Specialist insurance will pay for the cost of responding to a breach, as well as helping a company fund the expense of dealing with regulatory investigations and defending civil litigation. Insurers recently expanded cover to include the risk of falling foul of data security standards set by the big credit card transaction companies, Beeson added.

Bantick pointed out that most retailers in the US now routinely purchase specialist cyber insurance, as “tough data protection laws in the US make dealing with a data breach very costly. And evolving data protection laws and a growing awareness of the reputational damage of a major data breach are likely to lead to more retailers buying cyber cover in Europe.”

He also noted that “regulation tends to drive the purchasing of data breach insurance, and as European rules get tougher we will see a flurry of interest in cyber insurance from retailers and other sectors that handle personal data

Beazley’s Breach Response enables companies to respond quickly to a data breach, providing access to services and covering the cost of notifying customers, legal, forensic and crisis management services. Beazley expects to release a UK version of its popular Response product next year.

Turning to the ever present problem of dealing with hackers, Bantick indicated that they “find a high profile data breach appealing at this time of year, and a large data breach of customer credit card details could prove costly, both financially and for a retailer’s reputation.”

As the average transaction value increases, it gives cyber criminals and fraudsters more opportunity and increases the potential severity of the consequences, he added.

Insurers are able to adapt cover to respond to busy periods like Christmas, Beeson stated. For example, insurers can provide higher limits at peak times.

Cyber attacks were ranked as the twelfth most concerning risk by 500 business leaders in Lloyd’s Risk Index 2011. The survey, carried out by the Economist Intelligence Unit, was described by Richard Ward, Lloyd’s Chief Executive, as a “snapshot of two years of economic and political turmoil”. Find out more about the findings in Lloyd’s Risk Index 2011.

Source: Lloyd’s of London

Topics Cyber Fraud Excess Surplus Lloyd's

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