FCMB fraud: ₦3b targeted, ₦677m lost, ₦2.4b recovered

FCMB Limits Exposure in Major Digital Fraud Attempt, Authorities Prosecute

A sophisticated fraud attempt targeting First City Monument Bank (FCMB) resulted in ₦677 million being illicitly obtained, despite over ₦3 billion being targeted, according to court proceedings. The incident, detected in December 2025, highlights the evolving threat landscape for Nigeria’s digital banking sector and the industry’s shifting focus towards response and recovery.

Initial reports suggesting a loss exceeding ₦3 billion were clarified in the Lagos State Special Offences Court. The correct sequence shows that more than ₦3 billion was the intended fraud sum. The bank’s security measures blocked and recovered approximately ₦2.4 billion, limiting the amount that reached the perpetrators to about ₦677 million. This outcome is attributed to enhanced cyber security monitoring and improved collaboration between financial institutions and law enforcement.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is leading ongoing recovery efforts and prosecutions. Several suspects have been apprehended, and the court has already issued convictions and restitution orders against some individuals, including a repeat offender. Additional related cases are proceeding at the Federal High Court in Lagos. Authorities state that tracing and recovery of funds continue as more transactional data is analysed.

Analysts observe that the pace of legal action signifies closer coordination between banks and enforcement agencies in tackling cyber-enabled financial crime. The FCMB case exemplifies a sector-wide transition from a sole focus on prevention to robust response mechanisms. This includes strengthening real-time transaction controls, advancing monitoring technologies, and deepening institutional cooperation.

The fraud method involved unauthorised transactions linked to a digital banking product, reflecting the complex tactics—such as social engineering and process automation—that criminals employ as financial services digitise. A Lagos-based financial analyst noted, “The scale of digital banking means risks are evolving alongside the systems. Institutions are now judged by how they manage these events.”

For customers, the case confirms that no deposits were compromised, a critical factor in maintaining public trust. Banking analysts assert that as Nigeria’s financial sector expands through digital innovation, fraud attempts will persist, driven by increasing system complexity and interconnectivity. Consequently, a financial institution’s resilience is increasingly measured by its effectiveness incontaining incidents, recovering assets, and supporting prosecutions, not just by its preventive barriers.

The FCMB incident, with its contained financial impact and active legal follow-through, serves as a current benchmark for the industry’s maturing incident response framework in the face of persistent and sophisticated digital fraud risks.

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