HSBC fought customers 'tooth and nail' over scam but now it's fronting court
HSBC customers who became victims of a long-running "spoofing" scam hope the bank will take full responsibility for its "system failures" in Federal Court this week.
Sunni Wan lost almost $50,000 after responding to a text message scam in which fraudsters impersonated the bank. (ABC News: Billy Cooper)
HSBC customers who became victims of a long-running "spoofing" scam hope the bank will take full responsibility for its "system failures" in Federal Court this week.
The bank will face a hearing and is expected to admit it failed customers in a statement of agreed facts.
Customers are hoping for a full refund, including compensation, while consumer groups hope the bank will be heavily penalised.
Fraud victims are anxiously waiting to see if global bank HSBC will admit to the Federal Court that it failed to protect its customers from a long-running spoofing scam, potentially paving the way for a massive financial penalty.
Hundreds of Australians were scammed out of huge sums of money over four years, where fraudsters used text messages to trick people into thinking their accounts had been compromised.
While the bank has fully reimbursed some, others settled for much less and victims want the bank to repay outstanding losses and compensation.
Defrauded customers have been waiting for HSBC's day in court, after it was sued by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) in 2024.
The lawsuit is the first in Australia attempting to hold a bank to account for allegedly having inadequate processes to detect and prevent scam losses. (ABC News: Billy Cooper)
Sunni Wan lost nearly $50,000 after responding to a "spoofing" text message from someone impersonating the bank.
When the Sydney woman discovered there were many others facing massive losses, she created a support group to fight HSBC for reimbursement.
"They just kept putting the blame on the victims," she said.
HSBC is being sued by ASIC over allegations of "widespread and systemic" failures to protect customers.
Australians are continuing to lose their life savings to a long-running "spoofing" scam targeting customers of banking giant HSBC.
Customers made 950 reports alleging scammers had netted $23 million, between January 2020 to August 2024, in the bank impersonation scam.
The lawsuit is the first of its kind in Australia, attempting to hold a bank to account for allegedly having inadequate processes to detect and prevent scam losses.
It's also alleging the bank was too slow to investigate complaints, and customers were locked out of their accounts for too long — in one case, 542 days.
HSBC had planned to defend the case at trial, but it was abandoned when the bank said it would no longer contest it.
Today in Melbourne, HSBC will front
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