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Wednesday 30 October 2019 12:25 pm

Financial Times owner Nikkei loses $29m in apparent fraud

By: James Warrington

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LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 23: The Financial Times logo sits on display outside the headquarters of the newspaper on July 23, 2015 in London, England. Japanese media company Nikkei have reached an agreement to buy the Financial Times Group from publishing group Pearson for £844m. The Financial Times is a British, English language newspaper launched in 1888 and has a combined print and online readership of 720,000. It is part of the FT group which also includes a 50% stake in The Economist and Russian newspaper Vedemosti. (Photo by Danny E. Martindale/Getty Images)

Nikkei, the Japanese media giant behind the Financial Times, has lost roughly $29m (£22.5m) in an apparent wire transfer fraud.

In a statement issued today, the company said an employee of its US subsidiary had transferred the funds after receiving “fraudulent instructions by a malicious third party who purported to be a management executive of Nikkei”.

Read more: UK energy boss conned out of £200,000 in ‘deep fake’ fraud

Nikkei said it has hired lawyers to look into the alleged fraud, which took place in September, and has filed reports with authorities in the US and Hong Kong.

Nikkei, which is Japan’s largest media company, bought the Financial Times from Pearson for £844m in 2015 after winning a fierce bidding war with German rival Axel Springer.

The conglomerate also calculates the Nikkei 225 – the index for the Tokyo Stock Exchange – and publishes a range of titles including its flagship financial newspaper and the English-language Nikkei Asian Review.

The loss will come as a huge blow to the company, which has suffered a steady decline in sales in recent years and posted a 20 per cent year-on-year decline in net profit to ¥5.1bn (£36m).

The alleged fraud comes amid rising concerns about cybersecurity, as scammers adopt increasingly sophisticated methods to trick unsuspecting employees.

Read more: Whatsapp takes Israeli firm to court over cyber attack

Last month it emerged that an executive at a UK energy company was conned out of £200,000 after cyber criminals used artificial intelligence (AI) to mimic his boss’s voice.

It is not clear whether the cyber scam targeted at Nikkei made use of AI. The firm declined to provide further details on the incident while it was cooperating with investigations.

Main image credit: Getty

Read more

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