KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 14 — Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) has imposed an Administrative Monetary Penalty (AMP) of RM4.32 million on Malayan Banking Bhd and Maybank Islamic Bhd, and RM760,000 on CIMB Bank Bhd and CIMB Islamic Bank Bhd due to prolonged disruptions in several banking services.
It said that Maybank paid the full penalty for the AMP imposed on August 8, while CIMB settled its penalty on August 12.
“The AMP was imposed due to non-compliance with paragraph 48(1)(a) of the Financial Services Act 2013 (FSA) and paragraph 58(1)(a) of the Islamic Financial Services Act 2013 (IFSA), in conjunction with paragraph 10.32 of the Risk Management in Technology (RMiT) Policy Document,” BNM said in separate statements today.
Paragraph 10.32 of the RMiT Policy Document mandates that financial institutions ensure their critical systems are designed for high availability.
Specifically, cumulative unplanned downtime affecting user interfaces must not exceed four hours over a rolling 12-month period, with a maximum tolerable downtime of 120 minutes per incident.
Maybank’s regional mobile banking platform and MAE apps experienced multiple unplanned downtimes between June 1, 2023, and May 31, 2024, resulting in significant disruptions to customer and counterparty interfaces.
BNM added that CIMB’s customers faced prolonged service disruptions from April 8 to April 9, 2024, affecting e-banking channels, ATMs, and both debit and credit card services. These disruptions exceeded the thresholds set by BNM.
In response, CIMB acknowledged the central bank’s decision and expressed regret over the unplanned downtime, which impacted its customers and counterparties during those dates.
“Whilst the bank, together with its third parties, took necessary steps to ensure that the downtime was minimised, the incident affected our customers’ banking transactions, and we acknowledge that we need to strive to do better,” it said in a statement.
CIMB also affirmed its commitment to investing in technology, systems, and processes to enhance resilience and ensure its critical infrastructure can consistently meet customers’ needs.
Meanwhile, Maybank reiterated its commitment to enhancing customer experience and communication while ensuring compliance with all BNM regulations related to service uptime.
“Internal measures to further strengthen and monitor our systems are in place to ensure optimum performance.
“We greatly appreciate our customers’ continued support, patience, and understanding,” it said in a statement.
— Bernama