The Growing Threat of Wire & Settlement Fraud

Whitepaper

The Growing Threat of Wire & Settlement Fraud

Why Mortgage Leaders Are Prioritizing Real-Time Transaction Risk Intelligence

Coming soon schedule

Executive Overview

Mortgage transactions are becoming faster, more digital, and increasingly interconnected, creating new operational vulnerabilities across the funding lifecycle.

Recent FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) findings reported more than $275 million in real estate fraud losses tied to wire fraud, business email compromise, and transaction-related scams. At the same time, FundingShield’s Q1 2026 Fraud Analytics Report identified fraud and risk-related findings in 43.72% of analyzed transactions, reinforcing the growing operational challenges facing lenders, warehouse banks, investors, and settlement providers.

These findings highlight a fundamental shift: fraud is no longer simply a cybersecurity issue. It has become a transaction-level operational risk that requires greater visibility, verification, and control before funds move.

What Modern Fraud Prevention Requires

Traditional verification methods were not designed for today’s accelerated digital mortgage environment. Effective fraud prevention increasingly depends on the ability to verify critical transaction data using live source data drawn directly from financial institutions and title underwriters, rather than relying on aggregated or outdated information.

FundingShield’s platform is built around this direct, source-data approach combined with real-time verification, helping lenders make decisions using current, confirmed information at the moment risk matters most, before funds are disbursed.

The Value of an Embedded Closing & Verification Layer

As lenders seek greater operational efficiency, standalone fraud tools are increasingly being replaced by embedded solutions that operate within existing mortgage workflows. FundingShield provides an Embedded Closing & Verification Layer that functions as an infrastructure layer within the transaction stack, validating settlement parties, wire instructions, accounts, documents, and critical transaction data before funds are disbursed. By integrating verification directly into the closing process, lenders gain greater transparency and control without introducing additional operational friction.

Beyond Detection: The Importance of Remediation

Identifying risk is only part of the work.

FundingShield’s approach extends beyond detection to remediation, helping organizations resolve discrepancies, validate information, address exceptions, and mitigate potential fraud concerns before they become funding losses, repurchase exposure, compliance issues, or post-closing defects.

This combination of fraud prevention, live source data, real-time verification, embedded solutions, an infrastructure layer for closing and verification, and proactive remediation provides mortgage stakeholders with a more comprehensive framework for managing transaction risk.

Conclusion

As fraud tactics continue to evolve, mortgage leaders are increasingly prioritizing transaction intelligence over traditional post-closing reviews.

FundingShield helps lenders, investors, warehouse banks, and settlement providers strengthen transaction integrity through live source data verification, real-time intelligence, embedded workflow solutions, and proactive remediation, designed to identify and address elevated risk before funds move.

The future of mortgage risk management will belong to organizations that can verify, monitor, and remediate transaction risk in real time, before it becomes a loss event.