When talking about risks in banking, people usually refer to financial risks, such as credit and market risks, and for a good reason. They can cause significant losses, threaten profitability, and destabilize financial institutions.
However, there are many other types of risks that can cause harm on the same scale and, in some cases, have even more severe consequences.
These non-financial risks often stem from people-related factors, processes, systems, or external events and are harder to quantify but just as critical to manage.
In this article, we will explore non-financial risk management by examining six key types of risks and ways to manage them.
Risks like cybersecurity, fraud, compliance, and operational failures may not appear in financial statements but can still disrupt operations, undermine trust, and threaten long-term stability.
Cybersecurity and fraud risk consistently rank as the most critical non-financial risks for banks. These threats move quickly, exploit short control gaps, and often lead to customer harm, regulatory scrutiny, and reputational damage.
Breakdowns in processes, systems, or regulatory controls rarely stay isolated and can result in outages, fines, and costly remediation.
Vendor failures or security weaknesses can disrupt operations and expose data, making strong due diligence, monitoring, and exit planning essential.
Traditional controls are reactive. VALID applies real-time decisioning inside payment and deposit workflows, reducing fraud losses while preventing downstream operational, compliance, and reputational risk.
Non-financial risks are threats that don’t directly appear in an organization’s financial statements but can still seriously affect business performance and continuity.
They broadly include risks that fall outside traditional market, credit, and liquidity categories and encompass a wide range of organizational vulnerabilities.
If not properly managed, these risks can undermine trust, disrupt operations, and threaten long-term stability.
Before exploring different types of non-financial risks in banking, here is a quick overview of what they include:
|
Risk type |
What it is |
Why it matters |
|
Cybersecurity and IT risk |
Risk of losses from data breaches, hacking, ransomware, system failures, or technology outages |
Can disrupt customer access, expose sensitive data, trigger regulatory action, and cause severe financial and reputational damage |
|
Fraud risk |
Risk of losses from fraud, money laundering, terrorist financing, bribery, or other illegal activity |
Drives direct financial losses, regulatory penalties, and increased scrutiny, while undermining trust in payment and banking systems |
|
Operational risk |
Risk arising from failures in processes, systems, human factors, or external events |
Leads to service disruptions, financial losses, customer dissatisfaction, and costly recovery efforts |
|
Compliance risk |
Risk of legal or regulatory penalties due to noncompliance with laws and regulations |
Can result in heavy fines, enforcement actions, remediation costs, and long-term regulatory oversight |
|
Reputational risk |
Risk of damage to public trust and the bank’s brand from negative events or perceptions |
Can accelerate customer attrition, funding pressure, and regulatory attention |
|
Third-party and vendor risk |
Risk that external vendors or service providers fail to meet security, operational, or regulatory expectations |
Vendor failures can quickly disrupt operations, expose customer data, and create compliance breaches beyond the bank’s direct control |
Cybersecurity and IT risk covers losses from data breaches, hacking, ransomware, and failures of information systems. These incidents can disrupt customer access, compromise sensitive data, and cause significant financial and reputational damage.
For US banks, it is now the most significant non-financial risk, with 40–60% of bankers ranking cybersecurity as their top concern and 63% of bank CROs identifying it as a top-tier risk in 2024.
In the US, payment fraud has become widespread, with 79% of organizations reporting they have either experienced or been targeted by attempted payment fraud.
As a result, risk officers rank fraud as the second-most significant non-financial risk, appearing on 42% of top risk lists.
Pro tip
To truly reduce fraud, you need tools that react in real time, before the risk fully materializes.
VALID supports financial institutions by applying real-time, validated fraud decisioning within check and payment workflows.
By combining machine learning, behavioral analytics, and cross-institution intelligence, VALID helps identify higher-risk activity earlier in the payment process, reducing downstream losses and manual intervention.
With this approach, VALID accomplished:
Contact us today and stop fraud before losses occur.
Operational risk is the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, systems, human factors, or external events.
It can range from simple human error or software bugs to cyber outages, natural disasters, or fraudulent activity that disrupts banking operations, such as payment processing errors or frozen online accounts.
Events like Hurricane Katrina and major SWIFT payment outages show how large operational failures can cost banks billions in losses, downtime, and recovery efforts.
Compliance risk is the risk of legal or regulatory penalties when organizations fail to comply with applicable laws and regulations, such as banking rules, consumer protection statutes, or anti–money laundering requirements.
Some institutions have paid tens of millions for AML lapses, and 89% of community bank executives say regulatory compliance is “extremely or very important.”
Here is a list of key policies that you need to follow and what they mean:
|
Policies |
What they mean |
|
Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) / anti–money laundering (AML) |
Defines how the organization prevents, detects, and reports money laundering and other financial crimes |
|
Customer identification program (CIP) |
Establishes procedures for verifying customer identities when accounts are opened |
|
Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions compliance |
Ensures the organization screens and blocks transactions involving sanctioned individuals, entities, or countries |
|
Fair lending |
Requires lending decisions to be made fairly and without discrimination |
|
Consumer compliance |
Governs compliance with consumer protection laws, including disclosures and complaint handling |
|
Data privacy and information security |
Outlines how sensitive customer and employee information is protected and managed |
|
Compliance risk management (CRM) |
Defines how compliance risks are identified, assessed, monitored, and reported across the organization |
Reputational risk is the chance that a bank may suffer losses if its public image or trust is damaged. Even a single incident, such as a scandal or data breach, can quickly erode customer confidence and lead to lost business or regulatory action.
Third-party and vendor risk arises when banks rely on outside companies for services like technology, payments, or data storage, and those partners experience failures or security breaches.
Because vendor problems can quickly disrupt operations or expose customer data, banks must carefully assess, monitor, and plan for the risks associated with outsourcing.
Most bank risk controls are designed to observe behavior rather than control it. They record what happened, flag anomalies, and trigger human review. In practice, this is all valuable, but fundamentally passive.
Fraud behaves differently. It moves faster than governance cycles, escalates across channels, and exploits brief windows where controls are observational rather than decisive.
When left unchecked, fraud losses rarely stay contained. They often trigger secondary risks, including reputational damage, customer harm, and regulatory scrutiny tied to compliance and conduct expectations.
This is exactly why you need VALID.
VALID is an AI-driven risk management and fraud prevention platform that helps financial institutions detect and prevent fraud in real time across digital and check-based transactions.
Processing over $4 trillion in annual check volume across major US financial institutions, VALID provides the visibility needed to stay ahead of rapidly evolving fraud threats.
Here is what VALID can do for you:
This allows banks to approve, hold, or decline deposits right away, reducing delays, preventing downstream losses, and minimizing unnecessary friction for customers.
This approach identifies up to 95% of fraud losses while flagging only 0.5% of items, significantly reducing false positives and the need for manual reviews. That broader view includes:
Key capabilities include:
By accelerating approval for up to 99% of deposits and guaranteeing covered losses, InstantFUNDS increases customer satisfaction while enabling financial institutions to grow revenue without added risk.
Contact us today to see how VALID helps you manage non-financial risk and stop fraud in real time.