Costs and Duration
The ACFE estimates that the typical organization loses 5% of its revenues to fraud each year. In the 2016 report, the average loss per case was $2.7 million, and the median loss was $150,000. (The median loss is significantly lower than the average loss, which factors in outliers in the data set with much higher losses.)
About 23% of the cases studied involved losses of $1 million or more. The median duration for all cases studied was 18 months.
The study found a correlation between duration and the costs of fraud: The longer a scam lasts, the more financial damage it generally causes. The ACFE reports that fraud schemes lasting more than five years caused a median loss of $850,000. The median loss for schemes continuing for six months or less was only $45,000.
Fraud can be classified into three basic categories:
Asset misappropriation. This form of occupational fraud occurred in 83.5% of cases studied in the latest ACFE report, although it resulted in the lowest median loss ($125,000).
Financial statement fraud. These scams are the least common. Misstatement occurred in only 9.6% of cases but caused the greatest damage. The median loss from financial statement fraud was a whopping $975,000.
Corruption. This category includes bribery and conflicts of interest. It occurred in 35.4% of cases and produced a median loss of $200,000.
Fraud risks vary depending on an organization’s size. Corruption is more common in larger organizations. Conversely, asset misappropriation schemes involving check tampering, skimming, payroll and cash larceny are far more common in smaller organizations.
In the 2016 ACFE study, 39.1% of the frauds were detected from tips by employees, customers, vendors and other outside parties. Other common detection methods include:
Hotlines can be an effective way to solicit fraud tips. The ACFE reports that the percentage of fraud cases detected via tips increased from 28.2% for organizations without hotlines to 47.3% for organizations with established reporting hotlines. The most common form of hotline was the telephone hotline (39.5%), followed by email (34.1%) and Web-based forms (23.5%).
Notably, active detection methods — such as monitoring, IT controls, account reconciliation and internal audit — are associated with lower median losses and fraud durations. Passive detection methods — such as notification by police or accidental discovery — were associated with higher losses and durations.
Though effective, hotlines tend to be underused. Only 60% of organizations used hotlines in the 2016 study. Other antifraud controls are far more common, including external audits of financial statements, codes of conduct, internal audits, management certification of financial statements and management reviews.
These more visible antifraud controls serve a critical role in a strong internal control system: Regardless of their effectiveness in detecting fraud, they can be highly effective in deterring fraud.
Over the last 20 years, the ACFE’s biennial fraud report has raised awareness about the costs and duration of fraud, common schemes, and methods to detect and prevent fraud. We’ve highlighted just a few findings from the ACFE’s 92-page study. For more information, access the full report on the ACFE website or contact a certified forensic accounting expert.