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Every month, TraceSecurity’s Senior Information Security Engineers develop a Cybersecurity Intelligence Brief exclusive to our vCISO customers. These briefs include information on the latest threats to organizations, training recommendations, best practices, regulatory advice, and more. Below are a few highlights from our vCISO brief for February 2026.
This month’s brief covers escalating AI-powered phishing attacks targeting financial institutions, a critical vulnerability in widely-used payment middleware, and the emerging threat of deepfake-enabled business email compromise. We also provide staff training materials on recognizing AI-generated social engineering.
Increase in AI-Powered
Phishing Targeting Banks
Average Cost of a Data Breach
in Financial Services
FFIEC Regulatory
Notification Window
The following threats have been identified as having significant relevance to community banks, credit unions, and savings institutions during the current reporting period.

Threat actors are using large language models to craft highly convincing phishing emails that mimic internal communications, vendor invoices, and regulatory correspondence. These attacks specifically target wire transfer authorization workflows and ACH file approval processes. Unlike traditional phishing, AI-generated content contains no grammatical errors and accurately mirrors institutional tone and formatting. Multiple community banks have reported losses exceeding $250,000 from single incidents.
Recommendation: Implement out-of-band verification for all wire/ACH requests above your established threshold. Deploy email authentication (DMARC/DKIM/SPF) at enforcement level. Train staff that grammatical perfection no longer indicates legitimacy. Consider implementing AI-based email analysis tools that detect behavioral anomalies rather than relying solely on content-based filtering.

Sophisticated threat actors are now combining traditional BEC tactics with AI-generated voice calls (“vishing 2.0”) that convincingly impersonate executives and Board members. At least three confirmed incidents in Q4 2025 involved deepfake voice calls instructing operations staff to initiate urgent wire transfers. One credit union reported that the synthetic voice was indistinguishable from their CEO.
Recommendation: Establish code-word verification for high-value transaction approvals requested by phone. Never authorize transactions based solely on voice or video calls. Update incident response playbooks to include deepfake scenarios. Brief Board members and senior management on this specific threat vector.

A new zero-day vulnerability (CVE-2026-XXXX) has been disclosed in a widely-used managed file transfer platform common in financial services environments. The vulnerability allows unauthenticated remote code execution and has been actively exploited in the wild since late January. Institutions using this platform for SFTP transfers, core system file exchanges, or regulatory reporting should take immediate action.
Recommendation: Identify all instances of affected software in your environment and with your critical vendors. Apply vendor patches immediately or take systems offline until patches are available. Review transfer logs for indicators of compromise. Contact your TSP and core processor to confirm their patching status. File a SAR if unauthorized access is confirmed.

A growing trend of malicious QR codes appearing in physical mail, lobby signage overlays, and even ATM surroundings is directing users to credential-harvesting sites. Attackers place fraudulent QR codes over legitimate ones in branch locations or mail fake correspondence appearing to originate from the institution.
Recommendation: Educate customers and staff to verify QR code destinations before entering credentials. Conduct physical inspections of branch QR codes regularly. Consider removing QR codes from public-facing materials or using branded short URLs instead. Implement web filtering on employee devices to block known phishing domains.
Artificial intelligence has fundamentally changed the social engineering threat landscape. The traditional indicators that employees relied on to identify phishing and pretexting attempts are no longer reliable. This training module is designed to be shared with all staff and provides updated guidance for identifying modern social engineering tactics.


FFIEC IT Examination Handbook: ithandbook.ffiec.gov
CISA Alerts & Advisories: cisa.gov/known-exploited-vulnerabilities-catalog
FS-ISAC Threat Intelligence: fsisac.com