This report explores how the rapid expansion of digital ecosystems is reshaping cyber-enabled financial crime and fraud in India. With the widespread adoption of digital payments, mobile platforms, and cloud-based services, fraud has evolved into a complex, technology-driven ecosystem that leverages stolen identities, real-time payment infrastructure, social engineering, and artificial intelligence. The scale and velocity of platforms such as Unified Payments Interface (UPI) have significantly expanded the attack surface, making fraud prevention, fraud detection, and digital forensic investigation critical to organisational resilience and trust. A key insight of the report is that fraud is no longer an isolated activity but an organised, industrialised ecosystem operating across borders and sectors.
It highlights the urgent need for organisations to transition to next-generation forensic services, moving beyond traditional, device-centric approaches to intelligence-led, identity-centric investigation models. This transformation enables organisations to better connect digital evidence, financial transactions, communication trails, and governance insights into a unified and defensible investigative narrative. At the same time, the report emphasises the changing nature of digital evidence, which is now fragmented across cloud platforms, devices, payment systems, and telecom networks, making it more volatile and time sensitive. This reinforces the importance of forensic readiness, including strong logging, retention, and evidence preservation frameworks established before incidents occur.
This also provides a sector-wide view of emerging fraud risks across banking, financial services and insurance, fintech and virtual digital assets, manufacturing, energy, public digital infrastructure, and e-commerce. Fraud typologies are becoming increasingly diverse, ranging from payment fraud and account takeover to crypto-enabled fraud, ransomware, insider threats, and identity misuse. It further highlights the growing role of advanced technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), natural language processing, and blockchain analytics in enabling faster fraud detection, anomaly identification, and transaction tracing. However, the report underscores that technology must be complemented by strong governance, skilled talent, and integrated processes to deliver effective outcomes.
In addition, it identifies persistent investigation challenges, including fragmented data environments, skill gaps, cross-border jurisdiction issues, and a mismatch between the speed of fraud execution and investigative response. Addressing these challenges requires enhanced public–private collaboration, real-time fraud intelligence sharing, and cross-border coordination mechanisms to improve recovery outcomes and strengthen the overall fraud risk management ecosystem.